Defendant appeals as of right his February 12, 1987, conviction by jury of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, MCL 750.520b(1)(b)(ii); MSA 28.788(2)(1)(b)(ii). Defendant was the stepfather of the then fourteen-year-old victim. Defendant also appeals his sentence, adjudged on March 20, 1987, of twenty to forty years imprisonment, with thirty-nine days credit for time served._
*664 Defendant’s first claim of error is that the trial court erred in allowing the prosecutor to present the rebuttal testimony of the victim and that of her father over defense objection.
At trial, the defense theory was that the allegations of defendant’s sexual abuse of the victim which formed the basis of the complaint in this case were fabricated at the instigation of the victim’s mother because the latter held a grudge against defendant. During presentation of the defense case, defense counsel elicited the testimony of two witnesses that they heard the victim’s mother say that she was going to "get” the defendant. The witnesses testified that they heard this comment in the courtroom on a date which the victim’s mother testified was the date she was divorced from defendant.
At the close of the defense case, the prosecution called the victim’s father as a rebuttal witness who, over defense counsel’s objection as to relevancy, testified that the victim’s character was such that her mother could not have prevailed upon her to testify falsely. The prosecutor then called the victim as a rebuttal witness. The victim testified that she had not testified untruthfully on direct examination for the purpose of helping her mother obtain a divorce from defendant. Defense counsel objected, arguing first that the prosecutor’s question had been asked and answered during direct examination, and second, that the victim’s rebuttal testimony was not proper redirect examination. The trial court overruled the objections, noting that defense counsel had directed questions concerning the divorce of defendant and the victim’s mother to the victim’s mother on cross-examination rather than to the victim.
On appeal, defendant claims that the testimony of both rebuttal witnesses was improperly admit
*665
ted and grounds for reversal. The decision to admit evidence in rebuttal rests within the trial court’s discretion.
People v
Hubbard,
Defendant argues that the testimony of the victim’s father improperly vouched for the victim’s character for truthfulness, and that this testimony was admitted in violation of MRE 404(a). However, at trial, defendant objected only on the ground that the testimony was not relevant. An objection based on one ground is insufficient to preserve an appellate attack based on a different ground.
In re Davis,
Further, contrary to defendant’s assertions, evidence of the victim’s character for truthfulness was admissible. In the people’s case in chief, defense counsel questioned neither the victim’s mother nor the victim herself concerning the de *666 fense theory of fabrication, but merely established that the victim’s mother did not like the defendant. The victim’s mother did not recall whether, on the day of the divorce, she said she would "get” the defendant. The defense' opening statement, which was reserved until immediately before presentation of its case, supported by the testimony of defense witnesses, injected for the first time the theory that the victim’s allegations were concocted in response to her mother’s grudge against her stepfather. The victim’s credibility was attacked in the defense case, and rebuttal evidence concerning her character for truthfulness was properly admitted pursuant to MRE 404(a)(4) and 608(a). Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the prosecutor to present the testimony of the victim’s father to the jury in rebuttal.
Defendant also argues that the victim’s rebuttal testimony was improperly admitted. The prosecutor confined his inquiry of this witness to whether she had fabricated her direct examination testimony, and had done so for the purpose of helping her mother obtain a divorce from defendant. Neither the prosecutor nor defense counsel questioned the victim in this vein during the prosecution’s case in chief. Again, the trial court’s permitting such testimony in rebuttal does not constitute an abuse of discretion. Even had the trial court ruled improperly, any error was harmless in light of defendant’s extremely unconvincing testimony. Stubl, supra.
Nor do the facts of this case require reversal under
People v Losey,
Defendant’s second claim of error is that the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing defendant to twenty to forty years imprisonment. The statutory maximum sentence for first-degree criminal sexual conduct is life imprisonment. Defendant, then forty-eight years old, had no prior criminal record, an extensive employment history, and various physical infirmities. Nevertheless, the trial court departed from the sentencing guidelines minimum range of six to ten years.
Departures are expected, and as long as the trial court articulates permissible reasons to support the departure, we do not afford relief unless our appellate conscience is shocked.
People v Coles,
The factors relied upon by the trial court in departing from the sentencing guidelines range were proper. However, the sentence imposed was not justified by those factors.
People v Kenneth Williams,
Defendant’s conviction is affirmed, and the case remanded for resentencing.
