The defendant was convicted under the first count of an indictment which charged him with grand larceny, in that he feloniously took and carried away one Dodge automobile of the value of $1,200, the personal property of J. R. Hobbs. He was given an indeterminate sentence of five years minimum and seven years as a maximum imprisonment in the penitentiary. Erom this judgment of conviction he appeals.
It developed upon the trial that Reverend J. R. Hobbs, a minister of the gospel and pas *676 tor of the First Baptist Church, in the city of Birmingham, left his Dodge automobile standing in front of his church in said city during the entire afternoon of Wednesday, January 7, 1920, and that when he went to get it, at about 8:30 o’clock that night, the car was gone. The car was located on Friday night following in Athens, Ala., in the possession of a Mr. A. J. Keyes, who claimed to have bought it from this defendant. /It was afterwards returned to the owner.
During the progress of the trial in the court below innumerable exceptions were reserved to the rulings of the court, and on this appeal these exceptions have been grouped into the three principal propositions upon which the appellant relies to effect a reversal. These propositions, as stated in brief , by counsel for appellant, are a.s follows:
“(1) The question of a continuance of a case is usually in the discretion of the court, but the court must not so exercise this discretion as to contravene the Bill of Rights of the state of Alabama. Article 1, §§ 6 and 9, of the Constitution.
“(2) The trial court should not use any language which tends to bring the trial lawyer into contempt before the eyes of the jury.
“(3) During the trial of a criminal cause, where the accused is being tried for the larceny of an automobile, it is error for the court to admit evidence ,for any purpose tending to show the theft of another automobile by the same party, but at a different time and place.”
We shall deal with these propositions in the order in which they are presented.
The general and well-recognized rule is that in a prosecution for a particular offense evidence tending to show defendant guilty of another and distinct offense, disconnected with the crime charged, is inadmissible; the manifest purpose of this rule being to prevent prejudice to the defendant in the minds of the jury by the introduction of evidence of offenses for which he is not indicted, to which he is not finally to answer, and building up a conviction on inferences of guilt from the fact that he had committed another offense. The justice, fairness, and reason for th,e rule is apparent, and, as said in the case of Gassenheimer v. State,
“No man shall be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense, and of the nature and cause of the accusation made against him he shall be fully informed before he is'called to trial, is the paramount law of the land. Than that accusation he cannot be supposed to stand prepared to answer.”
From what has been said, we are clearly of the opinion that the substantial rights of the -defendant were unduly impaired by the rulings of the court, and for these reasons the judgment of the lower court must be reversed and the cause remanded.
.Reversed and remanded.
