Arrington v. State
This text of 411 So. 2d 779 (Arrington v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
for the Court:
Ollie Arrington appeals from a conviction and sentence of 50 years by the Circuit Court of Jones County for the rape of a fourteen year old child. We affirm.
The only question we address on appeal is whether or not the circuit judge erred in admitting into evidence a transcript of Ar-rington’s testimony at a previous trial.
Arrington’s first trial resulted in a mistrial. At the subsequent trial, Arlington again testified in his own behalf, and the State offered in rebuttal a transcript of his testimony at the first trial. Arrington now argues that a proper predicate or foundation was necessary prior to the introduction of this transcript.
Arrington was a party, not simply a witness, and therefore the transcript of his testimony at the previous trial was competent, either as part of the State’s case in chief or rebuttal, as an admission of the defendant. White v. Weitz, 169 Miss. 102, 152 So. 484 (1934); Roney v. State, 167 Miss. 827, 150 So. 774 (1933); Steele v. State, 76 Miss. 387, 24 So. 910 (1898); See generally, 23 C.J.S. Criminal Law § 892(b) (1961).
The admission of this transcript in rebuttal, after Arrington had taken the stand in his own defense in the second trial, was within the discretion of the trial judge. Even if cumulative or repetitive, it was harmless error. If contradictions or discrepancies existed between his testimony in the first and second trials, he should have requested surrebuttal to explain them.
Upon the argument that the sentence imposed was excessive because greater than Arrington’s reasonable life expectancy, we note the trial judge found Arring-ton to be 17 years of age, and took into consideration his height and health, following which he sentenced Arrington to serve a term of fifty (50) years. The 1980 Statistical Abstract of the United States, published by the United States government, shows the life expectancy of the average black male in 1978, 17 years of age, to be 50.2 years.
The sentence was therefore not beyond the reasonable life expectancy of the defendant.
AFFIRMED.
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411 So. 2d 779, 1982 Miss. LEXIS 1910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrington-v-state-miss-1982.