Dеfendant was convicted of selling phencyclidine in violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act. Held:
1. Defendant filed a discovery motion and a notice to produce. In response to these motions, the state furnishеd a list of witnesses and a copy of the report from the State Crime Laboratory. The state also advised thе trial court that there was no evidence favorable to defendant in its
*441
files. The trial court then denied the motiоns. The defendant in a criminal case cannot compel the discovery and inspection of evidencе in the possession of the state.
Whitlock v. State,
2. A witness for the state, the Sheriff of Monroe County, was permitted over objection to testify as to the content of a telephone conversation he had with Dennis Smarr, the individual to whom dеfendant allegedly sold the phencyclidine. The substance of the conversation was that Smarr volunteered to act as an undercover agent for the sheriff by making drug purchases in the county. The trial court admitted the sheriff’s testimony for the limited purpose of explaining motive or conduct of this witness or of Dennis Smarr. This testimony was explanatory of Smarr’s conduct in purchasing controlled substances and was admissible. Code § 38-302 authorizes the admission of a conversation which otherwise might be inadmissible as hearsay when the conversation explains conduct and ascеrtains motive. In another drug case,
Watson v. State,
This ruling of law is erroneous whether with or without the benefit of аn enumeration of error and we therefore expressly overrule the holding in Division 3 of Watson.
3. The state’s witness, Smarr, was permitted to testify over defendant’s objection that he had used marijuana in Viet Nam. The objection was that whether the witness had used marijuana in a foreign country was irrelevant and immaterial to any issue in this case. We *442 agree that this testimony was inadmissible as a part of the state’s case. However, the question could not have harmed the defendant as its only possible effect could have been to impeach one who was an adversary witness to thе defendant. Nothing held in Watson v. State, supra, requires a holding to the contrary.
4. In this case Smarr was permitted to testify over the objection that it was immaterial and irrelevant that while acting as a police agent he had purchased drugs from fourteen different persons. In
Winget v. State,
5. Defendant submitted written requests to charge Code § 26-505 which provides that a defendant may be conviсted of an included crime and defines that term; and that possession of phencyclidine is a lesser included crime of the sale of that substance and that the jury may find the defendant guilty of the lesser offense if they find defendant not guilty of the greater offense. These requests were denied. It is never error for a trial court to refuse to charge on a lesser included offense even though requested in writing when the evidence does not reasonably raise the issuе that defendant may be only guilty of the lesser crime.
Myers v. State,
6. The evidence authorized the conviction.
7. All other enumerations of error are without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
