This is an action of replevin which was begun before a justice of the peace to recover the possession of' a steer. The cause was removed into the circuit court where there was a trial to a jury resulting in judgment for defendant, and from which the plaintiff appealed.,
It appears from the record before us that at the trial the *433plaintiff testified in his own behalf, and on cross-examination the following questions Aver e asked and answered:
“Q. Now, you are in the habit of branding your cattle out west? A. We branded all of them. Q. On the ranch? A. Branded all of them. Q. How long have you been in the cattle business ? A. Oh, well I handled a few cattle out there for ten or fifteen years. Q. Ever handle any mavericks ? A. None, only my own, as I know of. We had a law, all we rounded up where your stock ran and belonged to you, the people branded them for you, the round-up people branded them for you. Q. If you got anybody else’s steer that was not branded, you ran him in ? A. I don’t know that I did.”
The plaintiff’s counsel - objected to this last question which was by the coux*t sustained. The defendant thereupon asked the plaintiff this further question: “Q. I will ask you, Mr. Massengale, if you have not told repeatedly since you came back to Missouri that you got your start rounding up unbranded cattle in the west and branding them for yourself ?” To this question plaintiff’s counsel objected and which objection was by the court sustained.
It further appears that during the argument of the case to the jury Mr. Collet, one of defendant’s counsel, remarked that “Massengale, the plaintiff, obtained his start and made his money by rounding up unbranded cattle in the west, and stealing them and branding them as his own.” As soon as this remark was made the plaintiff’s counsel objected thereto for the reason that no evidence to that effect had been adduced ; that thereupon the court directed the defendant’s counsel to confine his remarks to the evidence, whereupon he replied, “I am stating facts,” and then turned to the jury and further remarked, “ you see them squirm when the truth begins to hurt, he [meaning plaintiff] is a cattle thief and is trying to follow the same law here as he did in Montana. He *434is now trying to come down to Chariton county and steal some of our cattle.” To these remarks the plaintiff objected as being outside of the record and had not been proved, but the court overruled the objection because it was of the opinion that the remarks of the defendant’s counsel were justified by the evidence, to which ruling the plaintiff duly excepted.
I. It is quite difficult to conceive of a more flagrant abuse of the license of speech by counsel than that of defendant’s counsel in this ease. His remarks were based upon a question which the court had ruled was improper and calling for evidence which was impertinent. There was no evidence ■whatever" of the facts referred to by defendant’s counsel, and yet the court, when appealed to by plaintiff’s counsel, ruled that there was and permitted the defendant’s counsel: to proceed with his argument without reprimand or rebuke.
The evidence adduced to maintain both the affirmative and negative of the controverted and decisive issue of fact in the case, was quite evenly balanced, and it may be that the unproved facts referred to in the objected-to remarks of the counsel for defendant, coupled with that of the court in respect thereto when challenged by plaintiff’s' counsel, may have turned the scale in defendant’s favor. The court, in effect, by its ruling, admitted the improper evidence which defendant’s counsel had by his question sought to introduce, and permitted him to make it the ground for hurling against plaintiff and his business methods the bitterest and most damaging invectives. The effect of this inadvertence of the court we must think was highly prejudicial to plaintiff.
The remarks made by us in Ensor v. Smith, 57 Mo. App. 584, are equally applicable here, to the effect: “In the portions of the argument and remarks of counsel to the jury which have just- been quoted, it is seen that statements and allusions to various facts, to prove which there was no evidence adduced, were made, which it seems to us, were calculated to do much harm. The admonition of the court to counsel .to *435keep 'within the record was not sufficient to repair the damage which probably resulted. When the mind of the jury is being swayed by the use of perverted and conjectured facts and the influence of zealous and impassioned advocacy, the conditions may require the application of a far more radical and drastic remedy than that administered by the court. If the warning of the court is disregarded it may, in its discretion, then suspend the argument and discharge the jury, or omitting to 'do that, it may later on set aside the verdict on its own motion. In the recent ease of Smith v. Telegraph Co., 55 Mo. App. 626, where it appeared that counsel for the plaintiff in his argument before the jury persisted in making a statement of facts, which were not disclosed by any evidence, and in commenting thereon, it was held that such behavior was an abusa of the license of speech by counsel anu a sufficient ground for reversing the judgment.
“In the management of a cause the largest and most liberal freedom is allowed counsel and the law protects him in it. ‘The right of discussing the merits of the cause both as to the law and the facts is unabridged, the range of discussion wide. He may be heard in argument upon every question of law. In his addresses to the jury it is his privilege to descant upon the facts proved or admitted in the pleadings; to arraign the conduct of the parties; to impugn, excuse, justify or condemn motives so far as they are developed in evidence; assail the credibility of witnesses when it is impeached by direct evidence or by the inconsistency or incoherence of their testimony, their manner of testifying, their appearance on the stand, or by circumstances. His illustrations may be various as the resources of his genius; argumentation as full and profound as his learning can make it; and he may, if he will, give play to his wit or the wings of his imagination.’ Mitchum v. State, 11 Ga. 613. But while this broad and comprehensive license is accorded counsel, it is neverthe*436less subject to the restrictions that they must ‘keep within the record’ as to the facts. In condemning the practice of undertaking to get that in as proof which is merely conjecture it was said in Berry v. State, 10 Ga. 522, by the great judge who delivered the opinion in the case: ‘Wiry then resort to such a subterfuge. Does not history, ancient and modem; nature, art, science and philosophy; the moral, political, financial, commercial and legal worlds — all open to counsel rich and inexhaustible treasures for illustration ? Here under the fullest inspiration of excited genius they may give vent to their glowing conceptions in thoughts that breathe and' words that burn. Nay, more, giving reins to their imagination they may permit the spirit of their heated enthusiasm to swing and sweep beyond the flaming bounds of space and time, extra flammantia moenia mundi. But let nothing tempt them to pervert the testimony, or surreptitiously array before the jury, facts which, whether true or not, have not been proved.’ ”
Ingenious counsel for defendant have in a very able brief urged upon our consideration a number of reasons, some of which are quite persuasive, why the judgment ought not to be disturbed, but after all we are unable to relieve our mind of a suspicion, still lingering there, that the verdict upon which it rests may have been influenced by the conduct of defendant’s counsel. We are further sustained in the conclusion just stated by the following authorities cited in plaintiff’s brief: Thompson on Trials, secs. 958 and 969; Marble v. Walters, 19 Mo. App. 135; McDonald v. Cash, 45 Mo. App. 66, 79; Smith v. W. U. Tel. Co., 55 Mo. App. 626; Ritter v. Bank, 87 Mo. 574; Haynes v. Town of Trenton, 108 Mo. 123, 133; Gibson v. Zeibig, 24 Mo. App. 65; Bishop v. Hunt, 24 Mo. App. 373, 377; Railroad v. Meyers, 63 Fed. Rep. 793; Hall v. United States, 150 U. S. 76; Tucker v. Hanniker, 41 N. H. 317.
II. It appears that the defendant by his counsel, during *437the progress of the trial, requested the court to put the jury in charge of the sheriff and that an exhibit of the steer in controversy he made to it to the end that it might examine for itself the marks and brand. This request was by tbe court refused. It further appears that after tbis ruling was made, and while the attention of the court was engaged in the consideration of some other matter, the defendant told the jury that the steer in question “was in Salisbury” — tbe place of trial — and for it “to go and look at it.” While this conduct of the defendant was under the circumstances, highly improper, we can not find that the attention of the court was called thereto by the plaintiff in such a way as it could administer a suitable rebuke to defendant therefor. There was no ruling of the court in respect thereto, or exception saved so as to bring the matter before ns for review.
III. The .objections to tbe action of tbe court in admitting tbe evidence referred to in the plaintiff’s first and third assignment of error, as far as we are able to discover, were well taken, and at the trial anew we think such action ought to he avoided.
Tbe judgment will be reversed and cause remanded.
All concur. .