The act for which the defendant was convicted was striking the complaining witness twice upon his head with a pistol, thereby cutting his head and inflicting a wound upon it about an inch and a-half in length, and this was sufficient .under the Penal Code to create the offense of an assault in the second degree, foi that may be done by inflicting a wound upon another with, or without, a weapon, or by the use of any instrument or thing likely to produce grievous bodily harm. (Penal Code, § 218, subs. 3 and 4.) And such an instrument as was in the hands of and used by the defendant would be likely when so used to produce grievous bodily harm. Certainly there was such a degree of probability that it might be productive of that result as to require the case upon that point to be submitted, as it was upon the trial, to the consideration of the jury.
Upon the cross-examination of the defendant, who was sworn in his own behalf as a witness upon the trial, he was asked whether he had not committed other assaults at other times upon other persons, and the questions propounded to him for that purpose were objected to. The objection was overruled and exceptions to the decisions were taken. These inquiries may very well have been suggested or induced by similar questions put to the complaining witness upon his cross-examination by the defendant’s counsel. But while that might form some excuse for following the same course in the cross-examination of the defendant, it still would not justify the rulings which were made if they were erroneous. And that they were erroneous may probably with safety be assumed, for while the defendant may be cross-examined as to other acts of misconduct not involved in the issue to be tried which may affect his credit as a witness in the case, the inquiry shpuld be limited to acts reasonably attended with that result. (Brandon v. People, 42 N. Y., 265 ; Real v. People, Id., 270; People v. Brown, 72 id., 571; People v. Crapo, 76 id., 288; Ryan v. People, 79 id., 593.)
The cross-examination should be' restricted to such acts as bear “ directly upon the present character and moral principles of the witness, and therefore, essential to the due estimation of his testimony by the jury.” (1 Greenl. on Ev. [7th ed.], § 459.] And that the defendant may have upon other occasions committed an assault upon other persons would not seem to be within this prin
The evidence was such as to require the court to submit the case to the jury. Their verdict was reasonably well supported by it, ancf the judgment in the case should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.