Immediately following a statement by the widow of the deceased, testifying as a witness for the state, that about 10 or 15 minutes after he was taken home subsequent to the shooting, and while they were holding him on the bed, he talked with her about the shooting, she was asked the question, “State what he said.” The defendant’s objections to this question, upon the ground, among others, that a sufficient predicate had not been laid, having been overruled, the witness replied that the deceased said he was going to die, “and that they had met him down there to kill him without a cause, and just had it made up with each other to do so.” The defendant moved to exclude this answer as a Avhole, and made separate motions to exclude the following portions of said answer: “They had met down there to kill him without a cause,” and “just made it up with each other to do so,” — the following *33grounds being stated in support of each of the last mentioned motions: Because the portion of the answer referred to in the motion is not limited to- acts which caused the death of McLemore, because that portion of the answer is not a proper subject-matter of a dying declaration, because it is not a part of the res gestse, because it is a statement of a conclusion or opinion; and because it does not relate to any Circumstance or transaction attending the killing. Exceptions were reserved to the action of the court in overruling these several motions.
The question was one proper to be asked for the purpose of eliciting proof of the making of a statement by the deceased indicating a belief by him at the time that death was impending; and the part of the answer which purported to repeat a statement made by him that he was going to die was admissible evidence for the consideration of the court on the preliminary inquiry, the determination of which was a matter for the court alone, as to the sufficiency of the predicate laid to let in evidence of declarations made by the deceased. — Ward v. State, 78 Ala. 441; Sims v. State, 139 Ala. 74, 36 South. 138, 101 Am. St. Rep. 17. Whether the evidence of that statement was or was not proper to- be submitted to the jury over an objection duly made, the court was not in error in its rulings on the objection to the question and on the motion to exclude the answer as a whole.
The declarations of the deceased which may be proved when the proper predicate has been laid must be statements of facts or circumstances immediately attending the killing — the act which caused death, and the attendant circumstances — to which the declarant could have deposed as a witness if he had survived; and such declarations as disclose his mere conclusions, mental *34impressions, or opinions are not admissible over objections duly made. — Oliver v. State, 17 Ala. 587; Mose v. State, 35 Ala. 421; Reynolds v. State, 68 Ala. 502; Pulliam v. State, 88 Ala. 1, 6 South. 839; Sullivan v. State, 102 Ala. 135, 15 South. 264, 48 Am. St. Rep. 22; Sanford v. State, 143 Ala. 78, 39 South. 370; Underhill on Criminal Evidence, § 108; 1 Elliott on Evidence, § 340. Under the rule just stated, it was not permissible to prove the statements of the deceased “that they had met him down there to kill him without a cause, and just had it made up with each other to do so.” These were not statements of acts constituting part of the res gestae of the killing, but were statements of inferences or deductions drawn by the declarant from facts or conduct Avhich he did not narrate or describe. The existence of a conspiracy to take the life of the deceased Avas not properly provable by evidence of his expression, while in extremis, of the opinion or conclusion that- it existed. As evidence of these declarations was admitted, it is to be supposed that the jury considered it in reaching a conclusion in the case, and it may well be that it had Aveight with them on the inquiry as to whether the appellant' and his father were or were not free from fault in bringing on the difficulty. We cannot conclude that the error in the admission of this evidence was a nonprejudicial one.
Because of that error, the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.