Defendant claims that the rejected testimony should have been received, because it is material .in actions for criminal conversation, to ascertain upon what terms the husband and wife lived together before the seduction, and competent to show this by their language and deportment toward each*, their correspondence together, and conversation and correspondence with third parties. 1 Greenl. Ev., § 102; 2 Id., §| 55, 56; Gilchrist v. Bale, 8 Watts (Pa.), 355.
The defendant simply offered to show by the wife’s declaration to the witness, that she had complained of being left without adequate support. This might well be, without the destitution proceeding from the fact that the parties lived together upon bad terms.
There is not sufficient point, certainty and definiteness to the proposed testimony to justify a reversal because of its rejection; the more especially as the witness was allowed to state that to be -true in fact, of which it was proposed to show the wife had made complaint.
On the trial, the defendant, among other instructions, asked the court to give the following: “The general moral character of a witness may be given in evidence to test his credibility, but particular acts of immorality, such as want of chastity, are not competent to be given in evidence to discredit the testimony of a witness.” Which instruction was given by the court, modified as follows: 11 Testing the credibility of a witnesses giving to his testimony only such weight as the jury conclude it is entitled to in view of its consistency with other facts proven in the case, and the corroborating circumstances, if any, appearing in proof in the case. Defendant excepted to the modification.
Relating to the general subject is the following statutory provision: “ The general moral character of a witness may be proved for the purpose of testing his credibility. Rev., § 3997.
The question in relation to Mrs. Mattock’s character was improper; no foundation as to the knowledge of the witness was laid (but this objection was not made), nor did the question call for her general moral character. Upon the whole record we are of the opinion that the attention
We do not see here, error of such materiality as to justify us in reversing the judgment, the more especially, as, upon the whole case, and we have all the evidence, we are satisfied that the action of the court now under consideration worked no prejudice to the appellant. Bev., § 3111.
The court followed the rule on this subject, adopted by this court in The State v. Williams (20 Iowa, 98); and in The State v. Wilson, at present term.
Affirmed.