Appellant was tried before a jury on a multi-count indictment which alleged his commission of numerous offenses against several members of a family. The jury found him guilty of only one count of aggravated assault against one of the family members. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and sentence entered by the trial court on the jury’s guilty verdict.
1. Appellant had requested a charge on simple assault as a lesser included offense of aggravated assault. The trial court’s failure to give this requested charge is enumerated as error.
Simple assault “is necessarily a lesser included offense of the greater crime of aggravated assault and is an essential part thereof.”
Smith v. State,
2. Over objection, the investigating officer was allowed to testify that, in her opinion, the family members did not “have the appear *242 anee of people [who] were trying to make up a story. . . .” This evidentiary ruling is enumerated as error.
The trial court erred in allowing the testimony. “An expert witness may not testify as to his opinion of the victim’s truthfulness. [Cits.] . . . [A]n expert witness may not put his . . . stamp of believability on the victim’s story. [Cit.]”
State v. Oliver,
The question yet remains, however, as to whether the error was harmful. The jury acquitted appellant of all but one of the crimes which he allegedly had committed against the family members. It is thus apparent that the jury could not have been influenced by the investigating officer’s impermissible bolstering of the general credibility of the family members, but made an independent determination as to the specific credibility of each family member and the relative merits of each count of the indictment. As to that count upon which a guilty verdict was returned, appellant admitted that he had confronted the victim and had drawn a gun, urging only that he had never pointed the gun directly at the victim. Under these circumstances, it is highly probable that the erroneously admitted opinion of the investigating officer did not contribute to the verdict. See
Remine v. State,
