Appellant was, by information filed in the superior court for King county, charged with the crime of murder in the first degree. From a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree and a judgment and sentence based thereon, the case is brought here for review on appeal.
The first assignment of error is that the court erred in refusing to submit to the jury by proper instructions the crime of manslaughter. In State v. Palmer, 101 Wash. 396, 176 Pac. 517, it is said:
“It would seem from this that the voluntary killing upon sudden heat, which was formerly included in the crime of manslaughter, has been taken out of that classification by the act, and, as the law now stands, every killing which is accompanied by a design to kill is either murder in the first degree or murder in the second degree, depending upon whether that design was or was not accompanied by premeditation. No longer is the intentional killing upon sudden heat, or the intentional killing, no matter how provoked, classi*602fied as manslaughter. And as soon as it appears that the killing was with a design to effect death, the element of manslaughter disappears from the case. That grade of homicide is characterized by the fact that the one guilty of it possessed no design to kill. If the purpose to kill is present, the offense must be murder in one of its degrees.”
The law as thus stated is not criticized, but it is argued that it must affirmatively appear from the evidence that the crime of manslaughter is excluded before the court will be justified in refusing to submit that crime to the jury. It has been frequently held that, where the evidence excludes the lesser offense, such lesser offense should not be submitted to the jury. State v. Kruger, 60 Wash. 542, 111 Pac. 769, and authorities there cited. The statute, Rem. Code, § 2167, provides that, upon an indictment or information for an offense consisting of different degrees, the jury may find the accused not guilty of the degree charged, and guilty of any inferior degree, and therefore the correct rule is that the lesser crime must be submitted to the jury along with the greater, unless the evidence positively excludes any inference that the lesser crime was committed, and it is not incumbent upon the defendant, before such an instruction will be given, to show facts from which á jury might draw the conclusion that the lesser crime and not the greater was, in fact, committed ; still we think the trial court was right in this case in refusing to submit the crime of manslaughter, for, after a careful study of the record, we think the evidence excludes the possibility that the killing occurred without design, except possibly that it was done in an attempt to commit robbery, which is expressly made murder in the first degree by our statute. Con-, sidering all of the circumstances shown, the nature of the wound, and the point where the bullet entered at *603the left and rear part of the head of deceased, we cannot conceive that the shot was fired in self-defense, and even if so fired, the killing would have been excusable or justifiable and no crime, either of murder or manslaughter, would have been committed, and no instruction as to manslaughter would have been pertinent.
While the trial court, as we view the evidence, would have been justified in submitting to the jury first degree murder only, yet the defendant, having requested instructions on murder in the second degree and manslaughter, cannot now complain because his request was in part granted. If, under the evidence, it was error to submit the question of murder in the second degree, the defendant by his request invited such error. State v. Blaine, 64 Wash. 122, 116 Pac. 660.
It is next argued that the trial court erred in excluding certain testimony sought to be drawn from the defendant’s wife as to what her husband told her regarding his movements' on the day the crime was supposed to have been committed. This evidence, it is urged, is admissible to contradict testimony given by one of the state’s witnesses to the effect that the defendant on that day, after returning to Seattle from the scene of the crime, asked him to tell the wife, if she should inquire, certain things regarding his movements which were not true. And, also, it is urged that what the defendant then told the wife was a part of the res gestae. The cases cited to sustain this contention seem to lay down the rule that, where an attempt is made to impeach a witness by proving former statements made by him in conflict with his testimony, his credit cannot be sustained by proof that he made, to other persons before being called as a witness, the same statements as detailed in his testimony, but such state*604ments may be admissible, if made before the effect could be foreseen, to show that bis testimony is not a fabrication of recent date. People v. Doyell, 48 Cal. 85; Stolp v. Blair, 68 Ill. 541; State v. Hendricks, 32 Kan. 559, 4 Pac. 1050; Hester v. Commonwealth, 85 Pa. St. 139; Ogden v. Peters, 15 Barb. (N. Y.) 560. This rule does not help the defendant, as be did not offer himself as a witness, did not testify as to bis movements or as to any statement be bad made concerning them, and the state bad no occasion to try to impeach him. The statements sought to be proven by the testimony of the wife were simply self-serving declarations and were too remote in time to- be a part of the res gestae.
Tbe witness Good, when be first read of tbe disappearance of tbe deceased, went to tbe sheriff’s office and said in effect that, if tbe deceased disappeared on Wednesday, there was nothing in what be bad to say, but if be disappeared on Friday, then be knew something which might be of assistance in unraveling tbe mystery, and further intimated that tbe knowledge which be possessed might cause those guilty to seek to put bim out of tbe way. He then wrote tbe defendant’s name on a slip of paper, sealed it in an envelope and gave it to tbe deputy sheriff, to be opened only if be, Good, disappeared or when tbe body of tbe missing man might be found, saying that, if be were killed or disappeared, tbe person named on tbe slip would be responsible. Nothing regarding tbe writing of tbe name or tbe leaving of tbe envelope was touched upon in tbe direct examination of tbe witness Good, but upon cross-examination all of tbe facts were brought .out except only tbe name written upon tbe slip of- paper, and on redirect examination tbe paper bearing tbe defendant’s name was, on tbe state’s offer, introduced in evi*605deuce. The defendant argues that this was prejudicial. If so, he cannot complain. He took the chance involved in a searching, examination of the state’s witness, and having developed the facts of the writing of the name and the depositing of it with the sheriff and all the details surrounding it, he cannot now complain, because, under familiar and well settled rules of law, the state took advantage of what he had developed and placed before the jury that which he had made proper and material.
We have examined with care each one of appellant’s numerous assignments of error, have faithfully read the record, and fail to find any prejudicial error committed by the trial court. To discuss in detail, or even to state each assignment so that the point raised can be fully understood, would unduly extend this opinion, and as each point made is easily solvable by well settled rules of law, no good purpose could be served by such statement or discussion. Appellant has twice been found guilty by a jury. The trial, which we have reviewed, was fairly conducted, appellant’s rights were ably guarded by competent and eminent counsel, and he must abide the result. The judgment is affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Fullerton, Mount, and Bridges, JJ., concur.