No general rule can be laid down for the admission of dying declarations, and, as the circumstances of each case will show whether the requisite consciousness of a conviction of impending dissolution existed, it is “poor policy,” says Prof. Wigmore in his treatise on Evidence (page 1809, § 1442), to disturb the ruling of the trial judge upon the meaning of these circumstances. This principle laid down by Prof. Wig-more has been recently quoted and cited with approval by our Supreme Court. — Parker v. State, 165 Ala. 1. In the case presented, the attending circumstances and the condition of the declarant (confined to his bed suffering from a serious gunshot wound, from which death resulted Avithin less than a Aveek), taken in connection with his having said, at the time of making the statement that was admitted as a dying declaration, that he Avas shot “very badly, seriously,” and that *55he had been “killed” by the person who he said had shot him, shows a sufficient predicate to justify the court in admitting the dying declaration complained of as erroneously admitted. See Ex parte Key, 5 Ala App. 274, 59 South. 331, where we have discussed this question and reviewed the authorities.
The court properly refused to allow the defendant to show by his own witness Doster on direct examination that he was not related to the parties. Relationship to the parties may be established on cross-examination of a witness-for the purposes of showing bias or interest, or affecting his credibility, but no suggestion had been made that the witness was related to any of the parties; such an issue was not before the court, and there is no tenable theory upon which such evidence was admissible; and it was wholly incompetent for the defendant on the original examination of his own witness to show by him that he was not related.
The trial court was in error in its ruling in sustaining the objection of state’s counsel to that part of the testimony of the defendant, when testifying as a witness in his own behalf, wherein he testified that, during the progress of the difficulty resulting in the killing with which he was charged, he “heard somebody say, ‘G-ive it to him over the head.’ ” The nature of the remark and the language used leaves no escape from the conclusion that it must have been made by some person present and participating in the fatal transaction. It was clearly a part of the res gestae, and was made at a time (as narrated by the defendant) making it explanatory of the conduct of the parties, and material in the connection in which it was offered, as having a tendency to show who was at fault in bringing on the difficulty, and in fixing the responsibility for the killing.
The paper writing, or note, given by the defendant *56to the witness Geo. Washington with the request that he deliver it to Otio Osborn, who was implicated with the defendant, was competent and properly admitted in evidence. It was identified as the same paper that the defendant had given to the witness and contained matter having on its face a tendency to incriminate the defendant. — Oakley v. State, 135 Ala. 15, 33 South. 23; Coleman v. State, Infra, 64 South. 529. It also showed a plain purpose upon his part to manufacture and impose false testimony on the court in the trial of the case. “There is a principle of law that if a fraud on the court be attempted, in the getting up of false testimony, or any other artifice tending, or designed to deceive or mislead, or to make the false appear to be true, and this is knowingly assisted, or procured to be done by the suitor, this is a circumstance which the jury may rightly consider, to the disadvantage of the party making or assisting such attempt. An honest cause, the law considers, needs not the aid of such reprehensible methods.” — Beck v. State, 80 Ala. 1.
We have examined all other matters presented by the record, and find that they do not show error or require discussion. For the error pointed out, the judgment of the lower court must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.