OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was convicted by a jury of the offense of aggravated sexual assault and his punishment was assessed at sixty-five years imprisonment. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Nunfio v. State,
Prior to appellant’s voir dire, the State urged a motion in limine about discussing the facts of the case. It appears that both the State and appellant believed the evidence would show that the victim was a nun. The portion of the State’s motion in limine which the trial court granted directed appellant not to discuss the occupation or vocation of the victim. When appellant asked for clarification on whether he could do so in terms of a hypothetical, and posed a hypothetical question, the trial court answered “No.” Appellant did not seek to violate the motion or to otherwise preserve for appellate purposes any additional questions he would have asked. At trial, the victim testified that she was a Roman Catholic and a “member of Ursuline Order which is a congregation of religious women in the Catholic Church.”
The Court of Appeals panel issued three opinions. The lead opinion found the issue was not preserved for review, based on
Romo v. State,
The disagreement among the panel members requires us to first address the preservation issue. The trial judge granted the State’s motion in limine which restricted appellant from questioning the venire about a certain area, the vocation of the *484 victim, without first determining the propriety of the questions outside the presence of the venire. Immediately before voir dire began, the following occurred:
[The Prosecutor]: We would also have a motion in limine of course, about the— we would reurge the motion in limine about any facts of the case ... The fact that may come out in evidence the complainant is, indeed, a nun.
[The Court]: I am going to ... grant the motion with regards to the facts as to the occupation or vocation of complainant.
[Defense Counsel]: Can I use a hypothetical fact situation, if the victim is a nun, could they be fair and impartial?
[The Court]: No.
We view this question posed by appellant’s counsel as critical to the resolution of the preservation issue. The trial court was on notice of the question appellant wanted to ask, and specifically refused appellant’s request to ask the question. Appellant was required to do no more under these circumstances. The State’s “motion in limine” was directed only at questions to be asked on voir dire and was presented to the trial judge immediately prior to questioning the venire. Once appellant posed the specific question he sought to ask the venire and the judge refused to allow the question, the ruling by the trial court amounted to a direct order not to ask the question. Appellant obtained a specific ruling as to a specific question and properly preserved the issue for review. 1 See Tex.R.App.P. 52.
The standard of review in a case where the defendant claims he was improperly restricted on voir dire is whether the trial court abused its discretion.
See Smith v. State,
Here, the question posed by appellant’s counsel sought to determine potential bias or prejudice in favor of the victim by virtue of her vocation. Similar inquiries have been held to be proper.
See, e.g., Abron v. State,
This Court has held, in a long line of cases, that the error in denial of a proper question automatically establishes harm.
See, e.g., Smith v. State,
This Court has not specifically ruled on the question of whether the type of error at issue is now subject to a harm analysis under 81(b)(2). In
Cockrum v. State,
The rationale behind our exclusion of this type error from a harm analysis is that the inquiry involved in addressing the issue incorporates an analysis akin to that required under 81(b)(2) and, consequently, addressing the error itself also answers the harm inquiry. That is, once a reviewing court decides that a disallowed question was proper, the inescapable fact is that disallowance of the question denied the defendant the ability to intelligently exercise his peremptory challenges. The harm lies in the denial of the ability to intelligently exercise one’s peremptory strikes. To further require a reviewing court to undergo a harm analysis in accordance with Rule 81(b)(2) would be fruitless. As we pointed out in the case of
Roberts v. State,
Finding that the error in the trial court’s denial of the proffered question was properly preserved and constituted an abuse of discretion, we reverse the judgments of the Court of Appeals and the trial court and remand the cause to the trial court.
Notes
. The lead opinion by the court of appeals relies in part on
Ransom v. State,
wherein the court held that the denial or granting of a motion in limine, standing alone, cannot create reversible error.
Ransom v. State,
Further, the exchange at issue here — the motion by the State, the proffered question by the defendant and the ruling by the trial court — is not typical of the traditional motion in limine. “A true motion in limine does not usually seek an immediate ruling from the trial court.... Rather, its purpose is to obtain a ruling from the trial court ordering the holding of a hearing out of the jury's presence before any mention is made of the evidence." 3 M. Teague, Texas Criminal Practice Guide § 73.02[2], p. 73-6 (1990). Here, the trial court did not restrict its ruling to an order that the parties approach the bench before going into the matter the subject of the motion, but flatly refused appellant’s request that he be allowed to ask the specific question.
Cf. Norman v. State,
. In
Cockrum,
unlike the instant case, we found that the error, if any, was not preserved for review because the record “[did] not reveal any instance of the trial judge disallowing a question.”
Cockrum,
. In Roberts, we discussed the harm analysis required by Rule 81(b)(2) in conjunction with mandatory statutes and observed the following:
Prior to promulgation of the Rules of Appellate Procedure not every “error in the pro-
ceedings below” was deemed subject to a harm analysis (quoting Rule 81(b)(2)). Violation of some procedural provisions, "mandatory” in nature, was held by the Court to justify reversal of the conviction without an inquiry into harmfulness, vel non, of the error ... In cases involving breach of many procedural statutes the record will contain no concrete data from which an appellate court can meaningfully gauge the likelihood that the error did or did not contribute to the conviction or punishment of the accused.
Roberts,
