OPINION
S.M. (Mother) appeals the termination of her parental rights in her four children. She presents two issues:
I. Whether the trial court erred by allowing the State to recall her to testify on the second day of the termination hearing; and
II. Whether the trial court erred by excluding her from the courtroom during her children’s testimony.
We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In January of 1995, Mother came home intoxicated and began hitting her two older children, ages seven and nine. Mother’s sister, who had been babysitting for the children, reported the abuse to the police and alleged that the children had endured similar traumas many times. The Elkhart County Office of Family and Children (the State) removed Mother’s four children from her home and placed them with their maternal grandmother (the children had not lived with their respective biological fathers for at least a year). In May of 1995, the children were adjudicated to be Children in Need of Services (CHINS) due to Mother’s physical abuse of her two older children and her neglect of the younger two.
The children continued living with their grandmother after the CHINS adjudication. This heightened the already intense animosity between Mother and the grandmother. Mother’s supervised visits with the children became difficult. Eventually, the court withdrew her visitation privilege and issued a no-contact order.
The court also ordered Mother to participate in an alcohol treatment program. Mother attended at least three different programs but failed to complete any of them to the satisfaction of the program sponsors. In March of 1996, the court held Mother in contempt of court for failing to stay in the alcohol treatment programs and ordered her to spend ten days in jail. Three months later, the court ordered Mother to attend a second contempt hearing concerning the alcohol treatment requirement. Mother came to the hearing intoxicated. The court again held her in contempt and ordered jail time. After her release from jail, Mother continued drinking sporadically through at least July of 1997.
The State filed a petition to terminate parental rights in May of 1996. After several delays and continuances, the court scheduled the termination hearing for December of 1997. Three months prior to the scheduled hearing, the State filed a motion to allow the two older children to testify outside Mother’s presence. The motion was supported by a psychiatrist’s affidavit, which stated that testifying in the courtroom in Mother’s presence would create a substantial likelihood of emotional or mental harm to the children. The court granted the motion over Mother’s opposition.
At the termination hearing, the State first presented evidence to terminate the parental rights of the children’s respective fathers, either voluntarily or by default. The State *598 then presented evidence against Mother. During the presentation of evidence, the State called Mother as an adverse witness. After counsel for both sides had completed their questioning of Mother, the State called other witnesses, including the two children. During the children’s testimony, the court required Mother to leave the courtroom.
After the children testified, the trial court continued the hearing until the following month. In the weeks between the hearing dates, Mother submitted several recently completed documents to the family caseworker. Included among the documents was a form on which Mother had stated that she had no history of alcohol abuse. When the hearing resumed, the State recalled Mother to elicit testimony about her statement on that document. Mother’s counsel objected to having Mother recalled; the trial court overruled the objection.
At the close of the evidence, the trial court took the matter under advisement. A few weeks later, the court granted the termination petition. Mother now appeals.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. Trial Court’s Decision to Allow State to Recall Witness
Mother maintains that the trial court erred when it allowed the State to recall her for testimony about the document. She contends that the error prejudiced her because the trial judge based one of its findings of fact on the testimony, i.e., the court found that she had lied on the document concerning her history of alcohol abuse. She further contends that the error prejudiced her because she had no opportunity to present responsive evidence.
The State contends that Mother had a sufficient opportunity to respond to the evidence. In addition, the State maintains that the decision to allow the recall was within the trial court’s discretion.
The State is correct. A trial judge has discretion to determine whether a party may recall a witness. Ind. Evidence Rule 611(a)(1);
May v. State,
Moreover, the document was merely additional evidence of several problems that rendered Mother unable to provide a stable home for her children. Even if it had been error to admit the document and to make the related fact finding, the trial judge would have had sufficient evidence to terminate Mother’s parental rights. When a trial judge makes an erroneous fact finding that is superfluous to the judgment, the error does not warrant reversal.
See Williams v. Rogier,
II. Exclusion of Mother from Courtroom
Mother raises two challenges to the trial court’s decision to exclude her from the courtroom during the children’s testimony. First, Mother contends that the psychiatrist’s affidavit which supported the State’s motion was inadmissible and insufficient. Second, Mother contends that the termination statute authorizes only two methods for presenting children’s testimony outside their parents’ presence: closed-circuit television testimony *599 or videotaped testimony. IC 31-35-5-2, -3. According to Mother, the trial court violated her due process rights by failing to adhere to the statutory procedures concerning children’s testimony.
In response, the State maintains that the psychiatrist’s affidavit was admissible and was sufficient to support the trial court’s ruling. The State also maintains that Mother waived any challenge to her exclusion from the courtroom by failing to object at the time the children testified.
We need not consider whether the affidavit was admissible or was sufficient, because, as explained below, we conclude that the trial court erred by excluding Mother from the courtroom. We hold, however, that Mother waived the trial court’s error by failing to present a timely objection.
As the State points out, Mother’s counsel did not object when the trial court stated that Mother would be excluded from the courtroom while the children testified. The State also points out that a litigant must object to an evidentiary ruling in order to preserve the ruling for appeal.
See In Re D.G.,
There is, however, an exception to the waiver requirement: if the ruling at issue was fundamental error, this court must reverse the trial court regardless of the lack of objection. We must thus determine whether the exclusion of Mother from the courtroom was error, and if so, whether the error was fundamental. 3
To determine whether Mother’s exclusion was error, we look first to IC 31-35-5-1 — 7, which controls children’s out-of-court testimony in termination actions. The statute assumes that the parent will be present in the courtroom and authorizes only two methods for presenting children’s testimony outside the courtroom: closed circuit television or videotape. IC 31-35-5-2, -3.
The tenets underlying the statute received extensive attention from the courts for several years after its 1987 enactment.
4
State
*600
courts as well as the United States Supreme Court considered whether the use of similar procedures in criminal cases violated state or federal constitutional confrontation rights.
See e.g. Coy v. Iowa
Having determined that the trial court erred, we must now decide whether the error was fundamental. The fundamental error doctrine applies to egregious trial errors. In order for this court to overturn a trial court ruling based on fundamental error, the error must have been “a clearly blatant violation of basic and elementary principles,
and
the harm or potential for harm therefrom must be substantial and appear clearly and prospectively.”
Reynolds v. State,
Here, the harm from the error was not substantial enough to rise to the level of fundamental error. Although the children’s testimony was undoubtedly persuasive for the trial court, the testimony was reflective of other evidence the trial court received. The children testified that Mother was often intoxicated, that she was physically abusive toward them, and that they were afraid of her. Record at 345-58. Evidence from other witnesses addressed these matters in greater detail. Record at 395, 407, 413-14, 422, 701, 756-57, 805, 814-15. Given that the children’s testimony reiterated other evidence presented to the trial court, the harm arising from the procedural error in presenting their testimony was not substantial enough to be deemed fundamental error. As such, Mother waived the error by failing to object at trial.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Though not technically an evidentiary ruling, the trial court’s decision to exclude Mother from the courtroom is akin to such a ruling. As such, an objection was required to preserve the ruling for appeal.
. Counsel’s original opposition to the State’s motion, recorded at the hearing on the motion, did not preserve the objection for appeal.
See Poulton v. State,
. Our courts have applied the fundamental error doctrine in termination cases.
See, e,g., In re D.G.,
. The original statute, codified as IC 31-6-16-1, applied to Child In Need of Services actions; the legislature amended that statute in 1990 to make it applicable to termination actions. In 1997, the legislature revised and recodified the statute. The statute applicable to termination actions is now codified as IC 31-35-5-1 — 7.
. The original criminal statute allowed closed-circuit or videotaped testimony such that the defendant could observe and hear the child without the child observing or hearing the defendant. In response to our Supreme Court's decision in
Brady,
