Defendant James Smith, having been granted a separate trial, was convicted of robbery, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary. He brings this action here for review upon writ of error.
It is contended by plaintiff in error that the evidence does not sustain the verdict, for the reason that the loms delicti has not been proven. This is not tenable. An examination of the entire record clearly discloses that the crime was committed in Moody county, in this state — the county alleged in the information, and in which the action was tried. We think a fair and reasonable construction of all the evidence leaves no room for doubt upon this point.
The state called, as a witness in its behalf, Clyde Kephart, one of the persons included in the information in this action, and as to whom the case was pending on a plea of not guilty. He was permitted against defendant’s objection, to testify fully concerning the commission of the alleged crime, and his participation therein. Defendant contends that it was error to permit this witness to testify before the court had directed him to be discharged from the information. Whether or not the court erred in this respect depends upon the effect to be given the several legislative enactments upon the subject in this state. In the Code of Civil Procedure adopted in 1877, it was provided that “no person offered as a witness in any action or special proceeding, in any court or before any officer, or person having authority to examine witnesses or hear evidence, shall be excluded or excused, by reason of such persons’ interest in the event of the action or special proceeding; or because such person is a party thereto; or because such person is a husband or *550wife of a party thereto, or of any person in whose behalf snch action or special proceeding is brought, prosecuted, opposed or defended” — with certain specified exceptions, which have no bearing upon the questions involved in this action. Comp. Laws, § 5260, Code Civ. Proc. § 446. By this sweeping enactment, all persons are competent witnesses, unless shown to be within the statutory exceptions, and the reason for many rules of the .common law based upon the incompetency of parties has ceased to exist. However, the learned commissioners who prepared the Codes of 1877, inadvertently, it would seem, retained certain principles of the common law, apparently inconsistent with the general doctrine as declared in the section above quoted. These are found in the Code of Criminal Procedure, and are as follows:
“Sec. 852. Discharge of Defendant as Witness. When two or more persons are included in the same indictment, the court may, at any time before the defendants have gone into their defense, on the application of the district attorney, direct any defendant to be discharged from the indictment, that he may be a witness for the territory.
“Sec. 353. Same^ — Duty of Court. When two or more persons are included in the same indictment, and the court is of the opinion that m regard to a particular defendant there is not sufficient evidence to put him on his defense, it must, before the evidence is closed in order that he may be a witness for his co-defendant, submit its said opinion to the jury, who, if they so find, may aquit the particular defendant for the purpose aforesaid. ” Same sections, Comp. Laws, §§ 7379, 7380.
It was provided by the general repealing act of February, 1877, that for the purposes of construction the several Codes adopted at that session of the legislature “shall be held and deemed to have been passed on the same day and as parts of the same statute, and if the provisions of any Code conflict with or contravene the provisions of any other Code, the provisions of such Code must prevail as to all matters and questions aris*551ing thereunder out of the same subject matter.” Eev. Codes 1877, p. 900. Therefore Secs. 352 and 353 of the Code of Criminal Procedure must prevail over Sec. 446 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and determine the practice in criminal actions, unless the former sections have been repealed or modified by subsequent legislation. In 1879 the following, found in the Compiled Laws as Sec. 7381, was enacted: “In the trial of all indictments, informations, complaints and other proceedings against persons charged with the commission of any crime, offenses and misdemeanors before any court or committing magistrate in this territory, the person 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.” This latest expression of the legislature will, applying especially to criminal actions, must be given such force and effect as its language fairly imports, and in so far as it conflicts with former statutes on the same subject, must be construed as intended to modify such statutes. It will be observed that in all criminal trials any person charged with crime shall, at his own request, but not otherwise, be a competent witness. His competency is not restricted to cases where he requests to be a witness in his own behalf, but extends to all criminal trials, and makes him a competent witness for all purposes; the only limitation being that he cannot be compelled to testify, either for the state or for the defense. Such being the clear and unmistakable intent of this enactment, we conclude that any person charged with crime, whether convicted or not, may, if he so elects, become a witness, either for himself, his co-defendant, or the state. This conclusion is in harmony with the tendency of modern legislation, and the later decisions in states still governed by common law principals. It is consonant with sound reason, and avoids many manifest absurdities resulting from the application of common law principalis, based upon the incompetency of parties, in jurisdictions which permit parties to be witnesses. In the absence of any showing *552to tbe contrary, we will presume Kephart was willing to testify and we bold that the court properly permitted him to do so without first discharging him from the information.
The defendant accepted to the following portion of the charge: ‘-You are instructed that under the statutes of this state a defendant in a criminal case may be a witness in his own behalf. But you are further instructed that it is your duty to take into consideration, in weighing his testimony, the fact that he stands charged with the commission of the crime; that the result of the case under consideration is to him of the most vital importance; and, bearing this in mind, you are to give to his evidence such weight and credence as, in your sound judgment, you may consider it entitled to.” Defendant also excepted to the following part of the charge: “And the proof in support of it is such as is furnished by co-defendants, and reía-tives and friends of the defendant or his co-defendants. It is the duty of the jury to take into consideration the interest of the defendant and his co-defendants, and the natural interest or sympathy of his relatives, or the relatives of his co-defendants or his and their friends. ” The court here refers to the effort of defendant to prove an alibi. It certainly was the duty of the jury to consider the interest of defendant, his co-defendants, and their relatives, in the event of the action. Evidence cannot be weighed, by persons of ordinary intelligence and experience, without giving attention to the evident feelings and interest of witnesses. It is always proper for trial courts to remind jurors of their duty in this respect, but we cannot commend the manner in which it was done in this case. They should have been directed to consider the interest, if any, as shown by the evidence, of each witness, without specifying any particular person or class of persons, and to give to the testimony of each such weight as the jurors believed it entitled to, in view of all the evidence. The testimony of each witness should be subjected to the same test, and the court should studiously avoid any expression calculated to discredit any particular por*553tion of the testimony. However, we are satisfied, from a careful inspection of the record, that, whatever departure there may be in the foregoing parts of the charge from what we regard as good form, such departure did not prejudice, or tend to prejudice, defendant in respect to any sustantial right, and therefore presents no reversible error. Comp. Laws, § 7588. Counsel for defendant, who did not take part in the trial below, has called our attention to other portions of the charge; but his objections cannot be considered in this court, no parts of the charge having been excepted to, other than as stated herein.
Careful attention has been given to certain errors alleged to have occurred in the refusal of the court to permit answers to questions asked of the witness Kephart on cross-examination. Many idle and unnecessary questions were asked. Numerous captious objections were made by counsel for the state. As a confessed participant in the alleged crime, Kephart should have been subjected to the most thorough and rigid cross-examination. The utmost latitude should have been allowed. It is unwise and dangerous for the government, in such cases, to interpose objections, so long as the inquiry is confined to any reasonable limits. But there must be a limit to any cross-examination, and when it appears, as it does in this case, from an examination of the whole record, that the witness, at one time or' another, has been required to answer every question which could possibly aid the jury in correctly estimating the value of his testimony, prejudicial error will not be predicted upon the refusal of the court to permit answers to certain questions, when, in other parts of the record, and in answer to other questions the witness in effect, testified fully upon the matters excluded. Such rulings, if erroneous, are not prejudicial to any substantial right. We think the cross-examination of Kephart was permited to extend even beyond reasonable limits, and we are unable to discover any reversible error in respect thereto. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.