The plaintiff in error, Jack Baldwin, was convicted of the murder of Alice Scott. From the evidence and the defendant’s statement the jury were authorized to find: that the accused and the deceased had been living in a state of concubinage; that, being informed that the deceased intended to marry another man, the accused went to a house where the deceased and this man were visiting, called the deceased to him, and, with a declaration that he intended to kill her, stabbed her eleven times, with the result that she died in ten minutes from the wounds. The accused introduced a witness that he was in a drunken condition shortly before the homicide; and in his statement the accused admitted that he went to the house where the homicide occurred, on the invitation of the deceased, but disclaimed knowing anything about inflicting the mortal wounds.
1. In his motion for new trial the accused complains that the court received the verdict in the absence of his counsel. The trial judge certifies that during the term counsel for the accused had absented himself from the court-room in other cases in which he was sole counsel, after the cases had been submitted to the- jury, resulting in delay in the effort to call counsel into the court-room, and he was twice admonished by the court that if he voluntarily absented himself again, the court would receive verdicts in his eases during his absence. When the jury in the present case came into the court-room to render their verdict, the defendant was present, but counsel for defendant, without permission of the court,
2. The accused called a witness to establish his character for peaceableness or violence. On cross-examination this witness was allowed to testify that he had heard of the accused whipping the deceased a time or two, over the objection that the testimony was hearsay. There was no error in this ruling. Where a defendant calls a witness to establish his good character, and the witness testifies that from general reputation he regards the defendant’s character as good, it is competent on cross-examination to elicit the witness’s information of specific instances of conduct tending to disprove the witness’s estimate of his character. Dotson v. State, 136 Ga. 243 (71 S. E. 164).
3. Complaint is made that the court failed to instruct the jury that the testimony to which reference is made in the preceding division of the opinion was admissible only for the purpose of ascertaining the accuracy of the witness’s knowledge of the defendant’s character. There was no request for such an instruction. In the absence of a written request, the failure of the judge in his charge to apply a rule of evidence to the testimony of a particular witness is not cause for a new trial. Holmes v. State, 131 Ga. 806 (63 S. E. 347).
The verdict is supported by the evidence, and no reason appears for reversing the judgment refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.