— On the tenth day of October, 1892, the Circuit Court of Sumter county being in session, the court made the following orders in reference to the trial of Step-toe Green, the appellant in this case: “Comes J. S. Mc-Eachin, solicitor who prosecutes for the State, and the defendant, Steptoe Green, being present in person and by attorneys ; and the said defendant having heretofore- and at a former term of this court, to-wit: on the 17th day of October, 1891, been arraigned in open court on the indictment in this cause, and he having then and there entered his plea of ‘not guilty,’ the court now sets Wednesday of the second week of tliis term of this court, the same being Wednesday, the 19tli day of October, 1892, for the trial of this cause ; and it is ordered by the court that 'the names of fifty (50) special jurors be drawn according to law, which names of jurors, together with the names of the petit jurors for the second week of this term of this court, shall constitute the venire for the trial of this cause.”
Before proceeding to trial, the prisoner, through his counsel, moved to quash the venire served upon him for his trial, because the name of M. B. Bosenbusli was omitted therefrom. There was nothing in this motion, and the court correctly overuled it. M. B. Bosenbush, though summoned by the sheriff, had not been drawn as one of the jurors for the week in which the trial was ordered to take place, and did take place. Had his name been put on the venire, it would have been ground of objection on the part of defendant, if' he had sought to avail himself of it. To be a competent and legal juror in such conditions, the person tendered and notice thereof given, must have been drawn as well as sum*62moned. M. B. Rosenbush had not been drawn. — Code of 1886, §§ 4306, 4309, 4320, 4322, 4324; Floyd v. State, 55 Ala. 61; Posey v. State, 73 Ala. 490. This ruling is not opposed to the principles declared in Phillips v. State, 68 Ala. 469; Parsons v. State, 22 Ala. 50; Sylvester v. State, 71 Ala. 17.
Chapman, a witness for the State, was asked the question: “How long the defendant had lived on the Chapman place ?” He answered; “Steptoe Green had lived on the place all his life.” The question and answer were separately objected to as calling for irrelevant evidence. The objections being severally overruled, the defendant separately excepted.
The place, which the testimony tends to show was the scene of the killing, was in a dense forest, thickly covered with undergrowth, and in every way a secret place. It was off from and near to the neighborhood road, which the testimony shows deceased and accused were travelling, engaged at the time in angry altercation. The place of the homicide was probably the most obscure and secreted spot of ground in the immediate neighborhood. One very important inquiry on the trial, as tending to fix the grade of the offense, if perpetrated, was whether the prisoner had a previously formed design to take the life of the deceased. He had travelled some distance with her in the neighborhood road, and only a short time before reaching the place where the body was afterwards found, the two, as the testimony tends to show, entered this dense forest and undergrowth. This was in the immediate neighborhood of what is known as the “Chapman plantation.” The1 testimony objected to tended to show the prisoner’s knowledge of the country around and of this unfrequented spot, and was a circumstance of which the jury might well be informed, so that they could consider it with the other evidence in answering the inquiry, whether he chose that spot for the tragedy, rather than the open roadway, which would much more likely have exposed him to outside observation. Probably this testimony was weak; but we think it a legitimate circumstance for the jury to weigh in determining the grade of the offense, if they found the prisoner guilty.
While prosecuting counsel was making the concluding argument to the jury, two positions were taken by him, to which defendant, through his counsel, objected separately, and moved the court to arrest the argument, and exclude them from the jury. In the testimony of Emma Marr, daughter of the deceased, who testified that she was near to, but not in sight of, the parties at the time of the alleged homicide, she had stated that she informed Nero Brown of *63the killing shortly after it is alleged to have occurred. Brown had been introduced by the prosecution as a witness on this trial, — but had not been interrogated by defendant as to this statement of the witness Emma Marr. Counsel for the defense had assailed the credibility of Emma Marr, basing the assault, in part, upon the alleged contradictions in the testimony of said witness on her different examinations. Beplying to this, the prosecuting counsel, in his said concluding argument, stated to the jury, “that if Emma Marr had not spoken truly, when she said .she had told Nero Brown about the killing, counsel for defense could have proven this statement false, as Nero Brown was present at the trial, and on the stand; and • • counsel for defendant had not attempted to disprove by him what Emma Marr had said to him on the day of the killing, about the killing.” There was nothing in this objection. It was clearly within the realm of legitimate argument to the jury. Even if such line of argument could in any case be objectionable, it was not so as here presented.
The other exception reserved to the line of argument the State’s counsel was permitted to pursue arose as follows : The testimony of Emma Marr given on former trials and written down had been adduced in evidence by the defense for the purpose of impeaching her through discrepancies shown between the- two statements. These had been produced by the defendant on the cross-examination of this witness. In reply to the assaults made upon the veracity of this wifeless, based on the alleged discrepancies in her several examinations, counsel for the State, in his said concluding address, “argued to the jury, that if Emma Marr was unreliable, and her testimony was not to be believed, it was strange defendant’s counsel relied on her evidence to prove the facts upon which they sought to impeach her as a witness. That defendant’s counsel had themselves used her as a witness to prove the facts upon which they sought to impeach her as a witness.” It may be that this was an illogical argument; but that of itself is not enough to put the court in error for not arresting it. — Commercial Fire Ins. Co. v. Allen, 80 Ala. 571; Childress v. State, 86, Ala. 77; Cross v. State, 68 Ala. 476.
Charges 11 and 13 were each properly refused, because each asked the court to assert as a fact that the evidence in this case was entirely circumstantial. Emma Marr testified that the defendant had confessed to her that he killed Harriet“Marr.
Charges 16 and 18, asked by defendant, are not distin*64guishable in principle from those we ruled on in Welsh v. State, ante, 1, at the present term. We held in that case that the court did not err in refusing the charges there considered ; and that ruling justifies the court’s ruling on charges 16 and 18 in this case. — 3 Brick. Dig. 284, § 528.
Response to application for rehearing.
Since we announced a decision in this case — February 6, 1893 — our attention has been specially directed to the charge given at the instance of the State, and which was excepted to. That charge is in the following language: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant went with Harriet Marr for over one mile, no one with them except themselves, until they reached the spot on the road near the five mile post, as shown'by the evidence, and during the time he was going there, or during any portion of the time he was going there, had the intent to kill her there, and did kill her there, the jury are authorized to find him guilty of murder in the first degree.”
It will be seen that this charge authorizes the jury to. find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree if they “believe from the evidence” certain hypothesized facts. In a criminal prosecution, it is not enough that the jury “believe from the evidence” that the constituents of the offense have been proved. They must be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, of the existence of every material element of the offense, before they are authorized to find a verdict of guilty; and that conviction must be produced by testimony. This rule applies to every species of prosecution known to the criminal calender. — Childs v. State, 58 Ala. 349; McAnnally v. State. 74 Ala. 9. It is not necessary that we decide the sufficiency or insufficiency of.the clause we are now considering. The identical language was employed in the following cases, and we made no comment on it, but, on the contrary, treated the charges as free from error. — Cagle v. Stale, 87 Ala. 38; Keith v. State, 91 Ala. 2. See also Bowdon v. State, Ib. 61; People v. Sheldon, 68 Cal. 434. Possibly the language could only tend to mislead, and, at most, would call for an explanatory charge, if injury was apprehended. — 1 Brick. Dig. 344, § 129, and cases cited. It would always be safer to adopt the long established phrase, that to convict of crime, the testimony must convince beyond a reasonable doubt. — Newton v. State, 92 Ala. 33.
The charge is objectionable in other respects. The sub-phrase, “as shown by the evidence,” should have been omit*65ted. — Marble v. Lypes, 82 Ala. 322; Joyner v. State, 78 Ala. 448; Herges v. State, 30 Ala. 45. And the last clause of the hypothesis is faulty. It declares that if defendant “during the time he was going there [the place where it is alleged the homicide was committed] or during any portion of the time he was going there, had the intent to kill her [deceased] there, and did kill her there, the jury are authorized to find him guilty of murder in the first degree.” The language should have been, and pursuant to such intent, did kill her there.
The charge is objectionable in yet another respect. One of its postulates is, “that the defendant went with Harriet Harr for over one mile, no one with them except themselves.” All the testimony bearing on this feature of the inquiry was that of Emma Marr. She testified that she was with them during most of this time, and was at no time far from them. To justify the postulate that “no one [was] with them except themselves,” would necessarily require that her testimony that she was with them should be disbelieved ; and if her testimony be disbelieved, there was an entire absence of proof of any previously formed intent to kill the deceased. The hypothesis of a charge should never include as a predicate a proposition which is unsupported by any testimony, or which is inconsistent, with any conclusion of fact there is testimony tending to establish, no matter how slight that testimony may be. — Henderson v. Marx, 57 Ala. 169; Cummins v. State, 58 Ala. 387; Boddie v. State, 52 Ala. 395; Wise v. Falkner, 51 Ala. 359.
The last mentioned imperfection would probably not call for a reversal, if it stood alone. It was enough, however, to justify the refusal to give a charge otherwise unobjectionable.
Reversed and remanded. Let the prisoner remain in custody until discharged by due course of law,