This is an action for damages for injuries appellant alleges he sustained by reason of negli- • gence of servants of respondent in charge of one of its trains. There was a verdict against appellant. The injury is alleged to have occurred November 29, 1911. *703 Two previous actions were instituted and dismissed before this one was begun. There was a previous trial, or mistrial, in this case.
' Appellant claims that while he was attempting to board respondent’s train at Mine No. 1 in Adair County, other cars were permitted violently to strike the car he was getting upon and that he was thrown and injured. There was evidence tending to prove injury due to the cause alleged. Respondent offered evidence tending to prove appellant was not injured at all at the time and place of in the manner alleged. There was testimony offered to impeach'appellant, and he employed the same weapon against some of respondent’s witnesses.
Appellant complains that the trial court erred in (1) admitting certain impeaching testimony; (2) instructing the jury; ■ and (3) so conducting the trial that it was unfair to appellant.
With respect to the first assignment the evidence tends to show that for many years prior to 1907 appellant had lived in the eastern part of Putnam County, Missouri; in 1907 he left Putnam County, and for a year or so had no established place of residence; he was- in various States for short periods; in 1908 he established his headquarters in Moulton, Iowa, his wife staying there, and about 1910 he went to housekeeping in that town; he traveled about'selling spectacles and jewelry; after moving out of the eastern part of Putnam County he continued frequently- to revisit it and pass through it and ply his vocation there; Moulton is but a few miles north of the eastern part of the north boundary of Putnam County; respondent offered testimony to show appellant’s reputation was bad in Moulton at the time of the trial, in 1916, and then offered testimony tending to show'his reputation in the eastern part of Putnam County where he formerly lived was bad at the time of the trial and had been at the time he left the county.
Other facts are stated in connection with the discussion of questions to which they are relevant.
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In this case appellant had lived at Moulton for several years. Some nine or ten years before he had lived in the eastern part of Putnam County and was generally and widely known by the people there. Moulton was but a few miles from the eastern part of Putnam County. County and State lines, as such, do not materially interfere with the spread of reputation. Appellant frequently revisited his old home and continued to ply there his vocation of spectacle and jewelry selling. He was still well and generally known in that community, as he had been for a great many years. With respect to the objection as to place of reputation, the trial court had a discretion to exercise which cannot be reviewed unless it was obviously abused. We cannot hold it was abused in this case. In Houk v. Branson, 17 Ind. App. l. c. 121, the reputation of a witness was proved to be bad in Crawfordsville, where he then lived. Other *706 evidence that his reputation in his old home- in the same county, where he lived several years before and which he frequently visited and where he continued to be known, was held admissible.
In Hauk v. State, 148 Ind. l. c. 261, testimony was offered to show that the reputation of the witness in Covington, his home at the time of the trial, was bad. Testimony was then offered to show that the reputation of the witness at Hillsboro, fifteen miles away, where the witness lived fifteen months before, was also bad. It ap^ peared that the witness was a doctor (as here) and continued to practice (as here) in the place of his former residence. The court held the testimony admissible.
“The general rule is that, in order to impeach a witness by proof of bad character, the predicate is a knowledge of his character in the community or neighborhood in which he resides; hut the term ‘community’ or ‘neighborhood’ is not susceptible of exact geographical definition, but means in a general way where the person has established a reputation. The inquiry is not necessarily confined to the domicile of the witness, but may extend to any community or society in which he has a well-known or established reputation. It is a matter of 'common knowledge that many men have their domiciles at one point and business at another, spend much of their time at the latter, and, in fact, have a better established reputation there than at the place of their actual domicile.” [Baer & Co. v. Cooperage & Box Mfg. Co., 159 Ala. l. c. 502, 503.] In this case the reputation in Mobile of a witness domiciled in Baltimore was admitted.
“A man’s ‘neighborhood’ is not necessarily con- ■ fined to the particular locality in which he resides, but is eo-extensive with the extent of territory occupied bv those with whom he associates and frequently comes in contact; one man’s ‘neighborhood’ may be a small hamlet, while the' neighborhood of another may be a county or state.” [Peters v. Bourneau, 22 Ill. App. l. c. 179, 180.]
The word “neighborhood” comprises “the territory wherein the person in question resides, moves, circulates. *707 does business and lias intercourse with Ms fellows.” [People v. Loris, 131 App. Div. l. c. 129.]
In State v. Henderson, 29 W. Va. l. c. 167, the court upheld the admission of testimony that the reputation of • defendant was bad in his old home community, whence he had removed seventeen years before, but in which he was well known and in which he continued to transact business and visit frequently. The court said: “The manifest object of the rule is to find out the general reputation of the person sought to be impeached or sustained ; and certainly where a man is well known, he has a reputation either for honesty or dishonesty. Anyone, who is well acquainted with those with whom such a person associates, and who know him well, is competent to speak of the reputation he has among1 them. ’ ’
In Boswell v. Blackman, 12 Ga. l. c. 593, it was proposed to prove the general reputation of the witness “in Russell County. ’ ’ The Supreme Court of Georgia, said: “Disconnected with any other proven facts, I should hold that the last named question would not do ; but before putting it, the plaintiffs in error had proven, by the impeaching witnesses, that they had known the witness sought to be impeached, for the last eight or ten years, in the County of Russell, Alabama; that he was generally known, and had a general reputation in the county. These things being true, the question propounded comes within all the reasons upon which the other question is held proper. The impeachment must be by persons acquainted with the "witness. And they are called to speak of his general character for truth and veracity — not the world over, or in London, or Paris, or Columbus, but in that circle where his real character is best known, to-wit: in the neighborhood where he livés. Now, when a witness is generally known, and has a general reputation in a county, that county may be fairly considered his vicinage :■ it is fair to infer, under such circumstances, that his true character for truth is as well known in that county, as men’s character for truth is known ordinarily in their neighborhood.”
*708 In Powers v. Presgroves, 38 Miss. l. c. 241, 242, it was said: “The rule in relation to proof of character is, that the inquiry must be made as to his general reputation, where he iis best known — what is generally said of him, by those among whom he dwells or with whom he is chiefly conversant. Ordinarily, the witness ought to come himself from the neighborhood of the person whose character is in question. But the court, unless under peculiar circumstances, will not undertake to determine, by a preliminary inquiry, whether the impeaching witness has sufficient knowledge of the fact to enable him to testify; b;ut will leave the value of his testimony to be determined by the jury. [1 Greenleaf, Ev. 601, sec. 461.] What is the plaintiff’s ‘neighborhood,’ whether one, or five, or ten miles, and the credit to be given to the witnesses, near or remote, or the character he bears in the compass of one mile, or in the county in which he lives, are all questions, under the limitations above stated, to be considered and determined by the jury, in arriving at his general character
In State v. Cushing, 14 Wash. l. c. 535, the court held it error to exclude certain impeaching testimony, saying: “If in the course of business or otherwise Newman had acquired a reputation for truth and veracity in the City of Spokane, it was competent to be given in evidence, although his place of residence may have been distant therefrom some five or six miles, as shown. ’ ’
Mr. Greenleaf, in a passage frequently approved by this court, states that a witness to reputation “must be able to state what is generally said of the person, by those among whom he dwells, or with whom he is generally conversant.”
It is apparent that any rule which would draw an arbitrary line about the spot of the residence of every witness, and by this method fix the place of origin of competent reputation, would not only violate the principle upon which reputation is admissible to prove character, but would be absurd in the extreme. With respect to such place of origin, the trial court has some discretion. *709 In the absence of any showing to the contrary, it is doubtless proper to confine the inquiry to the neighborhood of residence. In this case there were sufficient additional facts to justify the admission of the testimony. Its weight was then for the jury, and the distance of appellant’s present place of residence was a matter to be considered by them in that connection.
The case of State v. Shouse, 188 Mo. l. c. 478, is cited by appellant. That case decides, it seems, that , when there is evidence of good reputation at the place of residence at the time of trial and no evidence of bad reputation at that time, evidence, of bad reputation in another State some seven or eight years
prior to the trial
is not admissible, on the ground that time for reformation had intervened, citing 1 Greenleaf, Evidence, sec. 4591, and Missouri cases. That is not this case. Here the testimony, so far as concerns the questions to which the objections were made, had to do with appellant’s reputation at the time of trial. The case more resembles State v. Miller,
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VII. What has been said disposes of the questions presented under our rules (Simmons v. Affolter, 254 Mo. l. c. 174; Orchard v. Missouri Lumber & Mining Co., 184 S. W. l. c. 1139), and the judgment must be affirmed.
