James William Wingo appeals his convictions for first degree criminal sexual conduct and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The questions on appeal relate to the sufficiency of the indictments’ allegations as to the date of each offense, to the admission of evidence of similar crimes, and to the admission on cross-examination of testimony regarding nude photos of Wingo’s wife and testimony that Wingo had sexual relations with his wife prior to their marriage. We affirm.
I.
Wingo moved before trial to quash the two indictments charging him with the offenses for which the jury later convicted him on the ground that the indictments, dated December 5, 1988, failed to specify with any degree of particularity *175 the time in which the offenses were to have been committed. One indictment alleged Wingo “between July 4,1988 and August 25,1988, wilfully and unlawfully engage[d] in sexual battery upon [the victim], a child less than eleven years of age... .” The other indictment alleged Wingo “between July 11,1988 and August 25, 1988, wilfully and unlawfully . . . violated] Section 16-17-490, Code of Laws of S.C., 1987,” the statute creating the offense of contributing to the delinquency of a minor, by giving the victim, who was nine years old, alcoholic liquors and showing her obscene movies. The trial court denied the motion. It properly did so.
An indictment must sufficiently apprise the defendant of what he or she should be prepared to meet.
State v. Owens,
Here, both indictments sufficiently notified Wingo of the offenses with which he was charged since time is not a material element of either the offense of first degree criminal sexual assault or the offense of contributing to the delinquency of a minor and since the indictments allege the commission of the offenses during periods that preceded the date of the indictments. S.C. CODE ANN. § 16-3-652 (1976);
id.
§ 16-17-490;
see State v. Allen,
II.
Wingo objected to the testimony of the victim’s twelve-year-old female cousin that Wingo had also sexually assaulted the victim’s twelve-year-old sister using methods almost identical to those that the nine-year-old victim testified Wingo subsequently employed when he sexually assaulted her. He claimed the testimony was unfairly prejudicial. The trial court, however, allowed the evidence in. We find no reversible error.
First, the evidence of Wingo’s prior acts tended to show a common scheme or plan and the probative value of this evidence outweighed its prejudicial effect.
State v. McClellan,
III.
As we view the record, neither Wingo’s contention that the trial court erred in allowing the solicitor to elicit testimony from Wingo on cross-examination that officers found nude photographs of his wife while searching his home nor his contention that the trial court erred in allowing the solicitor to elicit testimony from Wingo on cross-examination that he had sexual relations with his wife before their marriage is properly before this court. The trial court sustained Wingo’s objection to the first inquiry without Wingo moving to strike the testimony he gave before making an objection thereto.
2
See
88 C.J.S.
Trial
§ 133, at 268 (1955) (a
*178
motion to strike is necessary where a question is answered before an objection thereto has been interposed, even though the objection is sustained). Wingo made no objection to the second inquiry.
3
State v. Sullivan,
*179
Even assuming Wingo objected to both inquiries and the court erred in allowing testimony concerning these two matters in evidence, the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Apart from the challenged evidence, we are satisfied after a full review of the entire record that sufficient competent evidence conclusively establishes Wingo’s guilt to the extent that no other rational conclusion could be reached. The trial court, therefore, committed no reversible error in admitting the testimony in evidence.
See State v. Bailey,
Affirmed.
Notes
The solicitor proffered the testimony of the victim’s sister outside the presence of the jury after Wingo’s counsel stated, “Your Honor, we wanted to place an objection in the record as to her testimony.” After the solicitor examined the victim’s sister and Wingo cross-examined her and while the jury was still out, the following occurred:
THE COURT: If the defense has any objections, state it [sic] for the record now.
MR. COLE (defendant’s counsel): No, sir.
We don’t have any objection.
The jury then returned to the courtroom and the victim’s sister testified without an objection of any kind about what happened to her after Wingo took her to his mobile home.
The solicitor questioned Wingo about “what kind of pictures” the officers found of his wife while searching his home. Wingo immediately responded that “[t]hey were her posing nude through the house.” Wingo’s counsel then objected and requested the matter be taken up outside the presence of the *178 jury. The trial judge granted his request and sent the jury out.
During arguments upon Wingo’s objection, the trial judge asked the solicitor, “Did they find any nude pictures of his wife? Is that what you are asking?”
The solicitor replied, “Yes, sir.”
The trial judge thereafter stated he would allow the question; however, when the jury returned and the solicitor resumed his cross-examination of Wingo, the following occurred:
[MR. BORSICH (the solicitor)]: Did they have a search warrant, Mr. Wingo — the police?
A.: No, sir.
Q.: Did you give them permission then?
A.: No, sir.
Q.: I believe the last question I asked you was-—
THE COURT: Is this going to be the same question?
MR. BORSICH: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: The objection is now sustained.
(Emphasis ours.) Wingo made no request that his earlier answer be stricken from the record.
No objection to the question concerning whether Wingo had sexual relations with his wife prior to their marriage appears in the record. What does appear is the following:
Q. (By the solicitor): So there was no sex going on until you got married?
A.: No, sir. I’m not saying that. I said when she first moved in for about six or seven months there wasn’t any.
Q.: But there was sex going on between you and her after that?
A.: Yes, sir, before we got married. Yes, sir.
Q.: How old was she then?
A.: Sixteen or 17.
Q.: So you have had sexual intercourse with—
THE COURT: You remember I sustained the objection to that question. MR. BORSICH: Yes, sir. Excuse me, Judge.
The trial judge had moments before upheld Wingo’s objection to the question regarding whether Wingo “[had] ever had sexual intercourse with anyone between the ages of 14,15, or 16.”
