By the Court,
Balcom, J.The declarations of the prisoner, proved by the witness Givens, were made thirty-nine days subsequent to the date of the contract in question. When they were proved, no evidence had been given that the contract had been seen by any person prior to the time they were made. Such declarations, therefore, were properly admitted to show that the contract was not in existence when William Blakeley died, nor within thirty-nine days subsequent to its date. But it is claimed by the prisoner’s counsel, that because Givens was an attorney of this court, and was being consulted as such by the prisoner when the declarations were made, they were *181privileged, and therefore covered by the seal of professional confidence. This position is clearly untenable. An attorney may testify to any communication made to him to obtain professional advice or assistance, as to the commission of a felony or other crime which is malum, in se. (The Bank of Utica v. Mersereau, 3 Barb. Ch. R., 598.) Nothing, therefore, was privileged that the prisoner said to Givens, if he was seeking professional advice or assistance to enable him to forge the contract; and he was seeking such advise or assistance, if Givens correctly related the conversation between them.
The next question I shall consider, is, whether the prisoner’s counsel should have been permitted to ask the witness, William G. Blakeley, on cross-examination, if he had not had a venereal disease and been guilty of adultery subsequent to his marriage. The counsel stated to the court his object in putting the question was to show that the witness “ had led a vicious' and dissolute life.”
Boscoe lays down the rule that “ questions with regard to particular facts tending to degrade the witness and affect his character and credit may be put to him on cross-examination, even though irrelevant to the matter in issue; but the party putting them must be satisfied with the answers given by the witness, and cannot call witnesses to prove those answers false. (Roscoe's Cr. Ev., 4th Am. ed., from 3d London ed., 180.) And this rule is too firmly established to be questioned. (See The People v. Rector, 19 Wend., 569; Southard v. Rexford, 6 Cowen, 254; Ward v. The People, 6 Hill, 144; Barbour's Cr. Tr., 399, 400, 401, 402; 4 Wend., 229; Roscoe's Cr. Ev., 307; Cow. & Hill's Notes, 419; Howard v. The City Fire Ins. Co., 4 Denio, 502; Lohman v. The People, 1 Comst, 379; 1 Greenl. Ev., §§456, 460.) Greenleaf states this qualification to the rule, namely: “ Questions, the answers to which, though they may disgrace the witness in other respects, yet will not affect the credit due to his testimony,” are generally suppressed. (1 Oreenl. Fv., § 548.) He places, in this class of questions, one frequently put to the principal female witness, in trials for seduction per quod seroitium amisit, and on indictments for rape, *182&c., whether she had not previously been criminal with other men, or with some particular person; and he cited a case where, on the trial of a female prisoner for stealing from a person in a house, the prisoner’s counsel was not permitted to ask the prosecutor whether, at that house, anything improper passed between him and the prisoner. (1 Greenl. Mo., § 458.) And in a note, he refers to the case of Macbride v. Macbride (4 Esp. Rep., 242), where the plaintiff called a woman as a witness to prove a part of his demand, and Lord Alvanley refused to allow the defendant’s counsel to ask her whether she slept with the plaintiff. But these views are in conflict with the decision of this court in The People v. Abbot (19 Wend., 192). ¡Now, with all due respect for the opinions of this learned author, I must say, it seems to me the cases referred to by him do not properly fall within the qualification he states to the rule as laid down by Boscoe; for the reason that the commission of adultery or fornication injures the general character of either sex; and the degree of credit due to the testimony of a witness, depends as well on his general character as on that for mere veracity. Vicious habits of whatever kind, sear the conscience and prepare those who practice them for the easy utterance of falsehood. The late Justice Cowen thought the credit of a witness was much affected, when he confessed, upon a cross-examination, he had for some time led an idle and intemperate life, the inmate of porter houses at hours unseasonably late, and had for two years been wasting his means in a course of adulterous lewdness, alienated from his family, unjust to them and to bis creditors. (See The People v. Rector, 19 Wend., 586.)
In Lohman v. The People (1 Comst., 379), the principal witness to sustain the indictment was a female, and she was interrogated without objection, on cross-examination, with the view of discrediting her, as to whether she had had sexual intercourse with any person other than one Cook, by whom she testified she became pregnant; and she was also asked whether she had not had the venereal disease; but she declined to answer the interrogatories, and the court refused to compel her to answer them, and to such refusal the prisoner’s counsel *183excepted. Judge Gardiner, in delivering the opinion of the Court of Appeals in that case, assumed, that if the witness had given affirmative answers to the interrogatories, they would have affected her general character; but he held, the court did right in refusing to compel her to answer the interrogatories. It was adjudged in The People v. Abbot (supra), that on the trial of a person charged with the crime of rape, or an assault with intent, &c., the inquiry may be made of the prosecutrix, on cross-examination, whether she has not had previous criminal connection with other men, and that, in such case, she is not privileged from answering; also that on such a trial the prisoner may show the prosecutrix to be in fact a common prostitute. All that Lord Ellenborough decided in Dodd v. Norris (3 Camp., 519), was that the plaintiff’s daughter, who testified the defendant was the father of a child she had had, could not be compelled, on cross-examination, to answer whether, before her acquaintance with the defendant, she had not been criminal with other men.
Mow, notwithstanding the above mentioned views of Green-leaf, and the cases cited by him to support them, the weight of authority is in favor of allowing questions to be put to witnesses on cross-examination, which do not relate to the matter in issue, if affirmative answers thereto would affect the general character of the witnesses. And in the case under consideration, I am of the opinion the prisoner’s counsel should have been permitted to ask the witness Blakeley, on cross-examination, whether he had not been guilty of adultery, and whether he had not had a venereal disease since his marriage; for the reason, if such questions had been allowed and answered in the affirmative by the witness, Ms general character would have been somewhat impeached (1 Greenl. Ev., §§455, 456), and it would then have been for the jury to determine whether his evidence was entitled to full credit. If the questions had been allowed and the witness had refused to answer them, as he might because they called for facts wholly collateral to the issue in the case, no inference unfavorable to his character could have been drawn from such refusal. (Barbour's Cr. Tr., *184401; 1 Greenl. Hv., § 451; Cow. and Hill's Notes, 747, 748.) Lord Ellenborough in Millman v. Tucker (2 Peak., 222), told a witness, on his being asked by Erskine whether he had not been convicted of forging coal-meters’ certificates, that he need not answer; and he told the jury that the witness, having availed himself of the privilege, was not thereby at all discredited ; and he also said he himself should, had he been asked such a question, have refused to give an answer, for the sake of the justice of the country, and to prevent such an examination.
The district attorney had no right to object to the questions that were put to the witness, William Gr. Blakeley, in this case. (1 Greenl. Hv., § 451; The People v. Bodine, 1 Denio, 280; Ward v. The People, 6 Hill, 144; Barbour’s Cr. Tr., 400.) But I think it is proper for the court, when such questions are put, to inform the witness of his privilege to decline answering. (Cow. & Hill’s Notes, 747.)
The only other question in the case which I shall consider, is whether .the prisoner should have been permitted to prove that the deceased stated to a witness, on the 18th day of April, 1855, he had signed the note and contract in question. The bill of exceptions shows, “it appeared in evidence that all hopes of recovering by the deceased ceased on the 13th of April, 1855also, that he died on the 20th day of that month. The contract and note bore the dates of April 16th and 17th, .1855.
I was inclined, on the argument, to the opinion that the above mentioned declaration was properly rejected as mere hearsay, in accordance with the general rule, which declares “ such evidence is inadmissible to establish "any specific fact, which, in its nature, is susceptible of being proved by witnesses, who can speak from their own knowledge.” (SeeWharton's Am. Cr.Law, 244.) But subsequent reflection, and an examination of the authorities, have satisfied me the declaration should have been received as evidence. I will first remark that no person other than the prisoner, except the deceased, had any certain knowledge as to whether the latter signed his name to the note or *185contract; and unless the prisoner wronged him, or attempted to wrong him, by forging his name to those instruments, he committed no offence against the people; and it was against the interest of the deceased to say, on the 18th day of April, 1855, he had signed the note and contract. Secondly, declarations, which are secondary evidence, are sometimes received in consequence of the death of the person making them, whether they were made at the time of the fact declared, or at a subsequent day, when it is shown that he possessed competent knowledge of the facts, or that it .was his duty to know them, and that the declarations were at variance with his interest. G-reenleaf says: “When these circumstances concur (meaning in a proper case), the evidence is received, leaving its weight and value to be determined by other considerations.” (1 Greenl. Ho., § 147; Whtte v. Chouteau, 10 Barb., 202.) He further says, while speaking of the admissibility of this class of declarations in certain cases: “ The ground upon which this evidence is received, is the extreme improbability of its falsehood.” (Id., §148.) And he again declares: “In some cases the admissions of third persons, strangers to the suit, are receivable. This arises when the issue is substantially upon the mutual rights of such persons, at a particular time, in which case the practice is to let in such evidence in general as would be legally admissible in an action between the parties themselves.” (1 Greenl. Ho., § 181. See Kelly's case, 3 City Hall Recorder, 153.) It is true this is said only in regard to civil actions; but the rules of evidence in criminal cases are, in most respects, the same as in civil cases. (Barb. Cr. Tr., 351.).
Roscoe declares that the declarations of deceased persons, made against their own interests, are admissible in some cases, “ as where a man charges himself with the receipt of money, it is evidence to prove the payment.” (Roscoe's Cr. Ev., 4th Am. ed., 26.)
The reason usually assigned for the rejection of mere hearsay as evidence, is its incompetency to satisfy the mind as to the existence of the facts sought to be established, as well as the frauds that may be practised under its cover. (Wharton's *186Am. Cr. Law, 2d ed., 244.) But what proof would be more convincing in this case, that the prisoner is innocent of the . crime with which he is charged, than the declaration of the deceased, on the 18th "day of April, 1855, that he had settled with the prisoner, and executed the note and contract in question? I answer, not any, except the positive assertion of a credible witness that he saw the deceased sign his name to them. The adverse interest of the deceased, and the fact that he believed he was on his bed of death, repel the idea of any fraudulent intent on his part in declaring he had executed the note and contract; and if he made that declaration while in his right mind, the presumption that it was true is exceedingly cogent, yea, almost morally certain. I must, therefore, hold that the declaration should have been received as evidence for the prisoner.
The judgment of the Delaware Oyer and Terminer should be reversed for the two erroneous ridings I have specified, and a new trial granted to the prisoner in that court; and he should be required to appear at the next Court of Oyer and Terminer, to be held in Delaware county, to stand trial on the indictment, and not depart that court without leave, and abide its orders and judgment.
Campbell, J., concurred in the foregoing opinion. Mason, J., concurred in the same upon the first two propositions discussed in it, but expressed no opinion on the last question contained in it. ■
Judgment accordingly.