Mrs. Frances Avent was operating a combination service station and grocery store on 3 June 1974. Defendant entered the store that afternoon when no other customers were present. He purchased some cigarettes and pretended to leave the store, but whirled around and pulled out a pistol. As he took about $75.00 from the cash drawer, defendant directed Mrs. Avent to go into a back room and close the door. He warned Mrs. Avent not to follow him after he left. Mrs. Avent did as she was told and
Thomas Whitehead testified that he first planned to rob Mrs. Avent but did not go through with it. When he told defendant he had failed, defendant took the .25 caliber pistol and ped-daled away on a bicycle. He returned shortly, pursued by two cars and a man who fired a shot into the woods. Thomas and defendant divided the money and then went to their gandmother’s house where defendant was apprehended.
Defendant testified that he sold some pills to someone and divided the proceeds with Thomas. As he returned home on a bicycle, he was pursued by a car and a man who shot at him. When hé got to his grandmother’s house, he was told that Doughtie had been looking for him. He hid when Doughtie returned to the house and fired only after Doughtie had fired at him first.
The contention of defendant may be stated briefly: The discrepancies between the description given to the sheriff’s department and the physical appearance of the defendat cast doubt on Mrs. Avent’s ability to recognize the defendant; Had she not viewed him in the hospital room, defendant asserts that she could not have accurately described the person who robbed her store. In its finding of fact number two, the court dealt with this point:
“That immediately after the robbery she described the person who had robbed her to Mr. Gilliam as being a person of eighteen to nineteen years of age, although she stated that she is not able to estimate ages very well; that she described the clothes which he was wearing at the time, and she stated that he was approximately five feet nine inches tall and of slender build weighing approximately 155 to 160 pounds; that she was not able to call his name but that she knew that she had seen him before. The Court finds that this estimate insofar as it relates to a description of the defendant’s person is reasonably accurate based on the Court’s observation of the defendant here in court.”
No exception was taken by defendant.
In Simmons v. United States, 390 U.S. 377, 384, 88 S.Ct. 967, 971, 19 L.Ed. 2d 1247, 1253 (1968), the Supreme Court stated that “each case must be considered on its own facts, and . . . convictions based on eyewitness identification at trial following a pretrial identification by photograph will be set aside on that ground only if the photographic identification procedure was so impermissively suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentifieation.” ■
Findings of fact as to whether the identification was the result of constitutionally impermissible circumstances are re
No error.