Under a proper predicate, Van Harris and his wife, Lyle Harris, had, in order to impeach the State’s witness Dave Johnson, testified to contradictory statements made by Johnson to them with regard to the origin and details of the difficulty, shortly after its occurrence. Defendant then proposed to corroborate his own witnesses, Harris and wife, by showing that they had told one Buckner what Dave Johnson had related to them about the shooting, and that the statement so made by them at that time corresponded with their testimony in the case. On objection, the court ruled this evidence inadmissible. In this the court did not err. Harris and his wife were not impeached, but were the impeachers, and their testimony could not be sustained and corroborated in such manner. Had Buckner been introduced to sustain Johnson, the im-. peached witness, the rule would have been different, and, under the weight of authority, he would have been allowed to show that Johnson had made the same statements at other times as those to which he had testified, and about which he had been impeached.
Whilst there has been quite a conflict of opinion in the past on this question, the modern doctrine and the decided *100weight of authority seem to have finally settled the right on rebuttal to sustain and corroborate an impeached witness in that manner. 1 Whart. on Ev., sect. 5711, and authorities cited in note 2. To extend the doctrine, however, to witnesses who are not impeached, would result in making a witness’s credibility depend more upon the number of times he had repeated the same story than upon the truth of the story itself, and tend to render the proceedings on each trial interminable.
There is no other question in the case necessary to be discussed. The charge of the court was sufficiently full and explicit, without requiring in addition any of the special instructions requested for defendant. To our minds, from the evidence, there can be no doubt of the fact that defendant intended and attempted a cold-blooded and cowardly assassination, without any provocation, much less excuse or justification. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.