This appeal is from a conviction for the *391theft of a heifer, and the punishment assessed against the defendant is four years confinement in the penitentiary.
Upon the trial of the case, the State, over the objections of the defendant, read in evidence the defendant’s application for a continuance, made at a former term of the court. This action of the court is assigned as error, upon a proper and explicit bill of exceptions, and is the only error complained of which we shall consider, as the other errors assigned will not, even if tenable, be likely to occur on another trial of the case.
We are of the opinion that the court erred in admitting in evidence the defendant’s application for a continuance, and that the error was a material one, for which the judgment must be reversed.
That the question may be properly understood, we must state, substantially at least, the facts of the case, and the bearing upon those facts of the facts stated in the application for a continuance referred to.
In August, 1882, James Farrar owned a heifer, which ranged two or three miles below Palmer, in Ellis county. This heifer was of a red color, half Durham, with peculiar horns, rather small, and turned a little down and toward ,each other. She was missing from the range about the first of August, 1882, and has not been seen since, though diligently searched for. The defendant, in company with one Milton, was seen near the heifer shortly before she was missing. Milton afterwards left the country. Defendant and Milton were then living with one Myers, and said Myers has also left the country. Uext morning after witness saw Milton and defendant near the heifer, he, the witness, got some fresh beef from Myers, at whose house defendant was staying, and he, witness, missed the heifer from the range on that same day. On the next day after the alleged theft, the head of a dead animal, identified as the head of the alleged stolen heifer, was found at the residence of said Myers, near Myers’s house, in the brush, having the appearance of the head of an animal which had been recently killed. On the day before the finding of this head, the defendant was seen in the town of Palmer selling fresh beef, which was in good order.
We have recited substantially all the testimony which tends to connecz the defendant with the theft of the heifer.
In the application for continuance, made by defendant at a previous term of the court, and which was read in evidence against him on the trial, it was stated that he desired the testi*392many of one M. T. Robinson, and expected to prove by said Robinson that he, the said Robinson, sold to defendant the heifer that he, defendant, is charged with stealing; also, that he desired the testimony of four other absent witnesses, naming them, by whom he expected to prove that he purchased said heifer from said Robinson.
Defendant’s bill of .exceptions shows that this testimony was objected to for the following reasons, to-wit: 1. It was not pertinent to the case.. 2. It was made while the defendant was under arrest. 3. It did not contain any allegation of fact which was pertinent' to the allegations in the indictment. We will only consider the second ground of objection, that the statements in the application for continuance were made while the defendant was under arrest.
Was the application for a continuance admissible in evidence against the defendant ? In the absence of any statutory provision controlling the question; we should hold that under the common law the' paper would be admissible as a judicial admission or confession, provided it contained matter relevant to the issue in the case. (1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 37; Whar. Crim. Ev., secs. 638, 643, 664 and note.)
But we must consider and determine this question solely with a view to the provision of our Code which relates to the confessions of a person accused of crime. That provision is as follows: “ The confession shall not be used if, at the time it was made, the defendant was in jail or other place of confinement; nor while he is in custody of an officer, unless such confession be made in the voluntary statement of the accused, taken before an examining court, in accordance with law; orbe made, voluntarily, after having been first cautioned that it may be used against him,” etc. (Code Crim. Proc., Art. 750.) ,
Row the first inquiry to be determined is, are the statements made by the defendant in his said application for a continuance to be regarded and treated as confessions ? What is a confession ? Mr. Bouvier defines,it as follows: “ The voluntary declaration made by a person who has committed a crime or misdemeanor, to another, of the agency or participation which he had in the same. An admission or acknowledgment by a prisoner, when arraigned for an offense, that he committed the crime with which he is charged.” (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, word.“Confession.”)
It is true that the statements contained in said application are *393not direct and explicit confessions or admissions on the part of the defendant that he committed the theft or participated in its commission. Nor is it necessary, in order to make the statement a confession within the meaning of the statute, that it should be a direct acknowledgment of the defendant’s guilt. As was said in Haynie v. The State, 2 Texas Court of Appeals, 168: “ When the confession of a defendant to the main fact in issue would not be admissible, it is, as a general rule, inadmissible to permit confessions of collateral facts, by which it was necessary to establish the main facts.” .
In .the case before us, suppose the defendant had filed in the cause a written instrument, sworn to by him, admitting directly that he was guilty of the charge contained in the indictment, could such instrument be used in evidence against him, per se, on his trial, over his objections? Clearly it could not, in our opinion, he being at the time in custody, and not warned that the same might be used in evidence against him. If, then, a full confession could not be used against him, we can perceive no reason why a partial one, or one which admits facts necessary to establish his guilt, should be admissible. In this case, the defendant did not acknowledge his guilt or complicity in the theft charged, in the statements made by him in the application for a continuance, but he did state facts therein, which facts it was necessary for the State to prove in order to connect him with the theft. Thus, the State had failed to prove that he ever had possession of the alleged stolen animal, or that he was in any way connected with the taking of it. In his application for continuance, which was made evidence against him on the trial, he alleged that he had possession of the animal, and accounts for that possession by stating that he had purchased the animal from Robinson, and expected to prove said purchase by Robinson and the other absent witnesses. By these statements he supplies a most material portion of the testimony, on the part of the State, required to establish his guilt. In fact, without these statements, the evidence would be wholly insufficient to support a conviction.
We are uf the opinion that the statements in the application for a' continuance must be regarded and treated as being within the meaning of confessions; and, such being the case, they were clearly inadmissible.
There can be no question either as, to the prejudicial effect of this testimony against the defendant, especially when.it was *394proved by Robinson and another one of the witnesses named in the application for a continuance that the defendant did not purchase the alleged stolen animal from Robinson, as stated in said application.
Opinion delivered February 6, 1884.Because the court erred in admitting in evidence against defendant his application for continuance, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.