The defendant John Hendel was charged jointly with one Louis Eoder, by information filed in the district court for Alturas county, with the crime of murder in the killing of one Leander Holstrom, on the seventeenth day of March, 1893. Upon their arraignment, defendant Hendel, on his own application, was given a separate trial. On said trial, at the June term, 1893, of said district court, defendant Hendel was convicted of murder in the second degree. A motion for new trial was made on his behalf, which was denied by the court, and from the order denying said motion, and from the judgment of final conviction, this appeal is taken.
The case comes to this court upon a bill of exceptions. The errors assigned are seven in number, and are as follows: "1. The court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for the appointment of an elisor to take charge of the jury; 2. The court erred in permitting J. S. Waters, Esq., counsel for Louis Poder, to interpose an objection to, and to be heard in argument upon, the request by appellant’s counsel, upon the trial, that the bullet taken from the vest worn by deceased be submitted to a microscopical and chemical expert examination and analysis; 3. The court erred in overruling the application made by appellant’s - counsel, upon the trial, for leave to have made a microscopical and chemical examination of the bullet found in the vest of deceased, and of the substance or substances adhering thereto; 4. That the court erred in overruling the objection of appellant’s counsel, upon the trial, and in permitting the witness D. W. Figgins to testify as to his belief in relation to the bullet found in the vest of deceased; 5. That the *92court erred in overruling the objection of the appellant upon the trial, and in permitting the witness Thomas Misc. to testify as an expert in answer to the following question, put to him by the counsel for the state: What is your opinion as to-whether that bullet [state’s exhibit No. 8] was fired from a pistol?’ — and to the following: What is your opinion as to-whether that [bullet found in vest] has been fired from a pistol ?’ (i. The court erred in overruling the objection of appellant,, made at the trial, and in permitting the witness Seaborn Jones to testify as an expert as to the appearance and condition of a bullet, then in evidence, and as to whether it had been fired from a weapon — gun or pistol; 7. The court erred in .denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.” We will consider the errors assigned in the order in which they are presented in appellant’s brief.
As to the first error assigned: The refusal of the court to-appoint, on application of defendant, an elisor to take charge of the jury during the trial of the case. We think the action of the court was correct. The application did not come within the provision of the statute applicable to such cases. (Kev.. Stats., sec. 1887.) The granting or refusing of the application was within the discretion of the court, and it seems to us it. was properly exercised in this case.
As to the second assignment of error by the court: In permitting counsel for appellant’s codefendant to be heard in opposition to appellant’s request that a certain bullet, offered in evidence by appellant, should be submitted to analytical and microscopical examination. While the point presented is somewhat novel, we think it was largely a matter of discretion with the trial court, and we cannot say, upon'an examination of the record before us, that the action of the court even tended to prejudice the case of appellant. The facts, as shown by the record here (and it is conceded it is only a part of theevidenee), are substantially as follows: The appellant was a keeper of a saloon or beer hall in the town of Hailey, Alturascounty. On the night of the 16th of March, 1893, deceased and three others had been drinking beer at appellant’s place, until about 4 o’clock on the morning of the 17th, when as is quite: *93usual in such cases, the debauch culminated in a quarrel between •appellant, his codefendant, Eoder, who was at the time in the employ of appellant, on the one side, and deceased and Ms three compaMons, on the other, during which quarrel two shots were fired, one by appellant and one by his codefendant, Eoder. There is some evidence of a tMrd shot being fired, but it hardly •arises to the digrnty of a suspicion. One of the shots took •effect on the body of deceased, entering between the seventh and ■eighth ribs, on the right side, striking and tearing away a piece of the eighth rib, one-fourth of an inch in width, and one-half an inch in length, glancing upward, and passing through the longs and through the body of the heart, and out through the left breast, between the sixth and seventh ribs. At the time the inquest was being held, and after the clothes had been removed from the body of deceased, a bullet was found upon the floor, in close proximity to the place where the clothing was removed from the body. This bullet was of size carried by the pistol used by appellant on the Mght, or rather the morning, of the homicide, to wit, a- “British Bulldog” pistol, of 44-caliber. Another bullet was also found at that time, which had passed through a portion of the partition of the room, about eight feet from the floor. Tins latter bullet was of the size carried by the pistol had and used by appellant’s codefendant, Eoder, ■on the night of the homicide, to wit, a 45-caliber Colt’s revolver. It is conceded that appellant and Eoder each fired one shot at and in the direction where deceased was, or was supposed to be. When the clothes of deceased were removed, it was found that the bullet that had passed through him had made a hole in the limng of Ms vest, at a point thereon corresponding with the place of exit of the bullet from his body. Search was made for the bullet, and one was found, as above stated, on the floor near where the clothes had been taken from the body ■of deceased. No other bullet was found at that time. The bullet found on the floor, as stated, bore unmistakable evidence ■of having been fired from a gun or pistol, and also of having ■come in contact with some hard substance, which had battered the point, and scraped or torn some of the substance from the side of it. This buEet was of the size and fitted the pistol of *94appellant. But now appears the peculiar and disturbing feature of this case. When the clothing of deceased was brought before the magistrate on the preliminary examination of the defendant (it does not appear from the record when the preliminary examination took place, but it was presumably some time after the inquest, which was held on the 17th or 18th of March; il is not exactly clear which of these two days), upon an examination of the vest of deceased by the sheriff, in whose custody the clothing of deceased had been from the time of the inquest to the time of the preliminary examination, a bullet was found in the lower corner of the left side of the vest, between the outside material and the lining; and this bullet, se found, fitted and was the size carried by the pistol used by appellant’s codefendant, Roder, on the occasion of the homicide. Upon the production of this bullet by the sheriff (called on the part of the defendant), who took it from the vest of deceased at the time of the preliminary examination of defendant Hendel, and who had retained it in his possession since that time, counsel for defendant Hendel moved the court to permit a microscopical and analytical examination to be made by a competent expert of the substance or substances adhering to the bullet found in the vest of deceased, for the purpose of determining its true composition. To this motion, one J. S. Waters, an attorney of said district court, and who, it seems, was counsel for appellant’s codefendant, Roder, objected, claiming that, as: the production of this bullet was an attempt to fasten the alleged homicide upon his client, he insisted that the bullet should be retained in its then condition until the trial of his client, informed against jointly with the defendant on trial, was had. The permitting of Waters, aforesaid, to be heard upon said motion, is assigned as error by counsel for appellant. We are unable to see any error in this ruling of the court. The defendants had been informed against jointly. Hendel, upon his-application, had been awarded a separate trial. It was, it seems to us, the duty of Roder’s counsel, not only to be present at the trial of Hendel, but to vigilantly watch and scrutinize the conduct of such trial, to the end that none of the legal rights of his client should be sacrificed or jeopardized in the-*95interest of Hendel. We think the district court committed no error in permitting the counsel of Eoder to be heard on the said motion of appellant, either as amicus curiae, or in behalf of his client, but that the action of the court was consonant with, and calculated to effect the ends of justice.
The third specification of error presented by appellant is based upon the refusal of the court to permit the “microscopical and chemical examination of the buEet, and of the substance or substances adhering thereto.” Aside from the objections urged by the counsel for Eoder against the granting of this request, which, of themselves, were sufficient, in our view, to warrant the action of the court, neither the court nor the law ever intended that the granting of a separate trial to one of two or more defendants, jointly indicted, should be used by the defendant first placed on trial as a means by which' he could sacrifice his codefendants, or do aught to impair their just and legal defense. But it does not appear from the record that there was any substance or substances adhering to the bullet which required the invocation of either chemical or microscopical aid to define its character. One witness testified: “There is something in the creases of this bullet, but I cannot say what it is. The apex of the bullet is slightly battered, and is marked with the imprint of the cloth — warp of the cloth — on the end of the bullet.” And this was all the testimony appearing in the record upon the subject. Neither of the medical witnesses testified to the existence of anything on the surface of the bullet at all resembling, or intimating an appearance of, “blood stains, or human tissues.” So far as the record before us shows, the blood and tissue theory has no more support in the evidence than does the) theory of the third shot, with which it is intimately allied. The medical witnesses stated that it would take from one to two weeks to procure the test required. We think, under the circumstances, it was within the discretion of the trial court to grant or refuse the application on the part of appellant, and that, in refusing it, the court committed no error.
The fourth specification of error is predicated upon the ruling of the court in permitting D. W. Figgins, one of the *96medical witnesses, “to testify as his belief in relation to the bullet found in the vest of the deceased.” It was a theory sought to be established by the defense that three shots were fired — two by Eoder and one by Hendel; that it was one of the shots fired by Eoder that killed the deceased. To maintain this theory, the defense called Dr. N. J. Brown, who testified as follows, in regard to the bullet found upon the floor near where the clothing was removed from the body of deceased: “Under all the conditions of the injuries inflicted, and the manner in which the deceased was dressed, this bullet, from its appearance, did not pass through the body of the deceased.” On being shown the bullet taken from the vest of deceased, said witness testified in regard to the same as follows: “I believe this bullet could have produced all the effects upon the body of the deceased, as I have observed them, and as they have been testified to here in court. This bullet has marks on the point that resemble the mesh work of weaving of cloth, and the edges are turned over from force of some kind, striking some substance, or some substance striking it.” Unsatisfactory as this evidence would seem to be, either from a legal or a logical standpoint, it was enough that it was offered on the part of the defense, and was permitted to go to the jury, and it was but common justice to permit the prosecution to meet it in rebuttal by the testimony of Dr. Figgins, who testified as follows: “A bullet striking a rib would be battered, in my opinion. I do not believe that the bullet taken from Holstronfls vest is the bullet which killed Lee Holstrom.' I have examined that bullet, both with the naked eye and with a magnifying glass. There is the appearance of the web or mesh of the cloth on that bullet, while I believe that the bullet which caused the death of Lee Holstrom was battered, more or less, and would not have the meshes of the cloth stamped on it. The meshes of the cloth, if stamped on the bullet, would have been destroyed by contact with the rib. In my experience, as a surgeon, I never saw a bullet that had been fired into bodies that had any grease substance left upon it. The burning of the powder would melt the grease.” Without commenting upon the rela*97tive value of the testimony of these two expert witnesses, it is enough to say that the ancient conundrum of “Who should ■decide when doctors disagree?” seems to have been settled by the jury in this case, at least. Several other witnesses were ■called by the defense in rebuttal, who testified to the same effect as Dr. Figgins — that the appearance of the bullet taken from the vest of deceased showed it had never been fired from a gun or pistol — giving various reasons for this conclusion. Notwithstanding counsel for the defendant had opened the ■door to this class of testimony by introducing that of Dr. Brown, he now contends that it was error for the court to permit the same class of testimony in rebuttal. A careful examination of the authorities constrains us to believe that the ■question as to the admissibility of expert testimony must depend largely, if not entirely, upon the circumstances of each particular case; and where it is apparent, not only that no injustice has been done, and that the exigencies of the case seem to warrant or require the admission of such testimony, for a proper and satisfactory presentation of the facts to the jury, •such admission is not error.
It is objected by counsel for the appellant that the bill of ■exceptions does not show that any venue was proven upon the trial. While it is apparent from the record that there was great remissness on the part of counsel who represented the state in the settlement of the bill of exceptions, we think there is sufficient therein to show that the venue was proven. Besides, it was conceded by counsel for appellant, before the argument of the case was entered upon, that the record contained ■only a portion of the evidence.
The objection that the verdict is contrary to the evidence is not well taken. In addition to the evidence already commented upon, no less than four witnesses (Field, McGatnish, Farrel, and Saunders) testified positively that Hendel admitted to them, and in their presence, that he killed Holstrom, and undertook to justify the killing by saying that deceased had knocked him down, and had knocked his wife down, and he had to kill Trim *98Hendel’s attempt to explain away these admissions was, as evidenced by the verdict, a failure. Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Morgan and Sullivan, JJ., concur.