(After stating the foregoing facts.) It is a fundamental principle in our system of jurisprudence, intended to protect the individual who is charged with crime, and to insure him of a fair and impartial trial before an unbiased jury, that the general character of the defendant and his conduct in other transactions is irrelevant unless the defendant chooses to put his character in issue. Code, §§ 38-201, 38-202;
Green
v.
State,
172
Ga.
635 (
*263
In
Cox
v.
State,
165
Ga.
145 (
. We cannot agree with the conclusions reached in the majority opinion of the Court of Appeals in the instant case. While the other offenses shown by the evidence objected to were of the same sort as the one for which the defendant was on trial, this did not render the evidence admissible, for they were wholly independent, separate, and distinct.
Williams
v.
State,
152
Ga.
498 (supra). There was absolutely no logical connection between them and the case on trial, as required by the decision in the
Cox
case, (165
Ga.
145), supra, before such evidence would be admissible for the purpose of showing intent. See also
Mims
v.
State,
207
Ga.
118 (
While Mr. Chief Justice Russell, in
Green
v.
State,
172
Ga.
635, 640 (supra), pointed out that “the rule that the character of a defendant in a criminal case can not be put in issue or attacked has been gradually chiseled away and finally located in the shadow of other principles, . . and while the principle still lives in theory as a memory of the past, it is of little practical effect in the actual trial of cases,” the rule referred to is still in the Code (§ 38-202), and the appellate courts are without power to repeal it or destroy it by chiseling it away, which would be the result if the present decision of the Court of Appeals should stand. The second division of the opinion and judgment of affirmance by the majority of the Court of Appeals as rendered is not only in conflict with the decisions of this court hereinbefore cited and referred to, but also in conflict with its own decisions in
Robinson
v.
State,
62
Ga. App.
355 (
Judgment reversed.
