Appellants Faye Abreu and Edward Ray Gordon were tried jointly before a jury on indictments which charged them with the commission of various sexual crimes against Abreu’s daughter. Abreu was found guilty of enticing a child for indecent purposes and child molestation. Gordon was found guilty of three counts of enticing a child for indecent purposes and two counts of child molestation. After the trial court had entered judgments of conviction and sentences on the jury’s guilty verdicts, appellants filed motions for new trial. When *362 the motions for new trial were denied, separate notices of appeal but identical enumerations of error were filed. Accordingly, the two cases are hereby consolidated for appellate disposition in this single opinion.
1. In their motions for new trial, appellants raised the issue of the effectiveness of their trial counsel, based upon his failure to have objected to certain of the trial court’s instructions to the jury. The denial of their motions for new trial on this ground is enumerated as error.
In its charge and recharge on the definitions of the crimes of “enticing a child” and “child molestation,” the trial court quoted the entirety of the language of OCGA §§ 16-6-5 (a) and 16-6-4 (a). Trial counsel’s failure to object does not demonstrate his ineffectiveness, because there was no reversible error. “ ‘It is not usually cause for new trial that an entire Code section is given . . . even though a part of the charge may be inapplicable under the facts in evidence.’ (Cits.) [Cit.]”
Anderson v. State,
Appellants rely upon
Grimes v. State,
When the trial court gave its recharge, it did not include an unrequested recharge on “reasonable doubt.” Trial counsel did not object to the failure to include recharge on “reasonable doubt.” But, even if he had, there would be no reversible error.
Schwerdtfeger v. State,
“The fact that defense counsel made no . . . objections to the
*363
charge obviously establishes no lack of effectiveness on his part absent some deficiency or impropriety in the charge which was harmful to the appellant^]. ”
Norris v. State,
2. Appellants urge that certain counts of the indictments are void and that the trial court erred in failing so to hold.
“If the [indictments were] void
for any reason,
the question should have been raised by demurrer before pleading to the merits, or by motion in arrest of judgment after conviction. [Cit.]” (Emphasis supplied.)
Rucker v. State,
“[W]e may consider only issues properly raised in lower courts. [Cit.] In this instance, the issue which these [appellants] argue was not properly raised in the trial court. A motion for new trial is not a proper vehicle for raising questions as to the legal sufficiency of an [indictment]. [Cits.]”
Carr v. State,
Mataluni v. State,
3. As to their convictions for enticing a child for indecent purposes, appellants urge the insufficiency of the evidence of venue. The evidence showed that the child was “enticed” in the county wherein appellants were prosecuted, but the evidence also showed that the alleged act of indecency or child molestation occurred in another county. Thus, it is appellants’ contention that there is a fatal lack of evidence that an act of indecency or child molestation was committed, attempted or intended in the county of prosecution.
“The crime of enticing a child for indecent purposes in violation of OCGA § 16-6-5 requires the showing of a joint operation of the act of enticing a child and the intention to commit acts of indecency or child molestation. ... [A] conviction under OCGA § 16-6-5 need not be based upon evidence that an act of indecency or child molestation was accomplished or even attempted. . . .”
Lasseter v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
