The prisoner in this case was convicted of manslaughter in the District Court of Deer Lodge County on the twentieth day of December, 1887, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the territorial prison for ten years. There was a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and an appeal taken to this court. This case was before us at the July term, 1887, and was then reversed and remanded for a new trial, upon the ground of an erroneous instruction inadvertently given. (See 7 Mont. 162.) There are several grounds of error relied upon by appellant for a reversal of this case. (1) Error for not *102granting a change of venue. (2) Error for not granting a continuance. (3) Error of law in giving certain instructions to the jury. (4) The evidence does not sustain the verdict.
We will notice these several grounds seriatim.
1. The prisoner presented his petition, which was sworn to, supported by the affidavits of a number of the residents of Deer Lodge County, setting forth that the “inhabitants of said county were so prejudiced against him” that he could not expect a fair trial therein. The court took the matter under advisement until an effort was made to obtain a jury. In other words, he made the result of an effort to obtain a jury determine the question whether the prisoner was entitled to a change of venue, and, being satisfied from the disclosures made from such effort that he could have a fair trial in said county, he overruled the motion. This proceeding was had under section 226 of the Criminal Practice Act of the Territory. It provides, among other things, that “ any defendant, in any indictment or information, may be awarded a change of venue, upon a petition, etc., .... and such judge or court being satisfied that such cause exists, .... may award a change of venue.” The judge or court may award the change of venue upon the unsupported petition of the prisoner, verified by oath either of himself or some credible person. The whole matter rests in the sound discretion of the trial judge, subject to a reversal for an abuse of that discretion. This discretion is a judicial one, which should only be exercised on good cause shown, which must consist of facts proven to the satisfaction of the judge or court, and not the conclusions and opinions of the parties who make the affidavits. (Kennon v. Gilmer, 5 Mont. 257.) The prisoner read the joint affidavit of fourteen persons in support of his application for a change of venue. That affidavit, after giving the names of the witnesses, is as follows, to wit: “-, being duly sworn, each for himself says, that he is a resident of Deer Lodge County; that he has heard the case of the Territory of Montana against Dennis Mantón frequently discussed by persons living in the neighborhood of where affiant resides, and from what he has heard he does not believe that said Dennis Mantón can have a fair and impartial trial in said county, for the reason that the inhabitants of said county aré prejudiced against said Mantón.” *103This affidavit does not state a single fact. It simply states the opinions of the witnesses from what they have heard. In the case of Keanon v. Gilmer, supra, the learned chief justice, who delivered the opinion of the court, says: “An affidavit against a whole community, that states the mere conclusions of the witnesses, is of no consequence whatever. It ought to state the facts, so that the court, and not the witnesses, may determine whether the community is prejudiced. The court is to make a finding from the facts. It is to determine in a judicial manner whether an impartial trial may be had.” He sustained this holding by reference to the following cases: People v. Yoakum, 53 Cal 567; People v. Congleton, 44 Cal. 95; People v. Shuler, 28 Cal. 495; People, v. Mahoney, 18 Cal. 185; and People v. McCauley, 1 Cal. 383. The fact that the court wanted to see whether a jury could be obtained before it decided the application for a change of venue, and the further fact that it may have decided it upon the ground that a jury could be and was easily obtained, make no difference in this case, because the petition and affidavits were wholly insufficient, and the court ought to have refused the application when it was presented. We remark, however, that we do not think that the fact that a jury may be obtained in a county is at all conclusive that a fair and impartial trial can be had in such county. (See case of Kennon v. Gilmer, supra.) We do not approve this practice. The court should determine the question from the facts shown, upon a procedure for that special purpose, either by testimony taken by affidavits, or witnesses called and examined in open court, or before the judge at chambers, as the case may be.
2. The application for continuance was made upon the affidavit of the prisoner, stating that one Hiram Bernard was a material witness in his defense, and that he would contradict one Catharine Gannon, a witness for the prosecution; that said witness had testified on the former trial on behalf of the Territory-in reference to the prisoner’s conduct on the evening and night of the alleged homicide, among other things, as follows, to wit: “He [referring to said defendant]' made his biscuits, put his biscuits in the oven, went into the room, and gathered up all the papers he could get, and made a bundle of them, and put them in his pocket.” And, in cross-examination, further testi*104fied: “He [referring to the defendant] stayed till eight o’clock, till he put his biscuits in the oven, and went in and ransacked, and got a bundle of papers, and put them in his pockets. They were some papers that they had with their business.” Said affidavit alleges that witness Bernard will contradict said witness Gannon in relation to the above evidence as follows, to wit: “ That a few days after the death of Susan E. Mantón, to wit, on the fourth day of March, 1887, the said Hiram Bernard was the keeper for the sheriff of the county of Deer Lodge, who had levied upon the property of the said Mantón, and that said Bernard was in the room in the house where said Susan E. Mantón died; that he was in the possession of said house for a period of at least ten days thereafter; that the witness Catharine Gannon, together with her sou, was in said house when he took possession of said house as said keeper, and they remained there at least six days after the said Bernard took possession; that during that time the said Catharine Gannon searched all the drawers and places and shelves where papers and books were kept, and the said Bernard saw the said Catharine Gannon burn all the papers, documents, and books that were found in said drawers, bureaus, and other places, which were of any value, and at the same time she took the watch and jewelry that belonged to the deceased, and appropriated and kept them, and claimed with her son the possession and ownership of said house and premises; that afterwards the said Bernard, in company with H. B. Whitehill, one of the attorneys for the defendant, searched for all legal papers belonging either to Dennis Mantón, the defendant, or the said Susan E. Mantón, and were not able to find any papers of any value whatever, for the reason that the said Catharine Gannon had destroyed all the papers of value that were in the house.” The court refused to grant the continuance, but with the consent of the county attorney allowed the affidavit to be read as the deposition of the witness Bernard. A careful analysis of the testimony set forth- in the affidavit will show that it is wholly immaterial. The only point upon which he proposed to contradict her was that “ he gathered up all the papers he could get, and made a bundle of them, and put them in his pocket. They were some papers that they had with their business.” We gather from the evidence in the transcript *105that deceased was the owner of the property, and the materiality-of this evidence that he put some papers in his pocket lies in the fact that it might shed some light upon a motive on the part of the prisoner to destroy the deceased, who was his wife. And it appears that the witness Gannon testified on the trial substantially as it is stated in the affidavit she did on the former trial." But we are unable to see how the testimony of Bernard could contradict her statement. He says, according to the affidavit, that, some time after the death' of the deceased, he, as an officer, was in the custody of the house of the prisoner, and the witness Gannon was there, and he saw her burn “ all the papers, documents, and books that were found in said drawers, bureaus, and other places that were of any value.” How this contradicts the statement that the prisoner “gathered up all the papers that he could get, made a bundle of them, and put them in his pocket,” it is hard to see. It is not stated what papers they were, nor that he got them out of the drawers, nor that the papers which she is alleged to have obtained from the drawers and bureaus, and burned, were the same she testified he gathered up. Both statements may stand together perfectly consistent. Besides, it is not disputed that the prisoner stayed in the house all night after he came back from where the deceased was left; that he was there all the time after his wife was brought to the house, the next day, and until her death, which was some twenty-six hours, and how much longer before he was arrested the proof does not disclose. The fact that Mrs. Gannon may have burned the papers she found does not contradict the statement that some time before he gathered up all he could get pertaining to their business, and put them in his pocket. The testimony is too remote and irrelevant upon which to predicate an application for a continuance. But the court below, following the rule laid down in Territory v. Perkins, 2 Mont. 467, and Territory v. Harding, 6 Mont. 323, stated that he would continue the case, unless the county attorney would consent that the affidavit should be read as the deposition of the absent witness, and, the county attorney consenting, the motion was overruled. We are asked to re-examine the ground upon which these cases are based, and put a different construction upon our Criminal Practice Act touching continuances on account of the absence of *106a material witness. We do not think this is a proper case in which to consider this question, but by our silence we do not wish to be understood as affirming those decisions. We think the continuance might have been properly disallowed upon the ground already indicated.
3. Objection is made to instruction 8, upon the ground that the words “the killing being proved” refer to cases where there is no conflict of testimony as to the manner of the death and the instrument used in the killing, and that the jury, by this instruction, were led to believe that, as soon as the death was proved, the burden of proving circumstances of mitigation or justification devolved upon the defendant. We are referred to Wharton on Homicide, section 669, in support of this position. In the section referred to the learned author is combatting the doctrine that, “ when the mere act of killing is proved without anything more, malice is presumed.” “This,” he says, “is an axiom handed down to us from the scholastic jurisprudence, and has no application to any case that can arise in a court for trial of real issues; for no such thing as a mere abstract killing of B by A can be proved.” In other words, while he does not gainsay the truth of the proposition as an abstract principle of law, yet, in practice, it can never occur, for the reason that in the very circumstances attending the killing there will always be evidence either tending to prove or disprove the existence of malice. But the instruction in question is a precise copy of section 40 of the Criminal Laws of this Territory, and with us it has the sanction of legislative authority, and by force of the statute is the law. We do not agree with the counsel for the prisoner as to the kind of case to which the words quoted above refer. The language is, “the killing being proved,” not admitted. It means that if the jury find the fact of the killing, and that the prisoner did it, then the burden of proving circumstances which mitigate the offense from murder to manslaughter, or justify the killing altogether, will devolve on the accused, unless the very evidence itself which proves the killing, and that it was doné by the prisoner, also shows that it was manslaughter, or justifiable homicide. There was, then, no error in this instruction. Instructions 10 and 11" are also objected to. They define manslaughter, voluntary and involuntary, in the language of the *107statute; and in a trial upon an indictment charging murder, which necessarily embraces manslaughter, it would be error to fail to give the jury instructions as to what constitutes manslaughter. And we will see further on that this instruction was proper under the facts of the case. The objection to instruction 20 is that it cannot be reconciled with instructions 10 and 11, defining manslaughter. When this case was before us a year ago, we defined the nature and character of the offense charged in the indictment. (See case of Territory v. Manton, 7 Mont. 102.) And we repeat here again, quoting from 2 Bishop on Criminal Law, section 689, that “the doctrine on this subject is that wherever there is a legal duty, and death comes by reason of any omission to discharge it, the party omitting it is guilty of a felonious homicide.”' And it is immaterial “whether the action be of the mind or of the body; whether it operates solely or concurrently with other things; whether it was consented to by the person on whom it operated or not; whether it was an unlawful confinement, or the leaving a dependent person in a place of exposure, or any omission of duty which the law enjoins.” The very volition of the defendant which led him to refuse aid to his wife, when the law imposed the duty upon him to protect her, is transferred to the violence of the elements, and he is made to use their forces, and hence is responsible for the death which they immediately caused. It is well to bear in mind that in this case it is an undisputed fact that the deceased Avas the wife of the prisoner; and it must be further borne in mind that the very essence of the charge in the indictment is his failure to do something to save his Avife from perishing in the cold. The cold is charged to be the means of her death. The prisoner had it in his power to prevent it, and he wickedly and wilfully stood by and let her die. /The gist of the offense charged is his passive inactivity when duty called upon him to protect his wife. /Hence those portions of the definitions of voluntary and involuntary manslaughter, Avhich relate to the “ sudden heat of passion,” and the “performance of an unlawful act, not felonious,” and the performance of-a lawful act “without due care and caution,” are inapplicable, and may be rejected as surplusage. But the instruction defining manslaughter as the “ unlawful killing of a human being without malice or any *108mixture of deliberation ” was directly applicable to the facts of the case. In the case of death caused by criminal negligence it is difficult to draw the line of distinction between murder and manslaughter. Mr. Bishop, in discussing this subject, says: “ If the act is one of negligence not clearly showing danger to life, yet, if death follows, the offense is only manslaughter; whereas, if the exposure or neglect is of a dangerous kind, it is murder. Ordinarily, if a husband should withhold necessaries from his wife, and she dies, it will be only manslaughter, since this act is not so immediately dangerous to life as the other. Whether death caused by neglect is murder or manslaughter is made to depend on the nature and character of the neglect.” While instruction 20 makes the wilful omission of duty, which results in death, the test as to whether it is murder, yet the same instruction admonishes the jury that they must believe that all the other elements necessary to constitute murder must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. In a previous instruction a full explanation of what it took to constitute murder had been given to the jury. While, then, this proposition is obscurely drawn, and the full statutory definition of manslaughter is given, we do not think there is any inconsistency between them, when we take such parts of the latter definition as are applicable to the case; and we feel the better satisfied with this conclusion, in view of the fact that the jury acquitted the prisoner of murder, and only found him guilty of manslaughter. (Parchen v. Peale, 2 Mont. 573.) Instruction 21 is objected to on the ground that it states a fact to the jury, and thereby invaded the province of the jury. It stated to the jury that they might take into consideration any previous difficulties and quarrels between the deceased and the prisoner as evidence of malice. In the case of Territory v. Scott, 7 Mont. 407, we sustained a similar instruction, and we refer to that case for the reasons of our decision. Instruction 22 is objected to on the ground that it directs the jury to consider the drunkenness of the deceased on the night of her exposure, to shed light upon the question as to whether she was of so violent a disposition on that occasion that the prisoner could not control her, and was thereby excused for letting her lie out all night, when it is contended that the jury should have been told to consider it to determine whether deceased *109came to her death by drunkenness or by exposure to the cold. A sufficient answer to this objection is that the able counsel who represented the prisoner on the trial did not ask any such additional instruction of the court. Certainly the evidence is too slight upon which to predicate such an instruction to induce us to reverse this case upon that ground, when the counsel did not attach importance enough to it to ask it below. (Thompson’s Charging the Jury, §§ 81, 127, and authorities there cited.) The counsel for the prisoner observes as to instruction 32 that if “the facts stated in this instruction constitute murder, then the definition of that crime in the law books is wrong.” This instruction is made to cover all the facts charged in the indictment, and covered by the evidence, and we think is correct in every particular; and the objection of counsel is a restatement in brief of the ground of his demurrer to the indictment, which we disposed of when this case was before us the other time.
4. The last objection made by the counsel for the prisoner is that the evidence does not sustain the verdict. Without entering into a review of it, it is sufficient to say that we think it abundantly sustains it. The prisoner allowed his wife to lie out on the ice, poorly clad, and within easy calling distance of the house, all night, and perish with the cold. He had a hired man living with him, who was willing to help him, and they could have brought her to the house, notwithstanding the snow was from two to three feet deep. The best evidence of this is that they did do it the next morning, when it was too late. She languished speechless until the next day, and died. Ho effort was made to get her medical aid. It is true, the deceased had been drinking, and that this was probably the reason she was not able to reach the house herself; but the proof shows that they had gone together to Philipsburg that day, a distance of seven miles, on foot, and that they both drank together, and the prisoner was himself more or less intoxicated when he left her on the ice to spend the night, while he remained in the house near by. / His drunkenness does not excuse him from the discharge of his duty to his wife as a husband; nor does her drunkenness excuse him from the discharge of his duty, especially when he drinks with her, and by example and precept contrib*110utes to her degradation. The prisoner has had two trials, and the present verdict, which finds him guilty of manslaughter, must stand. Let the case be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Bach, J., and Liddell, J., concur.