Appellant was convicted of the charge of rape on Georgia Warren, his stepdaughter, who was alleged to be under the age of eighteen years, and was. by the jury given a term of five years in the State penitentiary.
The testimony need not be set forth herein, but it seemed to be satisfactory to the jury, and has a sufficient amount of probity to cause us to say that it supported their verdict.
Appellant has six bills of exceptions. The first four can be treated together. They all are based upon the fact that certain proffered trial jurors had not paid their poll tax for the current year; that they were challenged for cause by appellant; that the court overruled such challenges, and appellant was compelled to exercise peremptory challenges on all of such jurors.
It has been held that a failure to pay a poll tax shall not disqualify a petit juror, and such is said in Art. 579, C. C. P., as follows:
“Failure to pay poll tax shall not disqualify any person from jury service.”
This article is found under Title 8, Chapter One “The Mode of Trial,” and evidences the fact that as far as trials in the courts are concerned the legislature intended to, and did, do away with the requisite of the payment of a poll tax in order *205to qualify a person as a juror. See Outlaw v. State, 125 Texas Cr. R. 636, 69 S. W. (2d) 120; Franks v. State, 139 Tex. Cr. R. 42, 138 S. W. (2d) 109.
These bills herein discussed are faulty in that it is nowhere therein shown that each thus challenged juror was subject to the payment of a poll tax; they may have been over-age, or suffering with some disability which would render them not subject thereto. See Outlaw v. State, supra. We hold that no error is shown in said bills.
We find in appellant’s remaining bills the proposition that, in this, a capital case, jurors who evidenced conscientious scruples against the infliction of death for crime, as prescribed by law, were Challenged by appellant for such reason, and the trial court refused to sustain such challenge for cause. In the instances herein set forth, it seems that the State failed to challenge such jurors, and the appellant then proffered a challenge for cause to each juror who had answered that he had such scruples. The trial court refused such a challenge for cause upon the part of the appellant, and it is shown that appellant was forced to use all his peremptory challenges, and finally had to take an objectionable juror because of the overruling of his challenge for cause of the juror who answered that he had such scruples.
Art. 616, C. C. P., sets forth the reasons for challenge of jurors in capital cases. Subdivision 11 thereof reads as follows;
“That the juror has conscientious scruples in regard to the infliction of the punishment of death for crime.”
Nowhere therein is it said that such reasons, or any certain one of them, are-sustainable alone by being offered by either the State or the accused. They seem to apply to each party to the trial, and we have so held in the case of Taylor v. State, 99 S. W. (2d) 609:
“In capital cases the defendant as well as the state has a right to challenge for cause a juror who has conscientious scruples about the infliction of the death penalty as a punishment for crime.”
We early held in the case of Gonzales v. State, 31 Tex. Cr. R. 508, 21 S. W. 253, that it was the duty of the court to excuse *206each juror who answered tht he had conscientious scruples against the infliction of death as a punishment, and it seems that in such case the court, without any suggestion on the part of the State or accused, himself excused such jurors. Nowhere does the statute say that this challenge for cause inures only to the benefit of the State, and in this instance appellant offers some ingenious arguments to show that such a juror would be objectionable to an accused.
There are further complaints relative to the argument of the district attorney which will doubtless not occur again upon another trial.
For a failure to sustain appellant’s challenge for cause as to the jurors evidencing conscientious scruples relative to the punishment of death in a capital case, this cause is reversed and remanded.