The State presented the testimony of a police officer who had investigated the matter. On cross-examination, this witness testified that during the week prior to the trial he had been back to the motel room, No. 104, which the prosecuting witness had occupied and had also gone into some of the adjoining rooms. Defense counsel asked the witness, “While you were in the adjoining rooms, did you hear any hollering from Room 104?” The court sustained the State’s objection to this question. Had the witness been permitted to answer, he would have answered, “Yes.” The exclusion of this answer is the subject of defendant’s first assignment of error.
The purpose of the question was to determine the extent to which occupants of adjoining rooms could have heard any loud
*730
noises coming from the room occupied by the prosecuting witness on the night of the alleged rape. This evidence involved a partial reenactment of the original occurrence, and it was therefore experimental evidence. Experimental evidence is admissible, but only if it is shown that the experiment was conducted under circumstances substantially similar to those of the actual occurrence.
State v. Jones,
Defendant does not present and discuss in his brief the question sought to be raised in his second assignment of error. Accordingly, his second assignment of error is deemed abandoned. Rule 28(a), N.C. Rules of Appellate Procedure.
Defendant’s third assignment of error is directed to the trial court’s denial of his motion for nonsuit. Both the prosecutrix and the defendant agreed that they engaged in sexual intercourse, and the only issue between them was whether the prosecutrix had given her consent. Defendant contends that the case thus became a “swearing contest” between him and the prosecutrix and that the unsupported testimony of the prosecutrix should be held insufficient as a matter of law to support a rape conviction in this case. Such is not the rule in this State. The unsupported testimony of the prosecutrix in a prosecution for rape has been held in many cases sufficient to require submission of the case to the jury.
E.g., State v. Hines,
*731
Defendant next assigns error to the trial judge’s denial of his motion for a mistrial based upon a question asked of the defendant on cross-examination. The prosecuting attorney asked defendant if, “back about 1962, you were charged with raping Mary Smith and you pleaded guilty to carnal knowledge with her being a minor.” The portion of the question regarding the rape charge was clearly improper. For purposes of impeachment, a witness, including the defendant in a criminal case, may not be cross-examined as to whether he has been
charged
with a criminal offense other than the one for which he is on trial.
State v. Williams,
When I was 23 years old, I was going with a girl 19 years old. Come to find out she was 15, and I was convicted of carnal knowledge. I plead [sic] guilty to it.
In addition, the trial court, in response to a request by defendant, instructed the j'ury to disregard any reference the prosecuting attorney made to the earlier charge against defendant. Therefore, in view of defendant’s explanation and the court’s prompt curative instruction, the prosecuting attorney’s reference to the previous rape charge was not prejudicial to defendant and no justification for a new trial has been shown.
See State v. Caddell,
For his fifth and final assignment of error, defendant assigns error to the following portions of the court’s charge to the jury:
The force necessary to constitute rape is the use of force or display of force sufficient to overcome the will of the pros *732 ecuting witness and overcome any resistance that she may make.
I do finally instruct you that if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about the 31st of May, 1977, the defendant, Ed Bailey, did by the use of force or threat of force sufficient to overcome the will of [the prosecuting witness] have sexual intercourse with her without her consent and against her will, it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty of second degree rape.
Citing
State v. Burns,
Rape is sexual intercourse with a female person by force and without her consent. State v. Henderson, supra; State v. Primes,275 N.C. 61 ,165 S.E. 2d 225 ; State v. Sneeden,274 N.C. 498 ,164 S.E. 2d 190 ; State v. Overman,269 N.C. 453 , 469,153 S.E. 2d 44 ; State v. Carter,265 N.C. 626 ,144 S.E. 2d 826 . A threat of serious bodily harm which reasonably induces fear thereof constitutes the requisite force and negates consent. State v. Henderson, supra; State v. Bryant,280 N.C. 551 , 557,187 S.E. 2d 111 ; State v. Primes, supra; State v. Overman, supra; State v. Carter, supra.
Defendant’s contention that our Supreme Court in
State v. Burns, supra,
adopted an “objective standard of reasonableness” to determine the degree of force necessary to constitute one of the elements of the crime of rape appears to be based on the single sentence from the above quoted portion of the opinion in that case which states that “[a] threat of serious bodily harm which reasonably induces fear thereof constitutes the requisite
*733
force and negates consent.” We do not interpret that sentence as requiring the trial court in every prosecution for rape to instruct the jury that before they can return a verdict of guilty they must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant used or threatened to use such force as reasonably induced fear of serious bodily harm. Certainly that was not the holding in
State v. Henderson,
No error.
