At a bench trial, the defendant made a relevance objection when the State elicited testimony on the length of the defendant’s suspended sentence for a prior crime. We hold, under the facts of this case, that the length of the defendant’s suspended sentence was both relevant and admissible. We also reaffirm the limitation on the judicial-temperance presumption, as stated in
Fletcher v. State,
*25 Facts and Procedural History
In June 2008, a group of people, including Joshua Konopasek and Mitchell Green, gathered for a party at a house in Rochester, Indiana. At some point, Green wore Konopasek’s sunglasses and continued to wear them on his head throughout the night. Several hours later, Green prepared to leave while still in possession of the sunglasses. As Green walked through the door, Konopasek shoved him from behind. Green fell to the ground outside, and Konopasek stood over Green and said, ‘You wanna take my sh**?” He then stomped on Green’s head, which broke Green’s jaw and rendered Green unconscious.
The State charged Konopasek with battery causing serious bodily injury. At the bench trial, the State presented witnesses implicating Konopasek. Konopasek took the stand in his own defense and recounted the incident differently. He claimed that after he confronted Green about the sunglasses, Green pushed him first. Ko-nopasek also contended that although he shoved Green, he was not responsible for Green’s injuries. The facts of the case were highly controverted.
On direct examination, Konopasek’s attorney elicited testimony from Konopasek regarding his probationary status. On cross-examination, the State further inquired into Konopasek’s probation, and defense counsel objected that the inquiry was not relevant to the case. The trial court overruled the objection.
The trial court found Konopasek guilty as charged and subsequently sentenced him to eight years with six years suspended and credit for time served.
Konopasek appealed, arguing that (1) there was insufficient evidence to convict him of battery causing serious bodily injury; (2) there was insufficient evidence to disprove his self-defense claim; and (3) the trial court abused its discretion when admitting evidence elicited by the State regarding Konopasek’s probation. The Court of Appeals agreed with the trial court and found sufficient evidence to support the conviction and disprove the self-defense claim.
Konopasek v. State,
We granted transfer (1) to address the admissibility of the evidence in question and (2) to reaffirm
Fletcher v. State,
I. Admissibility of Probation Evidence
Konopasek argues that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence elicited by the State regarding his probation. The Court of Appeals decided the evidence was inadmissible but ultimately found harmless error.
Konopasek,
On direct examination, defense counsel elicited testimony from Konopasek about the days immediately following the incident:
Q: Were you, in fact, on probation at the time?
*26 A: Yes, sir, I was.
[[Image here]]
And did you meet with your probation officer? <Q
Yes, sir, I did. >
And did you tell him about Mitch Green pushing you at Ryan Eaton’s house? cp
Absolutely. p>
[[Image here]]
Q: [D]id your probation officer do a drug screen on you?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: And did you pass it?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: [L]ater that afternoon, did you go over to the police station and give a statement to the police?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: So without the police contacting you, you went over to the police department and gave a statement in regards to this incident that we’re here today for?
A: Yes, sir.
A: You didn’t have to be summonsed or prompted or have the sheriff come talk to you; you went there?
Q: Yes, sir. My probation officer strongly suggested that I make my statement.
On cross-examination, the State further inquired into Konopasek’s probation:
Q: [Y]ou testified you’re on probation, right?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Okay. And you testified that Todd Hudkins is your probation officer?
A: That’s correct.
Q: Okay. And when you went to your probation meeting a day after you had continued it to the next day, he gave you a drug screen? Right?
A: That s correct.
Q: And he gave you a drug screen because you’re on probation for a meth case out of Circuit Court?
A: That’s correct.
Q: Okay. And you’ve got quite a bit of time hanging over your head?
Before the defendant answered, the following colloquy took place:
[Defense counsel]: Objection to that, Your Honor. It’s not relevant to today’s proceeding.
[State]: Judge, I think he’s opened the door for that in the nature of the questions he’s asked his client.
[Defense counsel]: I don’t know that it depends — he’s admitted he’s on probation. I don’t know that it depends on how much time he’s got hanging over his head.
The Court: Yeah, I think the door has been opened to this line of questioning. I’ll, I’ll allow it. I’ll overrule it. Go ahead.
[[Image here]]
A: I have five years left, sir.
Q: Okay. And I’m not gonna beat the issue to death, but you — there’s been a petition filed based on this charge, right?
A: That’s correct.
Q: I mean you’re, you’re pending a review of probation with those five years potentially being unsuspended as a result of this charge?
A: That’s correct.
Before deciding whether the State’s elicited testimony regarding Konopasek’s probation is admissible, we address two threshold issues. First, we determine to what admission of evidence Konopasek directed his objection. Second, we deter *27 mine what ground or grounds Konopasek advanced at trial for that objection.
“Failure to object to the admission of evidence at trial normally results in waiver and precludes appellate review unless its admission constitutes fundamental error.”
1
Cutter v. State,
Furthermore, a defendant may not argue one ground for an objection to the admission of evidence at trial and then raise new grounds on appeal.
Gill v. State,
Indiana Evidence Rule 401 provides a liberal standard for relevancy, and we review a trial court’s ruling on relevance for an abuse of discretion.
Id.
Relevant evidence is “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Ind. Evidence Rule 401. Indiana Evidence Rule 616 explicitly makes “evidence of bias, prejudice, or interest of the witness for or against any party” relevant and
*28
admissible for impeachment purposes, as this evidence can impact the weight of the witness’s testimony.
See Dorsey v. State,
On direct examination, Konopasek testified to his probationary status in an effort to support his credibility. By stating that he was forthright about the incident with his probation officer, Konopasek wanted to leave the impression that he was an honest individual. The State further inquired into Konopasek’s probation to show a different effect Konopasek’s probation could have on his credibility: because Konopasek was facing significant revocation time, he had an interest to falsify his testimony and claim self-defense. This was a classic “he said — he said” case, and evidence impeaching Konopasek was significantly relevant. 5
We further find that the probative value of the evidence was not outweighed by unfair prejudice. See Evid. R. 403. In cases where trial testimonies are the bulk of the evidence, credibility is a key factor. As a result, impeachment evidence can be highly probative. As a probationer, Kono-pasek knew he faced significant jail time if convicted of this subsequent offense and thus had an interest in lying. Furthermore, this testimony is not unfairly prejudicial. Arguably, this same evidence could work in Konopasek’s favor. The fact that Konopasek faced significant revocation time could support a theory that Konopa-sek would not have risked violating his probation by committing a subsequent crime. In short, the probative value of the testimony was not outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
II. Judicial-Temperance Presumption
“We generally presume that in a proceeding tried to the bench a court renders its decisions solely on the basis of relevant and probative evidence.” Coleman v. State, 558 N.E.2d 1059, 1062 (Ind. 1990). This longstanding principle has been termed the judicial-temperance presumption. The judicial-temperance presumption, although broad, is not without limits.
In
Fletcher v. State,
We do not need to apply the judicial-temperance presumption to Konopa-sek’s case because the evidence in question was relevant and admissible. However, because we believe the Court of Appeals engaged the judicial-temperance presump *29 tion too broadly, we "write to reaffirm the limits on the presumption as explained in Fletcher. We also write to clarify the interplay between the presumption and harmless-error analysis.
Because the Court of Appeals found the evidence of Konopasek’s probation inadmissible, it then analyzed whether the error in admitting the evidence was harmless.
Konopasek,
Shanks
involved the admission of depraved-sexual-instinct evidence at a bench trial of a defendant charged with child molesting.
The
Shanks
court enumerated three different reasons — including the one stated in
Fletcher
— for rejecting the judicial-temperance presumption. Although the
Shanks
opinion questioned the viability of the
Fletcher
limitation, it recognized that
Fletcher
is still good law.
Shanks,
On appeal, when a defendant challenges the admissibility of evidence at a bench trial and the evidence in fact was inadmissible, the judicial-temperance presumption comes into play. One way a defendant can overcome the presumption is by showing the trial court admitted the evidence over a specific objection, as in
Fletcher.
If a defendant does overcome the presumption, the reviewing court then engages in full harmless-error analysis: the error is harmless if the “reviewing court is satisfied that the conviction is supported by substantial independent evidence of guilt so that there is no substantial likelihood that the challenged evidence contributed to the conviction.”
Meadows v. State,
Conclusion
We reaffirm the Fletcher limitation on the judicial-temperance presumption. We summarily affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals finding sufficient evidence to support Konopasek’s conviction and to disprove his self-defense claim. App. R. 58(A)(2). We conclude that the trial court properly admitted the evidence in question and affirm Konopasek’s conviction and sentence.
Notes
. Konopasek does not allege fundamental error. Fundamental error is an error "so prejudicial to the rights of the defendant as to make a fair trial impossible.”
Willey v. State,
. Konopasek concedes this issue in his reply brief: "[KJonopasek limits the issue on appeal to the error in admitting a single question from the State: ‘And you’ve got quite a bit of time hanging over your head?' ”
. Although both the State and trial court make references to Konopasek "opening the door” after the objection, the record reveals that the trial court was not fully alerted that Konopasek was making an Indiana Evidence Rule 404(b) objection. When a defendant volunteers information on a subject, he may open the door to otherwise inadmissible evidence on that subject.
See Jackson v. State,
.Konopasek alleges (1) that the admission of the evidence was "impermissible character evidence under Indiana Evidence Rule 404” and (2) that he "did not ‘open the door’ to evidence regarding his status as a probationer.”
. We note that Indiana Evidence Rule 609 limits the types of crimes usable for impeachment. Konopasek did not make a Rule 609 objection at trial, so we do not determine whether Rule 609 impacts the admissibility of the evidence in question.
. The dissent in
Shanks
stated that the majority opinion suggested that the erroneous admission "automatically require[d] reversal.”
