On Jаnuary 31, 2008, the State filed accusations against Appellant Hwa Ja Lee, charging her with committing the misdemeanor offenses of prostitution and keeping a place of prostitution on or about June 30, 2006. On July 14, 2008, the State filed amended accusations charging that, on or about June 30, 2006 through on or about July 11, 2006, Appellant committed the misdemeanor offenses of pimping and keeping a place of prostitution.
At trial prior to opening statements, Appellant raised the statute of limitations defense set forth in OCGA § 17-3-1 (d), which provides that “[pjrosecutions for misdemeаnors must be commenced within two years after the commission of the crime.” Based upon the filing date of the original accusations, the trial court ruled that the statute of limitations had not expired. The court further ruled that Appellant could not argue to the jury that the proseсution was barred by the statute of limitations on the ground that the amended accusations were not filed until more than two years after the datе of the offenses. However, in its charge to the jury, the trial court included the suggested pattern jury instructions on the statute of limitations, stating in part аs follows: “If you find from the evidence that the accusation in this case was not filed within two years after the offense was committed, it would be yоur duty to acquit this defendant.” The jury found Appellant guilty on the amended accusations, and the trial court entered judgments of conviction and sentences for both pimping and keeping a place of prostitution. The trial court subsequently denied motions in arrest of judgment and for new trial.
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The Court of Appeals reversed the conviction for pimping because Appellant was charged with that offense only after a substantial amendment to the accusation more than two years after the alleged commission thereof.
Lee v. State,
“In a criminal case the law is addressed to the court, and the jury is not concerned with questions of law except as the law relevant to the case is given in charge to the jury. [Cit.]”
State v. Finkelstein,
However, at the time that the trial court initially ruled on the statute of limitations defense, which was before the presentation of evidence, the court properly declined to apply the defense as a matter of law to keeping a house of prostitution, because that same charge was included in the оriginal accusation. The trial court would have been authorized to inform the jurors of its legal ruling that the date of the accusation for kеeping a house of prostitution must be considered to be January 31, 2008, which was the date of the original accusation.
See Mobley v. State,
If a defendant prevails on a pretrial plea in bar on the statute of limitations, the chаrge should be dismissed; if the State prevails on this issue before trial, the defendant may still require the State to prove at trial that the charge is nоt barred by the statute of limitations. [Cit.] (“At trial, the burden is unquestionably upon the state to prove that a crime occurred within the statute of limitation, оr, if an exception to the statute is alleged, to prove that the case properly falls within the exception.”); [cit.]
Jenkins v. State,
In the Court of Appeals, Appellant enumerated as error the trial court’s denial of the motion for new trial on the ground that the only evidence showed that the convictions were barrеd by the statute of limitations. The Court of Appeals erred in failing to address this enumeration and to find that the evidence of keeping a house of prostitution was insufficient. That insufficiency of the evidence obviously could be neither waived for appeal nor considered harmless. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals must be affirmed with respect to pimping, but reversed as to keeping a house *98 of prostitution.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
