OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was convicted of the offense of possession of cocaine with intent to deliver, and his punishment assessed by the jury at seven years in the penitentiary. The Tex-arkana Court of Appeals affirmed his conviction in a published, but as yet unreported opinion.
Sims v. State,
Appellant contended on appeal,
inter alia,
that the trial court erred, having found the State exercised one of its peremptory challenges with purposeful discrimination in violation of
Batson v. Kentucky,
*82 We now note that in its opinion the Texarkana Court held alternatively that any error committed by the trial court in applying the remedy it did was effectively invited by appellant. At the conclusion of the brief Batson hearing that was conducted in this cause, appellant’s counsel requested either that the State’s strike be disallowed or that the panel be quashed. Finding itself “not satisfied” that the prosecutor’s reasons for excluding one of the veniremen was “sufficient,” the trial court removed the last juror picked from the jury and replaced him with the erroneously challenged venireman, as. per appellant’s request. Appellant did not later object to this procedure. Nor does he now challenge the court of appeals’ alternative holding that he invited any error that was committed.
In the premises, any opinion this Court might issue on the merits of the question we granted review to decide would constitute sheer dicta. We do not render advisory opinions. See
Garrett v. State,
Accordingly, the petition is dismissed.
