Milton Thomas was indicted in Houston County for rape. The jury convicted him of that offense and fixed his punishment at from twenty to twenty years. He was denied a new trial and the exception is to that judgment. Held:
1. There is no merit in the general grounds of the motion for new trial. The State’s evidence shows that the white girl alleged
2. On the trial and as witnesses for the State, the two girls who had been assaulted positively identified the defendant as their assailant. On direct examination, they testified that they picked him out as the person who had assaulted them from a line-up at the city’jail. The older girl also testified on direct examination that, several days after the assaults, she had stopped her car on the street in Macon near the post office; that the accused passed her driving the car he was using during the night of the assaults; that she then positively identified
3. Mrs. S. T. Ray, a witness for the defendant, testified on cross-examination that she went by the jail one night after ten o’clock to see the defendant Thomas; that the jailer would not let her see him at that hour of the night; and that she left some magazines with the jailer for the defendant. The solicitor-general then asked her if she knew that the jailer burned those magazines because they contained pictures of nude and semi-nude women? Counsel for the accused made the following objection: “Your Honor, please, I don’t see the materiality of all that, I don’t know that Mrs. Ray would know what the jailer did.” The court sustained the objection. At the conclusion of Mrs. Ray’s testimony, counsel for the accused moved for a mistrial on the ground that the question asked Mrs. Ray was an unwarranted attack on her character and therefore very prejudicial to the defendant. The motion for a mistrial was denied, and special ground 2 of the motion for new trial assigns error on this ruling. There is also no merit in this ground. If Mrs. Ray, a white woman and a witness who had testified to material facts for the accused, knew that she had carried obscene literature to the jail for delivery to the accused and because of its character the j ailer burned it, it would certainly go to her credibility as a witness, and as a witness for the accused she was subject to a thorough and sifting cross-examination by the solicitor-general. Code § 38-1705.
4. There is no merit in special ground 3 of the motion, which alleges that the judge erred, on motion therefor, in refusing to rale out of evidence all testimony relating to the fact that the witness Mrs. Ray brought to the Houston County jail for delivery to the accused magazines which contained obscene pictures of girls, since it was of no. probative value, entirely irrelevant and immaterial, and extremely prejudicial to the accused. Where the object of cross-examination is to show the interest or concern which a material witness has for the accused, great latitude should be allowed. Floyd v. Wallace, 31 Ga. 688 (1).
5. The judgment complained of is not erroneous for any reason assigned.
Judgment affirmed.
