Court Opinion

ID: 9581334
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-21 22:13:54.159687+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:36:52.325286
License: Public Domain

Finney, Justice:
Eron James Tasco, the appellant, was indicted for armed robbery and robbery. The case was submitted to the jury on both charges, and the jury convicted appellant of armed robbery. We affirm.
In a single exception, the appellant alleges the court erred in denying his motion for a directed verdict, asserting the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant was armed with a deadly weapon at the time the robbery occurred.
The weapon used in the robbery was not introduced at trial. The only evidence pertaining to its description was testimony from the victim and Joseph Jerome Simmons, who pled guilty to armed robbery growing out of the same incident. Simmons testified that the instrument used was a toy gun which had been thrown away after the robbery. The relevant portion of the victim’s testimony is as follows:
Q. Could you tell what kind of gun that was?
A. Not exactly. I am not that familiar with guns.
Q. Do you even know whether it was a real gun or not?
*272A. Possibly could have been.
Q. Could have been a real gun?
A. Yes.
Q.... Did you believe that gun to be a toy pistol or a real pistol?
At the time, I thought it was a real pistol ...
The sole issue in this case is whether or not there was sufficient evidence of the use of a deadly weapon to submit the question of armed robbery to the jury. Under the statutory law of the State of South Carolina, S. C. Code Ann. § 16-11-330 (1976), armed robbery is defined as “robbery while armed with a pistol, dirk, slingshot, metal knuckles, razor or other deadly weapon ...”
This court ruled in State v. Bailey, 273 S. C. 467, 257 S. E. (2d) 231 (1979), that an inoperable gun is a deadly weapon for the purposes of the statute defining armed robbery. The Supreme Court of North Carolina, in State v. Thompson, 297 N. C. 285, 254 S. E. (2d) 526, 528 (1979), said “when a person perpetrates a robbery by brandishing an instrument which appears to be a firearm ... in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the law will presume the instrument to be what his conduct represents it to be, a firearm ...”
Under the evidence in this case, the question of whether or not the instrument used in commission of the robbery qualified the incident as armed robbery was a factual determination for the jury. We conclude the trial judge correctly refused the motion for a directed verdict and properly submitted both robbery and armed robbery to the jury.
Affirmed.
Gregory, Harwell, JJ., and Acting Associate Justice Bruce Littlejohn concur.
Ness, C. J., concurring in separate opinion.