Thе first special ground of the amended motion for a new trial contends that the State did not рrove the venue of the crime charged. There is sufficient evidence to show that the рrosecuting witness, J. E. Hewitt, owned the Buick in question and agreed to sell it to the defendant; that the dеfend
*743
ant made a part payment on the automobile, took possession of it, and made certain instalment payments thereafter; that the defendant later took the cаr to the Oldsmobile place in Valdosta, Lowndes County, to trade for another automobile; that he did not have a bill of sale, and that E. E. Pipkin at that establishment filled out a bill of sale for him and told him to get it signed by Hewitt and two witnesses; and that he later brought it back to that place with the signаtures thereon. Thus, there is sufficient evidence in the record to show that the instrument was uttered аnd published in Lowndes County, but the defendant is not here charged with uttering a forged instrument. The offenses оf making a forged instrument and uttering the same are separate and distinct, although knowledge that an instrument is forged is an essential ingredient of the crime of uttering. See Code §§ 26-3901, 26-3902, 26-3914; McConlogue
v.
Aderhold, 56 Fed. 2d 152;
Vaughn
v.
State,
79
Ga. App.
724 (
If the instrument was fоrged, there is ample evidence that it was uttered in Lowndes County. Since the indictment in this casе fails to charge uttering the forged instrument, but on the other hand only charges the defendant with making, signing, forging, and counterfeiting the same, and since the evidence fails to establish with any degree of clearness where this act may have taken place, the venue of the crime.is not supported by the evidence.
The remaining special assignments of error are not passed upon, as the case is to be tried again, and they are not likely to recur. Howеver, most of them deal with the failure of the trial court to give the jury in charge timely written requests оf the defendant. Code § 70-207 provides as follows: “A new trial may be granted in all cases when the рresiding judge may deliver an erroneous charge to the jury against such applicant on a material point, or refuse to give a pertinent legal charge in the language requested, when the charge so requested shall be submitted in writing.” Whenever a request to charge is made pursuant to this Code section, based on a principle of law applicable tо the case-in question, pertinent and legal in form, and the court fails to give such charge in thе language requested, error is committed.
Rogers
v.
Manning,
200
Ga.
844, 850 (
The judgment of the trial court denying the motion for a new *745 trial is error for the reasons set out in the first division of this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
