(After stating the foregoing facts.) Special grounds 3 and 7 of the respective amended motions complain that the court erred in failing to comply with Code: § 81-1103, which provides as follows: “The charge so written out and read shall be filed with the clerk of the court in which, it was given, and shall be accessible to all persons interested in it,” referring to requests that the judge write out his charge. The complaint is that the court held the charge as written and read from April 19, the day of the trial, until May 19, when he-filed it with the clerk. A duplicate copy of the charge had promptly been mailed to counsel. In this contention they -rely, upon
Ashley-Price Lumber Co.
v.
Henry,
23
Ga. App.
93 (
This statute was enacted by the legislature (Ga. Laws, I860, p. 42) as it appears in our Code of 1933. The act of 1877 (Ga. Laws, 1877, p. 13) amended the statute by adding the words: “as soon as delivered.” This provision, as stated -by Justice
*524
Bleckley, in
Wheatley & Co.
v.
West,
61
Ga.
401, 408, stood “as a kind of constitutional law between the bench and the bar,” referring to both Code §§ 81-1102 and 81-1103. The words “as soon as delivered” were deleted from the 1933 Code, although they appeared in prior Codes during the time the decisions cited by the defendant were written. While it is presumed that the legislature, merely by adopting the Code of 1933, intended no change in the law
(Rogers
v.
Carmichael,
184
Ga.
496 (
Complaint is further made in special ground 6 (Case No. 33222) that the court erred in failing to identify, in his charge as written, the Code section under which the accused was prosecuted. Where the Code section
is
correctly identified in the charge it is not necessary to copy it verbatim. See
Burns
v.
*525
State,
89
Ga.
527 (
Special ground 1 (Case No. 33222) contends that the court erred in not granting a motion for a mistrial based on the following testimony of a witness for the State, as recited therein:
“I had a report that Fitzgerald was hauling whisky in a car of the same description.”
This part of the testimony of the witnesses, as contained in the approved transcript of the evidence certified by the clerk and made a part of the record in this case, is as follows: “We had a report on a car similar to the car we noticed that night. The report was that the car was hauling whisky and we recognized Fitzgerald by size and description as being the man we wanted. I had never seen Fitzgerald to know him before.” Since, in case of conflict, the record as certified by the clerk must control on questions of conflict (see
Jenkins
v.
Boone,
144
Ga.
44 (
*526
Special ground 4 (Case No. 33222) complains of error in refusing to give the following charge to the jury upon timely written request: “I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that where two or more people are in an automobile and whisky is found therein, that one or two people claim that whisky to the exclusion of the other, then the burden is shifted to the State to show such circumstances or facts as would connect the other party with the possession of said whisky.” A written request to charge on an issue of the case must be apt and, indeed, almost perfect; where it is not wholly correct in stating the law, it must be refused. See
United Motor Freight Terminal Co.
v.
Hixon,
78
Ga. App.
638 (
Grounds 1 and 3 of the respective motions for a new trial assign error on the following charge of the court: “I charge you further that all admissions shall be scanned with care and confessions of guilt shall be received with great caution. A confession alone, uncorroborated by any other evidence, shall not justify conviction,” on the ground that there was no evidence that the alleged ‘confession was freely and voluntarily made; that the excerpt of the charge fails to contain instructions to the jury that whether or not a confession was actually made is a question for their determination, and that the charge assumes the confession was made instead of leaving it to them to determine whether the statement amounted to a confession. In the absence of request, the failure to expressly charge that it is for the jury to determine whether or not a confession has been made is not cause for a new trial. See
Cooper
v.
State,
12
Ga.
*527
App.
561 (4) (
It is contended by special ground 4 of the amended motion for a new trial in Case No. 33221 that the court erred in failing to charge the principle of law as to circumstantial evidence, contending that the case is based upon circumstantial evidence alone. As seen from the statement of facts, however, there was direct evidence connecting the accused with the crime of possessing whisky. Further, there was no request to charge on this subject and, where the conviction is not dependent upon circumstantial evidence alone, a failure to so charge, in the absence of request, is not error.
Wallace
v.
State,
43
Ga. App.
785 (
The general grounds of the motion for a new trial as to Case No. 33221 (possessing whisky upon which the State tax had not been paid) are without merit, since the evidence authorized the verdict and has the approval of the trial court. As to Case No. 33222 (possessing more than one quart of “spirituous liquors” as defined by the Act of the General Assembly of Georgia approved on the third day of February, 1938, and known as the Revenue Tax Act to Legalize and Control Alcoholic Beverages and Liquors), the evidence authorizes a finding that the defendant possessed more than one quart of whisky in Lee County, which is a county where yfhisky cannot legally be sold. The evidence demands a finding that the whisky under consideration was non-tax-paid. The accusation is based on that part of the statute approved February 3, 1938, known as the Revenue
*528
Tax Act to Legalize and Control Alcoholic Beverages and Liquors, codified in the Annotated Supplement of the Code as § 58-1077. The possession of more than one quart of non-tax-paid whisky in a county where whisky cannot legally be sold is not a violation of this provision of the law. See
Pierce
v.
State,
200
Ga.
384 (
Since the evidence in Case No. 33222 shows that the whisky possessed was non-tax-paid, and in a county where whisky cannot legally be sold, and since the accusation on which the prosecution proceeded shows that it was based on the Act of February 3, 1938, known as the Revenue Tax Act to Legalize and Control Alcoholic Beverages and Liquors (Code, § 58-1077) and since it is held in Pierce v. State, 200 Ga. 384 (supra), that “the possession of more than a quart of non-tax-paid whisky, in *529 a county where whisky cannot legally be sold, is not a violation” of this act, the evidence does not support the verdict and the trial court erred in failing to grant a new trial as to Case No. 33222.
Judgment affirmed as to Case No. 33221, and reversed as to Case No. 33222.
