(After stating the foregoing facts.) Section 38-415 of the Code gives to the defendant the right to make to the court and jury such statement in the case as he may deem proper in his defense. This right, however, is not entirely unlimited. While the court may so far restrain the prisoner’s statement as to prevent his occupying the time of the court and jury with long, rambling, and irrelevant matter, yet as to all matters connected with the case the prisoner may make such statement as he may think proper, and he should not be restricted to stating su'ch facts as would be admissible in evidence. It has repeatedly been held that the rules of evidence have no application to the defendant’s statement. See
Prater
v.
State,
160
Ga.
142 (
In the instant case, the interruption by the court of the defendant in making his statement occurred so early in the statement that the court had no intimation of what he was going to say or how long it would take him to say it. The purpose of giving the courts any power to regulate statements of defendants is twofold: first, without regard to rules of evidence, to prevent the defendant from injecting into the case prejudicial matter wholly foreign to the issues of the case or any connection that the defendant may have had with it; second, in the interest of the conservation of the time of the court and jury, to prevent the defendant from occupying it with long, rambling, and irrelevant matter. In the instant case, the interruption of the defendant in the making of his statement was harmful and prejudicial error requiring another trial of the case.
The defendant, in his statement to the jury, admitted the killing of the deceased. However, it is insisted that there was no other direct testimony tending to prove that the defendant killed the deceased, and that for this reason the court should have charged the jury the law with reference to circumstantial evidence.
Where the accused in his statement to the jury admits the shooting, but claims justification, as in the present case, the case is one not wholly dependent upon circumstantial evidence, and the failure of the court to charge upon that subject is not reversible error. See
Harris
v.
State,
152
Ga.
193, 194 (5) (
Since the case is being reversed on one of the special grounds, it is deemed unnecessary to pass on the general grounds.
Judgment reversed.
