The appellant was indicted for murder. He undertook to justify the homicide upon the ground of self defense. He was convicted of manslaughter, upon evidence which clearly justified the verdiet, and sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary. He seeks to reverse the judgment of conviction:
1. Because of the court’s refusal to give in charge to the jury a request preferred by him upon the doctrine of self defense. But, upon reference to the court’s charge, we find that subject sufficiently covered.
2. Because, it is said, a material step in the progress of the trial was taken in the prisoner’s absence. The record shows that the defendant was not under arrest, but was on bond; that, at the close of the first day of the trial, the court announced that, the hour of adjournment having arrived, the taking of testimony would be suspended until the morrow ; that, without the knowledge of the court, the defendant walked out of the court room, and was standing with a crowd of men on the sidewalk in front of the court house when the presiding judge administered the statutory oath to a deputy sheriff and placed the jury under his charge, after admonishing them; that the judge’s attention was not called to the fact that the defendant was absent at the time these steps were taken, but that immediately thereafter he directed him to be brought into court, and stated to him that the bailiff had been sworn, and the jury, who were still in the box, had been admonished as to their duty in the case, and gave him full opportunity to assert any right he might have in the premises as if nothing had been done in his absence.
If it should be held that a probability of prejudice to a prisoner could be conceived because in his absence the court administered ' a statutory oath to a deputy sheriff, and admonished the jury as the law requires, it would not be reversible error where the absence is shown to have been through the wilful conduct of the prisoner, and he has had an opportunity to rectify the mischief and regain the lost advantage before the jury has left the box. Mabry v. State, 50 Ark. 498-9 ; Gore v. State, 52 id. 285.
2. Defend ant as witness
3. The defendant testified in his own behalf, but r -i i • , , • , • m r , , i. . .. contined his testimony to a single tact tending to sustain his theory of self defense. One of the attorneys for the prosecution, in his argument to the jury, commented upon the defendant’s failure to deny the testimony of two witnesses for the State to the effect that he had made a statement the day of the homicide indicating a desire for an opportunity to kill the person for whose death he was upon trial. It is argued that this is prejudicial error for which the judgment should be reversed. Acts of 1885, p. 126.*
But the exemption from unfavorable comment upon the silence of a defendant in a criminal cause extends only to one who does not avail himself of the statutory privilege of testifying in his own behalf. If he takes the stand, he is on the same footing as any other witness. McCoy v. State, 46 Ark. 141. When he has exercised his option to become a witness, he is made competent for all purposes in the - case; and, as was said by the Supreme Court of Maryland in a case like this, “his conduct on the witness stand, and his silence, when testifying, as to matters involved in the pending inquiry, which were certainly within his knowledge, were circumstances which the jury had a right to consider in deciding upon the credit due to the witness, in connection with the other facts proved in the case, and they were, therefore, circumstances upon which the State’s attorney had a right to comment in addressing the jury.” Brashears v. State, 58 Md. 568 ; McFadden v. State, 28 Tex. App. 241; Heldt v. State, 20 Neb. 492 ; Stover v. People, 56 N. Y. 315 ; State v. Tatman, 59 Iowa, 471; Com. v. Mullen, 97 Mass. 546.
Tfie attorney’s reference to the defendant’s failure to contradict the witnesses does not warrant a reversal.
3. Provision colirtehou°se!'ry
4. The last contention worthy of consideration is that the court was not held at the place authorized by law. The court house had been destroyed by fire, and the authorities whose duty it was to act in the premises provided a building- just across the street from the former site as a temporary court house. The court was lawfully held therein., Hudspeth v. State, 55 Ark. 323.
Affirm.
The act of March 24,1885, sec. 1, (Acts 1885, p. 126), provides “ that on the trial of all indictments,” etc., “the person so charged shall, at his own request, but not otherwise, be a competent witness, and his failure to make such request shall not create any presumption against him.”