(After stating the foregoing facts.) As was pointed out in
Corbin
v.
State,
84
Ga. App.
763 (1) (
The previous occasion on which liquor was found just outside the defendant’s yard, but next to the road and between his house and another, would not be sufficient upon which to base a conviction, but the cache found in the hay, together with the proof that the defendant had recently had liquor in fruit jars and tumblers in his house, and his conduct upon the first approach of the officer, were sufficient to authorize a jury to find that the defendant had in his possession and control a quantity of non-tax-paid liquor, and was guilty of the offense charged.
Error is assigned oh the ruling allowing the sheriff to testify that he raided the defendant’s premises as a result of a report
*609
received by him, but not requiring him to name at the same time the identity of the informant. This ruling was not improper. See
Thomas
v.
State,
85
Ga. App.
868 (
The trial court did not err in denying the motion for new trial as amended.
Judgment affirmed.
