On December 26, 1917, the prosecuting attorney of King county filed an amended information, charging appellant with the commission of the crime of grand larceny, the charging part of the information being as follows:
“That, on or about the 27th of October, 1916, appellant feloniously, designedly and fraudulently pretended and represented to Thomas J. Young that the lots located at the northeast corner of the intersection of Ravenna avenue and East 62nd street, in the city of Seattle, to wit: Lots 12 and 13, in block 1, of Wade’s addition, were lots 12 and 13, in block 2, of said addition, and thereby induced the said Thomas J. Young to loan to one Frank Pruher the sum of $250 on said lots 12 and 13, in block 2, of Wade’s addition.”
*690From, a verdict of guilty and a judgment based thereon, this appeal is prosecuted. The error assigned and relied upon is that the trial court erred in sustaining the objection to an offer of proof of a tender to the prosecuting witness of the full amount of the loss occasioned by the transaction.
The acts charged as constituting the offense were committed in October, 1916. The mistake' or fraud, whichever it be, was discovered in December following. After first protesting that he had shown the right lots, appellant appears to have admitted that a mistake had been made, and then promised to reimburse the prosecuting witness for all loss occasioned thereby, if given two weeks or a month in which to raise the necessary money. This proposition was satisfactory to the prosecuting witness, and he willingly granted the time asked. The state showed in its case in chief the failure to keep this promise, and followed by showing in detail the efforts of the prosecuting witness to collect the money, in person, through his mother, and through an attorney employed by him for that purpose, running over a number of months and including the making and breaking of a good many similar promises on the part of appellant, drawing out the definite statement a number of times that nothing had been paid, apparently on the theory that these numerous unkept promises tended to show a criminal intent in the original transaction; and perhaps, also, for the purpose of affecting the credibility of the accused as a witness in his own behalf.
The appellant offered testimony tending to show that he made an honest mistake in exhibiting the wrong lots to the prosecuting witness. He admitted that he made the promises to pay, asserted a desire to pay for the purpose of righting an unintentional *691wrong, and offered to prove by tbe testimony of two witnesses that, some months after the original transaction, hnt while efforts to collect the money were still in progress, snch witnesses, in accordance with his instructions, and on his behalf, went to the attorney for the prosecuting witness and tendered to him a sum of money sufficient to take up the loan, both principal and interest. Upon objection by the state, the offer was refused. It will be observed that the only issue requiring proof on the trial was the intent of appellant, which necessarily included knowledge on his part of the falsity of the representations at the time they were made; and the state argues that restitution, or an offer of restitution, is inadmissible, and does not tend to show a lack of guilty intent.
The pecuniary loss by the prosecuting witness is not a necessary element of the offense, and it has been frequently held that the criminal character of such an act is to be determined by the means used to obtain the money and not by the use made of it afterward. In other words, the crime, if one he committed, is not expunged by restoring the fruits thereof. This position is amply supported by authority. People v. Lennox, 106 Mich. 625, 64 N. W. 488; Carlisle v. State, 77 Ala. 71; State v. Loesch (Mo.), 180 S. W. 875; People v. Reiss, 114 App. Div. 431, 99 N. Y. Supp. 1002.
We accept this rule and adhere to it, hut we think its application may he waived by the state by its course of conduct. In this case, by first opening wide the gate, entering the field, and laying before the jury, in detail, all of the circumstances • surrounding the prosecuting witness’ efforts to collect, including the promises and their breach, the jury might have been led to find a guilty intent from the breach of the *692promises only, or the evidence of unperformed promises may have so affected appellant’s credibility in the eyes of the jury, as to cause a rejection of his testimony in toto; and still further, the delay in instituting these proceedings, preceded by the unsuccessful efforts to collect, may have caused the jury to find him guilty of a failure to repay, rather than of the crime with which he is charged.
We think that, logically, as well as in fairness to the accused, the state having introduced evidence of the promises and the failure to perform, the appellant should have been permitted to show a tender, or any other facts tending to show the performance of his ' promise to repay, or excusing such performance; with leave, of course, to the state on rebuttal, to show that such tender, or other act, was done for the purpose of avoiding prosecution. The general rule is that, where the intent with which an act is done is an essential element, all the attendant circumstances are admissible, and considerable latitude is allowed in the introduction of evidence. Elliott, Evidence, § 2975. The state having availed itself of this rule, and assumed that the making and the breach of the promises tended to show guilty intent, appellant was entitled-to negative the state’s contentions by showing performance or tender.
Judgment reversed.
Chadwick, C. J., Mount, Fullerton, and Parker, JJ., concur.