After instructing the jury generally, and particularly calling its attention to the law of 1907, page 396, wherein it is declared that “no conviction shall be had for the offense of rape, or seduction, in this state upon the testimony of the female raped, or seduced, unless it is corroborated by such other evidence as tends to convict the defendant of the commission of the offense,” the court gave the following instruction;
“If the jury find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the complaining witness made complaint of the *62alleged commission of the offense charged in the information to another, at the earliest opportunity, and immediately after the time of the alleged commission of the offense charged; then such complaint, if any such appears in evidence, is a corroborating circumstance, tending to support her testimony, if any she has given, relating to the alleged crime of rape having been committed upon her, at the time and place alleged in the information; and the court instructs you that such complaint, if any such complaint you find from the evidence, is a circumstance which the jury should take into consideration with all other facts and circumstances in the case, as shown by the evidence, in determining the question whether a rape at the time and place charged in the information was, in fact, committed upon the complaining witness.”
Error is predicated upon the giving of this instruction.
The principal and only affirmative defense offered by appellant was that of an alibi. The purpose of the statute was to prevent the conviction of a person charged with the crime of rape or seduction, upon the testimony of the woman, without evidence of some fact or circumstance coming from a source independent of her — in other words, to prevent a prosecutrix from corroborating herself. This is made apparent by reference to the act. It in terms requires other evidence, not of the act of rape, for from the nature of the crime that would generally be impossible, but of some material fact or circumstance tending to convict the person charged. It cannot be that it was the intent of the legislature to provide that, if a prosecutrix, within a reasonable time after the offense was committed, made complaint to another, it was a matter of corroboration within the meaning of the law. If so, no purpose was served by its enactment. It has always been the rule that evidence of complaint made soon after the outrage was perpetrated could be received either as original evidence or to .sustain the evidence of the prosecutrix if impeached. This subject is fully treated and authorities collected by the following text-writers: 1 Greenleaf, Evidence (16th ed.), 162h, 469c; Wharton, Criminal Evidence {9th ed.), § 273; 4 Elliott, Evidence, §3102; 1 McClain, *63Criminal Law, § 456; 10 Ency. Evidence, 600 •; Wigmore, Evidence, 1134-1140. The rule has also been declared in this state: State v. Hunter, 18 Wash. 670, 52 Pac. 247; State v. Griffin, 43 Wash. 591, 86 Pac. 951.
In the case last cited, the purpose of such testimony and extent of its application are fully discussed. It is settled by the great weight of authority that such evidence is received, whether upon the one theory or the other, only as corroborative proof that the complainant was in fact raped. Confusion has arisen from the fact that courts and law writers have sometimes failed to differentiate between corroborative evidence in its broad sense and the mere confirmation of the testimony of a prosecutrix by reproducing her story at a time when, as the law presumes, instinctive and spontaneous utterance of bodily and mental anguish prompts the pronouncement of truth. The one is evidence of substantive facts independent of the prosecutrix, which tend in some degree to support her testimony. The other is evidence in corroboration of her testimony, and merely affecting her credibility as a witness.
The words “corroborating evidence,” as used in these statutes, has been defined by Keith, P., in the case of Mills v. Commonwealth, 93 Va. 815, 22 S. E. 863, to be “evidence which does not emanate from the mouth of the seduced female ; that it must not rest upon her credibility, but must be such evidence as adds to, strengthens, confirms and corroborates her.” It may be laid down as a general rule that corroboration in this connection means testimony of some substantive fact or circumstance independent of the statement of the prosecutrix. It may be either direct or circumstantial, and however slight it must tend to connect the defendant with the crime. State v. Jones, 48 Wash. 133, 92 Pac. 899. Corroboration of the testimony of the witness is not sufficient. Corroboration of the fact in dispute is essential. A person may be convicted without the one, if the testimony be otherwise sufficient. He cannot be convicted if the other is lacking, how*64ever credible the testimony of the prosecuting witness may be.
To single out and make prominent, by way of separate instruction, the complaint of the prosecutrix that she had been the victim of a rape, without qualification and proper explanation of its character as evidence, was calculated to mislead the jury into the belief that it, being a matter of corroboration and so styled by the trial judge, was such corroboration as is referred to in the statute, and sufficient in itself to meet the requirements thereof. A complaint to a third party is neither a positive fact nor a circumstance tending to convict a party charged, within the meaning of the law. The fact of complaint was not denied. The independent evidence from which corroboration might have been found in this case was conflicting, and the jury may have honestly disagreed as to all of it, and still under the instruction complained of found the verdict in this case. The prosecutrix had testified that appellant had ravished her. The jury would naturally seize upon the only undisputed fact in the case as corroboration, when told by the court that it was a corroborating circumstance tending to support her testimony. The statute of 1907 creates a rule of evidence and makes it the law of the case. The court must fully and clearly instruct the jury upon the material question of law involved, although there be in fact corroborating circumstances. State v. Carnagy, 106 Iowa 483, 76 N. W. 805.
It is a familiar canon of the law that, in the construction of a statute, courts will look to the old law, the mischief, and the remedy. Under the old law the instruction complained of was proper. The mischief lay in' the fact that convictions might be had upon the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix. To meet this the legislature framed a new rule, and by so doing put upon the courts the duty of qualifying the rule which, by reason of its application, induced the new enactment. The court should have safeguarded the constitutional and legal rights of appellant by saying that corroboration arising from a timely complaint could not be taken *65as corroboration tending to support the evidence of the prosecutrix in the particular that appellant was the guilty person.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed and a new trial ordered.
Rudkin, C. J., Mount, Crow, and Gose, JJ., concur.