In the Court below the following proceedings took place: “ The panel being exhausted with the exception of two tickets, which the clerk stated were in the box, the District Judge proceeded to interrogate the Sheriff as to his forming or expressing an unqualified opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. He answered affirmatively. The said *177Sheriff of the County of Inyo aforesaid, being examined—under oath generally as to his qualifications under section 1064 of the Penal Code to act in summoning an ‘ordered venire’ of fifty additional jurors—he answered that he had formed an unqualified opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, and that he was biased, as he was present during the preliminary examination of the prisoner before the Magistrate, The Coroner, A. Wayland, was then sworn on the same point, who stated that he had not formed or expressed an opinion on the subject. Defendant’s counsel objected to such examination of Sheriff and Coroner, on the ground that the time for such examination arose only when objection was made by the defense to the panel. The Court now orders, under objection of defendant, that a special venire issue to the Coroner, the said A. Wayland, for fifty additional jurors, ‘the venire is directed to the Coroner of the County for the reason that the Sheriff of said County has, upon examination under oath, shown himself to be disqualified from serving an ‘ordered venire, under section 1064 Penal Code.’ Upon the return of such venire, defendant objected to the same, on the ground that the Coroner was unqualified to serve said venire. Objection overruled, defendant excepting.”
The District Judge erred, if he supposed that his action was authorized by section 1064 of the Penal Code.
That section only allows a challenge of the panel on account of such bias in the officer (person) serving the venire, as is mentioned in section 1073.
Nor was the action of the Judge regular under section 4191 or section 4192 of the Political Code. The former empowers the Coroner to serve process only where the Sheriff is a party, and the latter permits the appointment of an elisor, when the Coroner is disqualified or biased.
But, however irregular the appointment of the Coroner to serve the venire, the defendant could not object to the panel that the jurymen were summoned by one whom the Court had recognized as its officer. The objection to the venire was in legal effect a challenge to the panel, and the statute gives.but one ground for such challenge (when the *178jurors are not drawn), which is that the particular officer who summoned the jurors was biased. (Penal Code, Sec. 1,064.)
In People v. Southwell (46 Cal. 141), it was held that the irregularity in the action of the County Judge, in improperly appointing the Coroner to summon the Grand Jurors, could not be taken advantage of by challenge to the panel of Grand Jurors, because such irregularity was not one of the grounds of challenge provided by the Penal Code.
That case is authority for the proposition that the mistake of the Judge in this case was not ground of challenge to the panel of trial-jurors, or of objection to the venire.
No objection was made to the panel on the ground that the Coroner was not impartial.
Certain of the jurymen were challenged by the defendant for implied bias, on the “ground that the juror had formed an unqualified opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant.” The challenges were denied by the Court and the defendant excepted.
A challenge for implied bias can be taken only for the causes specified in section 1,074 of the Penal Code, as amended. (People v. Cotta, ante 166.)
In this case, the verdict was: “We, the jurors, do find the defendant Welch guilty of murder in the first degree, as charged in the indictment.”
Section 190 of the Penal Code, as amended by the Act of March 28, 1874, reads: “Every person guilty of murder in the first degree shall suffer death, or confinement in the State Prison for life, at the discretion of the jury trying the same; or, .upon a plea of guilty, the Court shall determine the same; and every person guilty of murder in the second degree is punishable by imprisonment in the State prison not less than ten years.”
It is obvious that the duty imposed upon the Court "by the section quoted is to exercise the same discretion, in respect to punishment, when a defendant pleads guilty and the Court finds the crime to be murder in the first degree (Penal Code, Sec. 1,192), as is to be exercised by the jury ( when they find a defendant guilty, and find also that the *179offense is murder of the first degree. (Penal Code, Sec. 1,157.)
The nature of that discretion is to be ascertained by reference to the language of the statute. In Virginia it was held, that in an action qui tam the verdict should fix the amount of damages. (Scott’s case, 5 Grat. 6,797.) Also, that where the duty was imposed on the jury of fixing the term of imprisonment, and the verdict did not ascertain such term, it should be set aside. (Mills’ case, 7 Leigh, 751.)
But the Act amending Section 190 of the Penal Code does not give the general discretion which juries exercised under the Virginia statute. Here their discretion is limited, at most, to determining which of two punishments shall be inflicted; and we think that it is still more restricted, and is to be employed only where the jury is satisfied that the lighter penalty should be imposed. It would seem that, in view of the apparently growing disinclination to find verdicts of murder in the first degree, when the necessary result was capital punishment, and the existence of a feeling that there were nicer distinctions in the degree of malignancy exhibited in murders than were made by the letter of the statute definitions, the Legislature intended to give to the jury, when the verdict was murder of the first degree, the power of relieving the defendant of the extreme penalty, and of substituting another punishment in its stead. A verdict fixing the punishment at imprisonment for life is somewhat analogous to the French verdict, “Guilty with extenuating circumstances,” and is the equivalent of the Louisiana verdict, “Guilty without capital punishment,” held good in State v. Rohfrischt (12 La. An. 382); and authorized by the statute which provides, “In all cases where the punishment denounced by law is death, it shall be lawful for the jury to qualify their verdict by adding thereto, without capital punishment.’ And whenever the jury shall return a verdict qualified as aforesaid, the person convicted shall be sentenced to hard labor for life in the State Penitentiary.” (Rev. State of La. p. 163.)
This view of the question is not unsustained by authority *180in California. By the Act of April 22, 1851, it was enacted: “Every person who shall feloniously steal, etc., shall be deemed guilty of grand larceny, and upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by imprisonment in the State prison for any term, not less than one year nor more than ten years, or by death, in the discretion of the jury.” And in The People v. Littlefield (5 Cal. 355), this Court said: “It would seem, from the language of the Act, that it was the intention of the Legislature that the jury should only assess the punishment when, in the exercise of their discretion, they thought that the defendant deserved the punishment of death. If they did not agree to such punishment, upon finding the defendant guilty, then they should find a general verdict.” In that case, it was evidently considered that the object of the Legislature (actuated by the circumstance that certain kinds of property—as live stock—were peculiarly exposed, in portions of this State, or by some other motive equally just) was to confer upon the juries the power of affixing, at their discretion, a more severe penalty than had previously been imposed on those guilty of grand larceny. By parity of reasoning we may say, in view of the former punishment for the crime of murder of the first degree, and the history of legislation on the subject in this State and elsewhere, that it was the purpose of the Legislature (by the amendment of section 190) to permit the jury, in a case where the facts proved brought the crime of the defendant within the statutory definition of the higher offense, but they believed the punishment of death too severe, to declare that he should be imprisoned for life. We think, therefore, the statute should be construed as if it read: “ Shall suffer death, or (in the discretion of the jury) imprisonment in the State prison for life.”
The defendant excepted to the seventh instruction, which —commencing with the words, “In this case, if the killing was willful (that is, intentional), deliberate and premeditated, it is murder in the first degree; otherwise it is murder in the second degree ”—proceeds to explain that the condition of the defendant, as to drunkenness, was to be considered by the jury in determining whether he was capa*181ble of forming the specific intention to take away life which is a necessary element in murder of the first degree.
It is urged that the instruction was a violation of the Constitution, the seventeenth section of Article VI, which reads: “Judges shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, but may state the testimony and declare the law.”
The provision of the Constitution is equally applicable to civil and criminal proceedings, and in both it may become the duty of the Judge to determine whether there is any evidence to sustain the main issue, or to sustain any fact on which a particular judgment must necessarily depend. Of course, such determination should be 'the result of prudent and cautious examination; but in a proper case, the Court may act on the assumption that there is no evidence in respect to a particular issue, and grant a non-suit, or advise an acquittal, or frame its charge to the jury, without reference to the existence of facts as to which no evidence has been produced. In such case, the Court cannot “state the testimony,” for there is none to state. The “matters of fact,” as to which the Court is not permitted to charge the jury, are the facts contested, or, in some degree, sought to be established by evidence. In assuming the non-existence of evidence excluded or not offered, the Court does not interfere with the discretion of the jury, whose verdict cannot stand, if based on matters of fact, in respect to which there is no evidence.
The prohibition of the Constitution cannot be made a means of shielding the District Judges in their refusal or neglect to discharge the duty of giving such instructions, and such instructions only as are appropriate to the evidence in the particular case, and thereby aiding the jury in the proper discharge of their function. It has been repeatedly held by this Court that the District Court may properly refuse a charge defining manslaughter when there is no evidence tending to establish that offense; and that under such circumstances it is no violation of the Constitution for the trial Court to assume that the offense is not manslaughter. In the present case there is no evidence *182whatever tending to prove either that the crime was manslaughter, or that the killing was justifiable or excusable. If the defendant was sane, therefore, it was not error to direct the attention of the jury to the real issue, as presented by the evidence: Was the killing murder of the first or second degree ?
In People v. Doyell (48 Cal. 85), the Court said: “We must take the charge together, and if, without straining any portion of the language, it harmonizes as a whole, and fairly and correctly presents the law bearing on the issues tried, we will -not disturb the judgment because a separate instruction does not contain all the conditions and limitations which are to be gathered from the entire text. It is true that an error which might affect the defendant will be presumed to have injured him; but another presumption is that jurors are men of common intelligence, and capable of comprehending the ordinary use of language, as applied to the particular proposition under consideration, and in reference to which it is employed. We will not assume that the jurymen may not have understood the charge as we understand it.”
Applying these presumptions to the seventh instruction, it cannot successfully be contended—and, indeed, is not contended—that because the charge seems to assume a killing “in this case,” the question whether the deceased was killed by the defendant was taken away from the jury.
Nor do we think the jury understood the seventh instruction to exclude from their deliberations the question of the defendant’s sanity.
The law on the subject of insanity was fully and fairly given in the instructions bearing on that subject requested by the defendant.
The seventh instruction was addressed to the question of the effect of drunkenness as applied to the distinction between murder of the first and second degree, and clearly explained that question. It cannot be assumed that the jury understood the instruction in any sense different from that in which it would be commonly understood by those out of the jury-box. It was not necessary to insert in the *183instruction all the exceptions, limitations and conditions which are clearly ascertainable from the charge as a whole. The proviso: “If the defendant was sane," is naturally implied, and the instruction is to be read as if those words were actually inserted.
Judgment and order appealed from, affirmed, and the Court below is directed to issue a warrant for the execution of the judgment.
Mr. Justice Rhodes did not express an opinion.