For the murder of Rice Willey, his brother-in-law, appellant has been condemned to life imprisonment in the State penitentiary. The bail feature of this case is reported in 190 S. W. (2d) 825.
The questions presented for review render necessary an extended statement of the facts.
Benton Willey died in 1931 and left surviving him his widow, Mrs. Julia Willey, seventy-nine years of age at the time of the trial, and five children, viz, Rice Willey (the deceased), Miss Julia Willey, Jennie Kennedy, wife of appellant, Oma Jay, wife of Bud Jay, and Adelia Ward, wife of Benton Ward. At the time of the death of Benton Willey, he and his family resided upon ¡a one-hundred-sixty-acre tract of land known as the home place, which was community property. Mrs. Willey owned as her separate property two hundred eighty-one acres of land situated about one-half mile from the home place. Deceased, though single, was not living at the home of his parents at the time of his father’s death. There is a suggestion in the-testimony that he and his father did not get along very well. After the father’s death, deceased moved into the home of his mother and took charge of her business. Deceased continued to reside as a tenant upon the home place until his death. Appellant and his family resided as tenants upon the two-hundred-eighty-one-acre tract.
The first difficulty between deceased and appellant arose in 1940 and was brought about relative to terracing of the two hundred eighty-one acres. This difficulty ended in a fist fight in which deceased received a cut in the head. Appellant apologized, but deceased made the statement that he would never forget it. At least a partial reconciliation appears to have been effected. The next difficulty occurred in 1943 or two years before the killing. This arose over the threshing of the rent maize *218on the two hundred eighty-one acres. It appears that appellant had a crew threshing his crop and was having the rent threshed at the same time. Deceased appeared and ordered the threshing stopped.
According to the witness Lawson, the deceased, after the threshing had been stopped, made the statement to him that he was going to kill - the appellant. About a year thereafter, which would be a year before the killing, Lawson communicated to appellant the threat deceased had made by saying to him, “I have been told that Rice has said he would kill you.” In that conversation appellant said to Lawson, “I am going to see to it that Rice don’t beat.my wife out of her part of the estate.”
The witness Woolems testified that about six weeks prior to the killing, he and his wife visited in the home of deceased with the intent of going on a fishing trip; that on that occasion deceased made mention of the relation existing between him and the appellant and that in that connection said, concerning appellant, “Mine and brother’s trouble is not all over yet, and when the smoke clears away one of us is not going to be here,” and further said, “All my folks have lived to be old.” The witness further testified that on that occasion he saw a large revolver and a bottle of whisky in the glove compartment of deceased’s car. Two days thereafter, Woolems told appellant what the deceased had said.
Following the threshing incident, deceased quit speaking to the appellant and continued in that attitude until his death.
It was decided by the family that, as a result of the threshing incident, the deceased and appellant should thereafter pay ‘an annual cash rental for the place rented by each. Appellant’s rent was fixed at $600.00 and that of the deceased, at $300.00.
Appellant and his wife had lived on the two hundred eighty-one acres for twenty years. It appears to have been generally understood — at least by some members of the family — that, in the event Mrs. Willey decided to sell that tract of land, the appellant and his wife wanted to buy it and that they should have the refusal to purchase. On October 6, 1945, or ten days before the killing, appellant went to Mrs. Willey, the mother, who at the time was living with the daughter, Julia, at Brady, Texas, to see about renting the two hundred eighty-one acres for the year 1946. He was then informed that about a week prior Mrs. Willey had agreed to sell the two hundred eighty-one acres to *219the deceased for $47.00 per acre. Upon appellant’s inquiring as to why he could not buy it, he was told by Mrs. Willey that “Rice asked for it first,” and that she wanted Rice to have the place.
According to the testimony of Julia Willey, this information made appellant angry and he offered Mrs. Willey $10.00 an acre more for the place than deceased had agreed to give. Only Mrs. Willey, and the deceased, and Julia Willey appeared to have known anything about the agreement to sell to deceased. None of the other children appear to have been consulted. Julia Willey further testified that appellant on this occasion said, “Many tears would be shed,” and “It would not turn out like we had planned it,” and “Well, I suppose there is nothing left for me to do, but to go out there and see that he does not get it.”
It was undisputed that an oil well had been discovered about one-half mile from the two hundred eighty-o'ne acres. The agreement to sell to deceased included all the minerals, while appellant’s offer of $57.00 per acre was for the surface estate only— the minerals to be retained by Mrs. Willey. Regardless of this difference in price, appellant’s offer was refused and he was placed upon notice that he would have to relinquish possession of the two hundred eighty-one acres.
Appellant and his wife then began an endeavor to buy the one-hundred-sixty acre home place, where deceased resided. To convey that property, all the children were required to sign the deed. Deceased refused to sell or consider the proposition of selling that place to his sister, Mrs. Kennedy. Appellant and his wife were facing the problem of finding some place upon which to live.
Such was the condition existing when, on October 15, 1945— the day before the killing — Mrs. Kennedy happened to meet the deceased in the road near their home. According to the testimony of Mrs. Kennedy, she stopped him and engaged him in the first conversation they had had for two years. In the course of this conversation she pressed upon deceased the proposition that if he was going to buy the two-hundred-eighty-one-acre place, she wanted to buy the home place of one hundred sixty acres and that if she did not succeed in getting that place it was going to be difficult for them to find a place to live. Deceased again refused to sell them that place, saying, “Well, I will not sell Alvin the place for I don’t want him around here,” to which Mrs. Kennedy replied, “We can leave Alvin out of it, I want the place *220myself, and just leave Alvin out of it.” To this, deceased replied, “I will leave him out; the first time I see him, I will take my forty-five and kill the son of a bitch, and then he will be out of it.” With this statement the conversation ended. The threat deceased made to kill appellant the first time he saw him was communicated by Mrs. Kennedy to her husband that night. Such was the condition existing up to the time of the homicide.
It was the State’s position, supported by the testimony that appellant, knowing the deceased — who was working at a peanut thresher — would be traveling in his car along a certain road, stationed himself thereon at a point opposite a gate or gap leading into a pasture under the control of appellant, and there waited for deceased to approach; that when deceased drove by, he shot him in the back of the head with a high-powered rifle, killing him instantly.
Appellant, testifying as a witness in his own behalf, denied prior knowledge that deceased was at the peanut thresher or that he would be traveling along, the road where he had gone to repair the fence or gap into his pasture; that as deceased approached him he made a demonstration towards the glove compartment which caused appellant to believe that he was reaching for a gun with which to carry into execution the threat he had made the day. before to appellant’s wife as. well as other threats communicated and uncommunicated relative to which appellant testified; and that he fired solely and only in self-defense.
According to the State’s testimony, the killing was deliberate with malice, and accomplished by lying in wait.
According to appellant’s testimony, the killing was justified upon threats and was in self-defense against apparent danger and the acts and conduct of the deceased toward appellant, and the circumstances and relations existing were such that the killing was not upon malice aforethought.
Appellant filed an application for a suspension of sentence.
Witnesses attested his good reputation for being a quiet, peaceable, inoffensive, and law-abiding citizen and also his good reputation for truth and veracity. Witnesses attested the good reputation of deceased for being a peaceable and law-abiding citizen. Whether he was a person likely to carry into execution any threat he might make was not gone into.
*221The witness H. D. Bradley, upon direct examination, testified to appellant’s good reputation for being a peaceable and law-abiding citizen. Upon cross-examination, the State inquired of the witness as to whether he had heard of appellant having had a fight with the deceased and others — some of which incidents the witness had heard of and others he had not. Witness was then asked, “Mr. Bradley, did you hear any — had you heard anything before this occurrence of Alvin Kennedy having illicit relationship with any woman out there?” Appellant objected to the question because it had no bearing upon the trait of appellant’s character as a peaceable and law-abiding citizen and was highly prejudicial and inflammatory. The objection was overruled, whereupon witness asked State’s counsel to repeat the question — which he did, in the following language, “Had you. heard anything about him having illicit relations with a woman in that neighborhood ?” — to which witness replied, “I had not.”
The trial court’s qualification to the bill of exception (No. 6) presenting this matter shows that he allowed the question to be asked because the- witness had attested appellant’s good reputation as a peaceable and law-abiding citizen.
There is no question but that a character witness who attests the good reputation of an accused may be asked upon cross-examination whether he had heard of rumors or particular charges of acts of accused inconsistent with the trait of character the witness is called upon to prove. Such testimony is allowed not to establish the truth of such charges but to test the sincerity of the witness and to enable the jury to weigh his evidence. McClure v. State, 136 Tex. Cr. R. 312, 124 S. W. (2d) 1007; Adaire v. State, 119 Tex. Cr. 381, 45 S. W. (2d) 984; Kimbrell v. State, 115 Tex. Cr. R. 593, 27 S. W. (2d) 213; 44 Tex. Jur., p. 1168, Sec. 161, Note 18, and authorities there cited.
Appellant recognizes the correctness of the rule stated and also that the question propounded related to whether or not witness had heard of the alleged misconduct rather than whether or not he knew of such alleged conduct as a fact. He insists that the vice in the question propounded lies, however, in the fact that the misconduct inquired about was not inconsistent with the trait of character he had put in issue. In other words, it is appellant’s contention that as there was placed in evidence only his reputation as a peaceable and law-abiding citizen, the fact that he had or that witness had heard of illicit relations by him with women in the neighborhood was not inconsistent with *222that reputation. Appellant had not placed in issue his reputation as a man of good morals or of good moral character.
Crimes, offenses, acts, and conduct other than, outside of, and extraneous to the offense charged are provable against an accused only when they come within some exception to the rule stated. We know of no exception whereby the State was authorized in this case to prove directly or indirectly or by some suggestion or innuendo that the appellant was or might have been guilty of illicit relations with a woman. When the interrogatory was propounded to the witness, appellant had to pursue one of two courses — either to sit by and not object thereto, thereby permitting the innuendo cast by the interrogatory to go unchallenged, or to object thereto and be placed in the attitude before the jury that he was afraid of the answer. He chose to object. The fact that the witness answered that he had not heard of such illicit relations upon appellant’s part did not change appellant’s attitude before the jury. The vice lay in the interrogatory and the innuendo cast thereby. We are constrained to agree with the appellant that it was not error to propound the interrogatory to the witness.
To impeach, as well as counteract, the testimony of the witness Woolems as to a threat the deceased made against appellant and as to his seeing a pistol in the glove compartment of deceased’s automobile upon the occasion of his visit to the home of deceased, the State proved by Mrs. Willey, wife of the deceased, as a separate and independent fact, that when Woolems arrived at their home that day he was drunk and had whisky in his possession. ,
To proof of the fact that witness was drunk on that occasion appellant objected because it was irrelevant and prejudicial. The matter is presented here by Bill of Exception No. 9.
Ordinarily, a material witness may not be impeached upon immaterial matter (Branch’s P. C., Sec. 165) or by proof of other and extraneous offenses not amounting to the grade of a felony or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude (Branch’s P. C., Sec. 168).
The State insists that proof of the fact that Woolems was drunk was permissible under a well-established exception to the rules stated — which is that for the purpose of testing the memory of a witness and his capacity for correct observation arid to affect the weight of his testimony, it may be shown that *223he was drunk when the matter about which he testifies occurred — as shown by Branch’s P. C., Sec. 43; McCarty v. State, 107 Tex. Cr. R. 589, 298 S. W. 575; Smith v. State, 121 Tex. Cr. R. 231, 51 S. W. (2d) 686.
An application of the exception depends upon the fact that the drunkenness or drunken condition of the witness was coexistent, in point of time, with the matter about which he testifies. The State, having offered proof of the fact that Woolems was drunk — as within the exception noted — was under the burden to so show.
Looking to the testimony of the witness Woolems as to the time and place when deceased made the threat and he saw the pistol, we find that he testified as follows:
“We went to Rice Willey’s house with the intention of going fishing. We got there at their house about twelve o’clock and sat around and talked awhile, and then Rice and I left to get some fishing tackle * *
It was while the witness and deceased were gone to get the tackle that Woolems claims the threat was made. It was later the same afternoon that he claims to have seen the pistol. According to Woolems, only he and deceased were present at either time.
Mrs. Willey testified that Woolems was drunk when he came to their home. She does not say, with reference to his arrival, when Woolems and deceased left to go get the fishing tackle, nor does she say that Woolems was drunk when he left the house or when he returned, or how long he and deceased were gone. She does say, “They were there at our house I imagine about three hours.”
Ultimately, then, to authorize proof that Woolems was drunk at the- time he claims the threat was made by deceased and that he saw the pistol in the glove compartment of the car, the State relies upon the fact that some time prior thereto, and not less than three hours, he was in that condition. In other words, it is the State’s position that proof of the fact that Woolems was drunk when he came to the home of deceased constitutes proof that he was in the same condition some time not less than three hours thereafter.
We are unwilling to indulge such a presumption in the in*224stant case. Here, we are dealing not with the application of some general rule nor with testimony ordinarily and generally admissible but rather with testimony that is ordinarily inadmissible and which becomes admissible only under some special exception to a general rule. Woolems gave material testimony in behalf of the appellant. If his testimony was to be impeached before the jury by testimony not ordinarily admissible for that purpose, it should come clearly within the exception relied upon to render it admissible. Under the facts and circumstances here shown, we are unable to reach the conclusion that proof that Woolems was drunk when he arrived at the home of deceased was admissible.
Throughout appellant’s defensive testimony the idea was manifested that deceased had overreached his mother in buying the two-hundred-eighty-one-acre tract for considerably less than its value and that she was under his influence; that on account of this influence and his control of her business, he wanted to reduce the two hundred eighty-one acres to money and thereby serve his own interest as well as to prevent his sisters, Mrs. Kennedy and Mrs. Ward, from eventually realizing anything out of this property.
Both appellant and Benton Ward, the husband of Adelia Ward, openly charged in their testimony that they believed it was the intent of deceased to beat those two sisters out of any part of their mother’s estate. There was also the suggestion that deceased had made use of the management of his mother’s business to further his own private interest.
To counteract these influences as well as testimony, the State called Mrs. Willey, the mother, as a witness in rebuttal. Upon direct examination she was asked, “Mrs. Wiley, how was Rice’s attitude toward you; was he good to you or mean to you?”
To this question appellant’s counsel objected, as follows: “We object to that, as calling for her conclusion; we have no objection to her stating the facts.”
The objection was overruled, and the witness testified, “No, sir, he was not mean to me.”
Witness was then asked, “Was he good to you?” — to which witness replied, “Yes, sir, I think he was a good boy, an average good boy.”
*225Appellant again urged his objection to the testimony because it was a conclusion of the witness.
Appellant, in his brief as also his oral argument, here urges that the testimony of the witness as to the deceased being “a good boy, an average good boy” was indamissible, not only as being a conclusion of the witness but as proof of the individual view of the witness as to the character of the deceased.
It will be noted that the answer of the witness as to deceased being a good boy was not responsive to the question asked, which was “Was he good to you?” Appellant should have moved to strike the testimony rather than to have relied upon his objection to the question asked.
In view of the fact that the case is to be reversed upon other grounds, we deem it advisable, in view of another trial, to discuss the question that appellant seeks to here present, which is, “Was the witness authorized to testify that the deceased was a good boy?”
It is the general and well-established rule that the only way to make proof of a person’s character is by proof of his general reputation with reference to the particular trait which is under consideration. The reputation a person bears is a fact and may be testified to as such. A person’s character, being an inner quality, is not susceptible to proof, as such. 19 Tex. Jur., p. 387, Sec. 248., It follows, then, that as a general rule, a witness will not be permitted to express his individual views as to a person’s character. 19 Tex. Jur., p. 388, Sec. 249.
Following this rule in Spangler v. State, 41 Tex. Cr. R. 424, 55 S. W. 326, this court held that in a homicide case the actual character of the victim is not admissible. In Gay v. State, 40 Tex. Cr. R. 242, 49 S. W. 612-615, a witness in a murder case was permitted to testify that the deceased was a good man. This was held to be inadmissible because the good character of the deceased can be established only by his general reputation.
It appears, therefore, that under the rule stated, the witness would not be authorized to express her individual view as to the character of the deceased.
By Bills of Exception Nos. 4 and 5, appellant claims that his wife was, upon cross-examination, interrogated relative to matters not gone into or covered in her examination-in-chief. *226The testimony complained of in each bill was withdrawn from the jury’s consideration by the trial court. The testimony was not of such a character that it could not be effectually withdrawn from the jury’s consideration.
The remaining bills of exception have been examined and are overruled without discussion.
For the errors pointed out, the' judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.
The foregoing opinion of the Commission of Appeals has been examined by the Judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals and approved by the Court.