delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is before this court a second time, on a conviction at a third trial for the crime of manslaughter and assessment of punishment at two years in the penitentiary.
The opinion of this court on the former appeal is reported in
But, on broader grounds, the ruling of the trial judge was not erroneous, in that it was within his sound discretion to deny the reading of the opinion so treating of facts and motives; and we think his indicated ruling would have been far from being improper. 2 Enc. Pl. & Pr., 710, citing State v. Wait,
Another assignment of error, here to be treated of, relates to alleged misconduct of counsel of the State and the trial judge touching the argument of the case before the jury.
The facts appear to be: While the plaintiff in error was on the witness stand on his last and third trial .be'fore a jury, he was asked by counsel of the State whether, at the committing trial before the justice of the peace or at any time before his second trial before a jury, he had ever publicly said that he killed deceased, but did it in self-defense; and attention was directed to his opportunity to have so stated on the first trial.
On cross-examination, by way of rebuttal, plaintiff fin error, in answer to questions by his own counsel, 'explained that on his preliminary examination, and on his first trial before a jury, no testimony whatever was introduced in his behalf.
Objection was made to this line of argument, and a motion was made to exclude it from consideration by the jury. The trial judge did exclude it, hut in doing so said that in his opinion the argument was legitimate. This we hold to have been manifest error.
It is argued at the bar in behalf of the State that, the provisions of our statute permitting a defendant in a criminal cause on his request to testify, and providing, that “the failure of the party defendant to make such, request and to testify in his own behalf shall not create any presumption against him.” (Code, Shannon,) sec. 5601), should be construed to have application only to such failure in the particular trial, in so far as that' comment by State’s counsel on defendant’s failure to, take the stand on a former trial is not improper, when that is proven as a fact in the particular trial. We, think tMs view too narrow. The policy of the statute» is to protect a defendant against argument based on, such failure (Staples v. State,
The error was not cured by the ruling of the trial judge, accompanied, as it was, by an approval of the argument as legitimate. For this, and another error noted in the judgment of this court, the case is reversed.
