for the Court:
¶ 1. A jury in the Webster County Circuit Court found James D. Fulgham guilty of sexual battery and touching a child for lustful purposes. On appeal, Fulgham claims the circuit judge erred in (1) failing to provide sua sponte а limiting instruction when admitting a transcript of a recorded conversation and (2) limiting his defense by cutting short his cross-examination of the victim’s mother. We find no reversible error in admitting the transcript since Fulgham neither requested a limiting instruction nor points to any prejudicial inaccuracies in the transcript. Further, because Fulgham neglected to make a proffer of the testimony he sought to elicit from the victim’s mother, this issue was not preserved for appellate review. Therefore, we affirm.
FACTS
¶2. C.W. 1 was fourteen years old in December 2009 when hе spent several nights at his grandmother’s 2 Webster County residence. On December 19, 2008, while C.W. was watching television at his grandmother’s house, Fulgham, 3 who was in his mid-fifties at the time, entered the room and sat next to C.W. on a couch. According to C.W., he became “uncomfortable” when Fulgham moved closer to him and rubbed C.W.’s head and stomach. C.W. recalled that Fulgham told him he loved him аnd grabbed C.W.’s hand and placed it on his penis. Fulgham then opened C.W.’s mouth and forced it down onto his penis. C.W. testified that he pulled away and told Fulgham to leave him alone.
¶ 3. Early the nеxt morning, C.W. called his father several times asking him to pick him up. When his father arrived at C.W.’s grandmother’s house at 7:00 a.m., he found C.W. standing outside in the cold with his bag packed ready to leave.
¶4. At trial, C.W.’s mother testified about a later phone conversation with Fulgham, during which Fulgham claimed C.W. had unzipped Fulgham’s pants and performed fellatio on him. Fulgham main
¶ 5. Fulgham testified in his own defense and blamed C.W. for initiating the sexual encounter. He testified that while he was sleeping on the couch C.W. pounced on him, pulled down Fulgham’s pajamas, and grabbed Fulgham’s penis. Fulgham claimed C.W. then began masturbating. Fulgham contended this happened in the span of “possibly ten seconds.” Fulgham explained that when he came to his senses, he immediately called C.W.’s mother and voiced concerns that C.W.’s father had been molesting the young boy. Fulgham denied gratuitously touching C.W. in any manner.
¶ 6. The jury convicted Fulgham on both counts. And the circuit judge sentenced Fulgham to twenty years’ imprisonment for sexual-battery count and ten years’ imprisonment on the unlawful-touching-for-lustful-purposеs charge, with the sentences to run concurrently. The circuit judge denied Fulgham’s post-trial motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, alternatively, a new trial. Fulgham now appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. Admission of the Transcript
¶ 7. At trial, the State offered an audiotape and transcript that it claimed depicted a June 2009 telephone conversation between Fulgham and C.W.’s mother. Fulgham objectеd to the admission of both the tape and transcript. He argued neither the tape nor transcript memorialized a conversation between C.W.’s mother and grandmother that tоok place earlier during the phone call. C.W.’s mother explained the tape contained her entire conversation with Fulgham and that she did not record her earlier conversation with C.W.’s grandmother. The circuit court admitted the tape over Fulgham’s objection.
A. Limiting Instruction
¶ 8. At trial Fulgham did not request a limiting instruction regarding the use of the transcript. Now on appeal, he claims error in the circuit court’s failure to instruct the jury sua sponte that the audio recording, not the transcript, is the primary evidence of the conversation. Fulg-hаm does not contest admission of the recording.
¶ 9. Though he claims reversible error in the circuit court’s failure to provide the unrequested cautionary instruction, he fails to point to any inaccuracies in the transcript. Nor does he assert any resulting prejudice. Further, at trial, he discovered what he deemed to be an error in the transcript, which thе circuit judge corrected to Fulgham’s satisfaction. Then, Fulg-ham used the transcript, not the recording, to cross-examine C.W.’s mother.
¶ 10. The cases he cites in his appellate brief do not address whether a cautionary instruction concerning the permissible use of the transcript must be requested by counsel or raised sua sponte by the court.
Coleman v. State,
¶ 11. Though Mississippi appellate courts have approved the use of transcripts when limiting instructions are given, neither the supreme court nоr this court have addressed whether a trial court
must
provide, sua sponte, a cautionary instruction. The supreme court in
Coleman
and
Dye
favorably recognized the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Aрpeals’ decision in
United States v. Onori,
B. Onori
¶ 12. In addressing various methods for handling contested transcripts, the Fifth Circuit reasoned that district judges “need not necessarily listen to the tapes or pass on the accuracy of any transcript.”
Onori,
¶ 13. But regardless of the method employed, “[ujpon request by a defendant, the jury should be instructed that a transcript is just another piece of evidence subject to objections, that it may have to be evaluated for accuracy, and that the jury need not accept any proffered transcript as accurate.” Id. (emphasis added). The Fifth Circuit further reasoned, “[a]s with other forms of potentially prejudicial evidence, the key to protecting a defendant’s rights in this situation lies in seeking limiting instructions.” Id. (emphasis added).
¶ 14. Onori’s rationale — that defendants must request a transcript-based cautionary instruction — comports with our own evidentiary rules. Mississippi Rule of Evidence 105 instructs: “When evidence which is admissible ... for one purpose but not admissible ... for another purрose is admitted, the court,
upon request,
shall restrict the evidence to its proper scope and instruct the jury accordingly.” (Emphasis added). Indeed, even when seeking to temper prеjudice in admitting prior felony convictions under M.R.E. 404(b), the burden to request a limiting instruction remains with trial counsel.
Brown v. State,
¶ 15. It is undisputed Fulgham failed to request a limiting instruction concerning the jurors’ use of the transcript. It is certainly best practice for trial courts to fashion appropriate cautionary instructions, when admitting recordings and purported transcripts. But drawing from Onori and Rule 105, wе find the burden falls on the trial counsel to request the-limiting instruction. Based on Fulgham’s failure to seek a cautioning instruction, we find no error in admission of the transcript.
¶ 16. Fulgham next argues the cirсuit judge prevented development of his theory of the case. While cross-examining C.W.’s mother, Fulgham asked about C.W.’s friendships. The circuit judge sustained the State’s objection to the rеlevance of this line of questioning. In his appellate brief, Fulgham suggests his proposed inquiry aimed at fleshing out “[wjhether [C.W.] had previously shown predatory, or sexual aggressive tendenсies, or acted inappropriately in some other way[.]” The State argues Fulgham waived this issue by failing to make a proffer on the record after the circuit judge sustained thе objection.
¶ 17. Cross-examination is limited to relevant matters.
Mitchell v. State,
¶ 18. Because Fulgham made no on-the-record prоffer of C.W.’s mother’s proposed testimony, he waived his opportunity to challenge the circuit judge’s ruling.
¶ 19. THE JUDGMENT OF THE WEBSTER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT OF CONVICTION OF COUNT I, SEXUAL BATTERY, AND SENTENCE OF TWENTY YEARS AND COUNT II, TOUCHING A CHILD FOR LUSTFUL PURPOSES, AND SENTENCE OF TEN YEARS, WITH THE SENTENCES TO RUN CONCURRENTLY, ALL IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO WEBSTER COUNTY.
Notes
. We use initials to protect the identity of minors.
. We use the terms grandmother, mother, and father to represent C.W.'s adoptive grandmother, mother, and father.
.C.W.’s grandmother was previously married to Fulgham’s father. Upon his death, she dated and eventually married Fulgham, her stepson.
