Sec. 5319, Code, provides that, if motion to set aside an indictment is made before plea is entered, the indictment must be set aside if certain objections are made to appear. The objections enumerated do not include that the indictment charges no crime — a point which can, of course, be raised by demurrer. Under Sec. 5321, Code, one ground for setting aside the indictment found in Sec. 5319 is not available to a defendant who has been held to answer before indictment. By Sec. 5331, Code, it is provided that, if a demurrer to the indictment' be sustained, among other things, for failure of
None of these authorize the setting aside of indictments and resubmission, upon the motion of the court, and on the ground that the indictment charges no crime. And it seems true, also, that none of our eases decide the precise point now under discussion. We think that, notwithstanding State v. Kimble is cited in State v. Hanlin,
Over apt objection, it was permitted to ask this witness, on cross-examination, this: The witness said, without objection, that she had known defendant for twelve years, and that he had made her home his staying place. Upon this, without more, the cross-examiner asked:
Q. “Up until,the timé he broke jail here in Centerville, didn’t he?” A. “No, sir.” Q. “Now, two days following the time he broke jail in Centerville, you furnished him with food, didn’t you?” A. “No, sir, I didn’t. I ain’t seen him until yesterday.”
The court charged upon the effect of evidence “before you that, after the defendant had been arrested upon the charge for which he is now being tried, and while in jail, he broke away and went into the state of Missouri and remained there, going under an assumed name” — the jury thus being reminded of what had been obtained on this cross-examination and favored with the court’s opinion as to what had been thus obtained.
We do not question that evidence of flight is admissible, but hold such evidence may not be gotten by means of improper cross-examination, and that the cross-examination permitted here was improper and prejudicial. See State v. Rowell,
Defendant was allowed to state, without objection, that he belonged to the miners’ union. Being then asked for how many years, and whether a member of any other secret society, answer was, on objection, excluded. Let it be borne in mind that this is not a case where the defendant first brought affiliation with secret societies into the ease, and thereupon the state took a leaf out of his book and went into the church affiliation of the prosecutrix. It is the prosecutrix that testified first along these lines, and despite objections of the defense; and later, when defendant sought to put in testimony similar in effect, the objections of the state thereto were sustained. In other words, we have here a ease where, instead of there 'being a species of estoppel upon the defendant because the state but followed his lead and put in what defendant had told the court might rightly be put in, defendant was not allowed to do what prosecutrix had already been allowed to do against him. Instead of being blocked by being a pioneer in the putting in of improper testimony, defendant was not allowed to do that which the state claimed the right to do, and was permitted to do befofie defendant asked the same privilege.
It may be conceded that the testimony of both should have been excluded as a matter of sound public policy; that neither should have been permitted to lead the jury off into the fields opened by such testimony as this. But why should this be recognized as to such testimony when offered by the one and disregarded when offered by the other? Why is
2.
We think this should have been stricken out, but would
.We think it was error to allow the foregoing testimony on part of the prosecutrix and then to deny answer to said question to defendant.
Other assignments are either clearly not well taken or whati they cover is not likely to recur on retrial.
For the errors pointed out in Divisions IY and Y, the judgment must be — Reversed and Remanded.
