The appellant, Gary D. Braddock, was convicted by a jury of two counts of child molestation and one count of rape of his former stepdaughters and was subsequently sentenced to twelve years in prison on each offense, to serve concurrently. The trial court denied his motion for new trial and this appeal followed.
1. The defendant contends that the trial court erred in allowing the jury to question the absence of an individual who had not been called as a witness during the trial. He further asserts as error the failure of the trial court to declare a mistrial after receiving knowledge that the jury was deliberating prior to the conclusion of the trial based on the fact that a note from the jury was sent to the court inquiring into the absence of this witness before the case had actually been submitted to the jury for deliberation. We disagree.
The transcript of the trial shows that the jury submitted to the trial judge a handwritten note in which they questioned the absence of the mother of the victims and her failure to testify in support of her children in court. The note was presented to the court during a five-minute-recess period that had been provided for the purpose of allowing the state time to consider whether the state intended to present any rebuttal evidence. Counsel for the defendant immediately objected to the contents of the note and objected to the submission of the note in the court’s files. Thereafter, the court asked both counsel for the defendant and the prosecutor if either wanted to call the witness to the stand. Although the defendant declined the offer, the prosecution proceeded to call the mother of the victims to rebut allegations made by the defendant during his testimony.
In
Bailey v. State,
*844
The defendant also contends that the prosecution improperly presented testimony from the victims’ mother after the jury questioned her whereabouts. However, our Supreme Court “has long held that, ‘(w)hether the State should be permitted to introduce . . . evidence after the defendant ha(s) closed his testimony, even if it was not strictly in rebuttal, (is) a matter resting in the sound discretion of the court.’ [Cit.]”
Smith v. State,
2. In his third enumeration of error, the defendant asserts that the trial court improperly admitted, over his objection, testimony concerning an alleged prior similar act that occurred approximately 15 years earlier. Specifically, the defendant asserts that he was never charged, arrested, indicted or tried for the offense and the incident is too remote in time to be considered. On the contrary, “[w]here ‘similar transaction’ evidence has been admissible otherwise, lapses of time of 11 years
(Rich v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
