OPINION
Appellant was convicted of credit card abuse. The jury assessed punishment, enhanced under V.T.C.A., Penal Code, § 12.-42(a), at 20 years’ confinement.
During the punishment phase of the trial, and after the introduction of evidence in that phase including expert testi *438 mony showing appellant to be the person convicted of a prior offense as alleged in the indictment, it came to the attention of the court that appellant had not pled to the enhancement count and that that count had not been read to the jury.
At that time appellant was arraigned on the enhancement count, and the indictment was then read to the jury. The court then overruled appellant’s request that the jury be instructed to disregard the testimony which had been heard at the punishment phase prior to the reading of the indictment. Appellant now contends the court erred in overruling the request in the absence of a re-offer or stipulation of that evidence.
In
Welch
v.
State,
In light of Welch, supra, the judgment is reversed and remanded.
Notes
. This writer was among the four dissenters in Welch, and still finds it anomalous that evidence introduced at the guilt/innocence phase may be considered but that which is introduced at the punishment stage but prior to the reading of the enhancement paragraph may not. The en banc decision of this Court, however, must prevail over the individual misgivings of the author of a panel opinion.
