delivered the opinion of the court.
Jacobi was convicted in the City -Court of Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama, on an indictment for criminal assault, and the judgment against him was affirmed by the Supreme-Court of that State.
The conviction was the result of a second trial of the case, and the alleged victim of the assault, who had testified at the first trial, was not present at the second. But evidence of her previous testimony was admitted against defendant’s objection, and it is contended that thereby defendant was deprived of rights secured by the Federal Constitution, ■ and denied due process of law. The question for us to decide at the outset is whether such a claim was specially set up at the.proper time and in the proper way.
The. rule is firmly established by ’the decisions of the highest court of Alabama that when a witness is beyond the jurisdiction of the court, whether he has removed from the State per *135 manently, or for an indefinite timé, his testimony on a former trial for the same offence may be given in evidence against defendant on a subsequent trial. Lowe v. State, 86 Alabama, 47; Perry v. State, 87 Alabama, 30; Pruitt v. State, 92 Alabama, 41; Matthews v. State, 96 Alabama, 62 Burton v. State, 115 Alabama, 1.
In this case evidence was introduced before the trial judge that the witness was not in the State at the time of- the trial, and that her absence was of a permanent or indefinite nature. There was no pretense of absence by procurement and there was evidence of diligence in attempting to serte process upon her. It was held that sufficient foundation for the admission of evidence of her former testimony had been laid and the Supreme Court concurred in that conclusion. Defendant objected to this preliminary proof and moved to exclude it on several' grounds, one of which was “ that the defendant has the constitutional right to be confronted by ” the witness. These objections having been overruled, evidence was introduced of the testimony given by the absent witness on direct and cross-examination on the former trial, to which defendant objected on the ground, . among others,
“
that the defendant, Jacobi, has the constitutional right to be confronted by the witnesses against him.” The trial judge overruled defendant’s objections, and each ground thereof, and admitted the evidence, and defendant duly excepted. No reference to the Constitution of the United' States was made in the objections. The constitution of Alabama provided that: “ In all criminal prosecutions the accused has a right ... to be confronted by witnesses' against’ him; ” and it is plain that the constitutional right asserted was under the state constitution.
Miller
v.
Cornwall Railroad Company,
After the'case reached the state Supreme Court, error was assigned to the admission of the evidence as being in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supreme Court did not refer tó that contention, presumably because of the settled rule in Alabama in criminal cases that when specific grounds of objection to the admission, of evidence are assigned, all others
*136
are waived,
McDaniel
v.
The State,
97 Alabama, 14; and that the Supreme Court will not decide a question relating to the admission of evidence not made and acted on in the trial court.
Freeman
v.
Swan,
22 Alabama, 106;
Robertson
v.
Robinson,
65 Alabama, 610. The Supreme Court was therefore not called upon to revise the judgment of the City Court for error not committed, and we cannot interfere with its action in adhering to the usual course of its judgments.’ If the court, however, had passed upon the question our jurisdiction might have been maintained.
Mallett
v.
North Carolina,
In
Spies
v.
Illinois,
The result is that the writ of error must be
Dismissed.
