OPINION OF THE COURT.
PARKER, J.There was a plea in abatement interposed based upon supposed irregularities in the finding of the'indictment by the grand jury. A demurrer to the plea was filed and sustained. The plea alleged upon information and belief that the Court in its instruction misdirected the grand jury as to their duty in finding and returning indictments in all cases, of which that of defendant was one, and that an unauthorized person was present in the grand jury room while the cause was under investigation and the indictment was being considered, and who participated in the proceedings.
1 The plea must be verified. The plea must be verified by the defendant, which verification must state that, “the plea hereunto annexed is true in substance and matter of fact.” Arch. Cr. Pldg. & Ev., 82; R. v. Grainger, 3. Burr, 1617; 1 Bishop on Criminal Procedure, secs. 757, 793.
It may be, under statute á Anne, c. 16, s. 11, which is no doubt a part of the common law of this country, the verification need not be by the defendant himself; but it must be verified by affidavit. A verification of a plea in abatement on information and belief is no verification within the requirements and renders the plea demurrable. We are not advised of any statute or rule relaxing the common-law requirements in criminal cases. The court was right in sustaining the demurrer to the plea.
2 The next point raised by defendant is that no sufficient proof of ownership was produced. The only testimony on the subject is contained in the following question and answer:
“Q. I will ask you to state whether the H. O. W. Cattle Company own any cattle in New Mexico?
“A. They own all cattle in the Territory of New Mexico branded H. O. W.”
No attempt was made to show any personal knowledge or recognition of the particular cow, branded “H. O. W.,” the alleged mother of the calf which was the subject of the larceny charged. The prosecution stood alone upon the fact that it had a brand, owned all cattle in New Mexico in that brand, and consequently owned the unbranded offspring of such cattle, of which the calf in question was one. No proof was offered that the brand had been recorded and no certificate of the record of any brand was shown. We think this testimony was insufficient as to ownership to support the verdict.
Section 107, Compiled Laws of 1897, is as follows:
“No brands except such as are recorded under the provisions of this act shall be recognized in law as any evidence of ownership of the horses, mules, asses, or neat cattle upon which such brand may be used.” Here is an express declaration that a brand which is not recorded shall not be recognized as evidence of title. If it must be recorded, then the record is the best evidence of the fact of record. Without statutory aid, the record itself, perhaps, would have to be produced. But section 67, Compiled Laws 1897, provides that the proof of the brand may be made by a certified copy of the record, under the seal, and certificate of the secretary of the cattle sanitary board. It would seem to require no argument under the terms of these statutes, to conclude that where a person depends solely upon a brand found upon an animal to establish title thereto, it must appear that he has a legal brand and that fact must be established in the legal way.
3 It is urged by the solicitor-general that seasonable ‘objection to this evidence was not made by defendant. At the time of the introduction of the evidence, no objection was made. At the close of the testimony of the witness the following motion was made:
“In view of the evidence as it now stands, I do not know what the court will do about it, but we move to strike out all the witness has stated on the subject of ownership on two grounds: (1), that the ownership of cattle can only be proved by the personal knowledge of the witness of the animals, or by the recorded brand, and neither of those methods has been resorted to here.”
It is a well-known rule that a party may not sit by and allow questions, apparently calling for incompetent testimony, to be asked without objections, take his chances upon something favorable being disclosed, and then, finding the proof prejudicial, be heard to complain of the court’s refusal to strike it out. 3 Jones on Evidence, sec. 898; see also,Murray v. Silver City, Deming & Pacific R. R. Co., 3 N. M. 580. But in this case the question propounded gave no hint that the prosecution was proposing to establish title by the response of the witness, and, indeed the answer was perhaps, not exactly responsive to the question. Nor can the answer be said to warn the defendant that it was relied upon to establish title. From a large experience of the writer in the trial of this class of cases it may be said that very frequently, if not usually, the formal proof by certificate of brandas the last piece of evidence put in by the prosecution, and the trial is conducted upon the tacit understanding that the same will be forthcoming before the case is closed in chief. In this case the defendant called the attention of the prosecution and the court at the close of the tesimony of the first witness for the prosecution, that he intended to rely upon his legal rights, while he might well have waited under the circumstances attending the trial of such cases, until the prosecution closed. We think the objection was seasonably made.
The plain question was whether this proof was sufficient and it was held that it was. In this we think the court was in error.
For the reasons stated, the cause will be remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial, and it is so ordered.
Baker and-M'cFie, JJ., concur. Mills, C. J., having decided the case below, Pope, A. J., and Mann, A. J., did not participate in this decision.