Defendant occupied a small frame building, on Main avenue, in Sioux Palls, consisting of three rooms, all on the ground floor, On the morning of December 8, 1897, two policemen entered the place for the purpose of arresting certain disorderly persons, supposed to be harbored therein, when -they discovered the dead body of Alfred Erikson lying on the floor of one of the rear rooms, attended by unmistakable evidence that he had been killed in the building. Defendant, who was in the front room when this discovery wTas made, was immediately taken into custody, and in due time was • tried, and cbnvicted of the crime of murder; the jury designating in their verdict that he should suffer death.
In impanelling the jury, the state’s attorney, against defendant’s objections, was permitted to inquire of each venire man whether he entertained any conscientious scruples against inflicting the death penalty in cases where the prosecution relies for conviction upon circumstantial evidence, but the court declined to regard an answer to such inquiry as cause for challenge. Our statutes (Comp. Laws), contain the following:
‘ ‘Sec. 6449. Every person convicted of murder shall suffer death, or imprisonment at hard labor in the territorial penitentiary for life, at the discretion of the jury. Upon trial of an indictment for murder, the jury, if they find the defendant guilty, must designate in their verdjet whether he shall’be punished by death or imprisonment for life at hard labor, and the judgment of the court shall be in accordance therewith. But upon a plea of guilty the court shall determine the same.”
*184“Sec. 7359. A challenge for implied bias may be taken for all or any of the following causes, and for no other: * * (8) If the offense charged be punishable with death, the enter taming of such conscientious opinions as would preclude his finding of the defendant guilty, in which case he shall neither be permitted nor compelled to serve as a juror.”
When section 7359 was adopted as section 332 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1877, section 6449 contained only these words: “Every person convicted of murder shall suffer death for the same.” Pen. Code 1877, § 249. Then a verdict of guilty necessarily involved the death of the accused, and conscientious scruples against capital punishment precluded a juror from finding a defendant guilty: but as the law now stands the entertaining- of such opinions does not have that affect, and is not . cause for challenge. This is true whether the evidence relied upon -for conviction be circumstantial or direct. The general rule governing the examination of persons called as jurors is thus stated by Mr. Thompson: “Within reasonable limits, each party has a right to put pertinent questions to show, not only that there exist proper grounds for a challenge for cause, but to elicit facts to enable him to decide whether or not he will exercise his right of peremptory challenge.”. 1 Thomp. trials § 101. This is a fair expression of the practice which has long prevailed in this jurisdiction in both civil and criminal trials, and we can discover no valid reason why either party in a murder trial should not be permitted to ascertain the opinions of jurors concerning capital punishment merely for the purpose of determining upon whom to exercise peremptory- challenges. Such, in effect, was the course pursued by the court below, and it meets with the ap proval of this court.
*185The prosecution introduced testimony, against the objection of defendant, showing that on the day following the commission of the crime a small tobacco sack’was found lying upon a work bench in the front room of the building, occupied by defendant, and wherein the body of deceased was discovered. Testimony was also introduced, against defendant’s objections, showing that some weeks before, at Gary, S.- D., deceased had a similar tobacco sack, in which he kept small quantities of moneju The sack found in the building was received in evidence against defendant’s objection, and he'assigrs the ruling upon the introduction of all this evidence as error. From the discovery of the crime until the discovery - of the tobacco sack several persons visited the premises previously occupied by defendant, and it is possible one of these persons might have placed the sack where it was found; but such inference is neither fair nor reasonable, in view of all the evidence, as the premises were guarded with as great care as is usual under like circumstances. The identity of the sack found in the building with the one seen in deceased’s possession at Gary was a question for'the jury, and it was certainly proper to show the condition and contents of the building wherein the crime was committed. This evidence was properly received.
The crime was discovered between 12 and 1 o’clock in the morning. ' At 4:45 of thje preceding afternoon deceased was at a store within two blocks of where the crime was committed, and was seen to cross the street, going in the direction of defendant’s place. A witness for the government was allowed, against defendant’s objection, to testify that deceased told him, immediately before leaving this store, that he was going to Garrington’s. This ruling is supported by high authority, *186and meets with, the approval of this court. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 108; Hunter v. State, 40 N. J. Lawr, 495; State v. Dickinson, 41 Wis. 299; State v. Howard, 32 Vt. 380; State v. Hayward (Minn.) 65 N. W. 63.
Harry Saunders, a witness on the part of the government, was allowed to testify that defendant called at a store where he was clerking, between 5 and 6 o’clock in the afternoon preceding the discovery of the body, and purchased certain articles, for which he gave a $5 bill, and received $4.80 in oh auge. The objections to this evidence were not well taken. The acts of defendant thus disclosed occured during the eight hours intervening between the time Erikson was last seen alive and when his dead body was discovered. It was certainly competent and relevant to show the defendant’s whereabouts and conduct at any time during this period, and the relevancy of such evidence is not affected by the fact that the conduct of the accused was in itself apparently harmless, and consistent with innocence.
A test tube, containing pieces of cloth cut from the pocket of overalls worn by deceased at the time of his death, shown to have been examined by an expert, who testified that they contained blood stains, was received against defendant’s objections. The expert was unable to say that the stains were caused by hitman blood, and the pieces were cut from the overalls several weeks after the crime was committed. It was the evident purpose of this evidence to show that the person who did the killing rifled the deceased’s pockets with bloody hands. As the cause must be reversed, as will hereafter appear, we are disposed to hold that, if the evidence should be the same upon a second trial as that presented by the record before us, *187this testimony should be excluded. The time when the pieces were taken from the overalls, and .the manner in which those articles were handled, create so much uncertainty as to what caused the stains as to • deprive them of any probative force whatever.
In his .closing argument to the jury, the state’s attorney made this remark: ‘‘Writers on criminology tell us that in several of the states where the death penalty has been abolished it has been re enacted, because', in the judgment of the people of those states, the increase of homicide has been such as to make it necssary for the protection of the people.” To this statement an exception was taken and allowed. It was made in response to arguments by counsel for defendant urging the jury to not inflict the death penalty, one of whom read a portion of the prelude to a sermon by Rev. Frank Crane against the expediency of inflicting capita] punishment. It will be observed that the learned state’s attorney stated a fact not in evidence; a fact of which it is doubtful that courts or juries should take judicial notice. There are at least two serious objections to this statement. There is nothing but the attorney’s assertion as to what writers on criminology have said upon the subject, and nothing to show that their opinions are well founded. It is unnecessary to decide in this case whether the judgment should be reversed for this reason alone, but we are of the opinion that this statement should not have been made.
P. J. Rogde, Esq. who assisted the state’s attorney, made this remark in his address to the jury, to which an exception was duly taken: ‘.‘It is not against the defendant that he did not go on the stand, because he was not compelled to,” and thereupon the court, in the presence of the jury, observed: *188“You must not go into that. I cannot allow you to make any comment whatever upon that subject.” Defendant failed to request any instruction touching this matter, nor did the court allude to it in its charge. This court, was recently called upon to consider the question here presented. Its conclusions are thus stated by Corson, P. J., in State v. Williams (S. D.) 75 N. W. 815: By statute (Comp. Law, § 7381.) an accused party on trial shall, at his own request, but'not otherwise, bé a competent witness; and Ills failure to make such request shall not create any presumption against him.” This law, while intended to confer a benefit upon the accused, places him in a peculiar position. If he does make the request, and takes the stand, his testimony will be subject to those tests on cross-examination that may prove embarrassing, and detract largely from its weight as evidence. If, on the other hand, his failure to take the stand in his own behalf can be ever called to the attention of the jury, the provision intended for his benefit would prove a trap and a snare. The theory that a court can remove from the minds of a jury the effect of a statement on the part of the state’s attornry referring to'the failure of the accused to testify in his own behalf, by an instruction, is illusory, and not sustained by common experience. Jurors, however much they are inclined to do so, would find it difficult to efface from their minds the impression made by the remarks of counsel, and reinforced by the instruction of the court, again calling to their minds the same fact, though given for the purpose of cautioning them from being influenced by counsel’s remarks. The only safe rule, therefore, when counsel for the state has so far overstepped his duties as to call to the attention of the jury the fact that the accused has not taken the stand, or offered himself *189as a witness, is to grant a new trial. In Iowa this is made obligatory upon the court by statute, and the state’s attorney is subject to prosecution for a misdemeanor, who in any manner calls such a matter to the attention of the jury State v. Baldoser, 88 Iowa, 55, 55 N. W. 97. In Minnesota the court, as well as counsel, is prohibited from referring thereto by statute. State v. Pearce, 56 Minn. 226, 57 N. W. 652, 1065. In Long v State, 56 Ind. 182, the supreme court of Indiana granted a new trial when counsel for the state said, on the argument to the jury: “There were but two parties to this transaction. You have heard the evidence of one of them. We would have been pleased to have heard from the other, to see what light he could have thrown upon this transaction.” To the same effect is Hunt v. State, (Tex. App.) 12 S.W. 737. While the language of the statutes of the several states is somewhat different, the principles involved, and the object and purpose of the law, are the same; and, in our view, the only practical way to remedy the misconduct of the state’s attorney in this case is to grant a uew trial. We use the term “misconduct” in its legal sense, as we are satisfied tile learned state’s attorney intended no wrong, but in his zeal to protect the interests of the state he went beyond his legal duty and legal right. Lindsay v. Pettigrew, 3 S. D. 199, 52 N. W. 873.
While the facts in the present case are not identical with those disclosed by the record in the former case, it clearly falls within the reason of the rule therein announced, and we are not inclined to recedefrom the position previously taken on this subject. The decision in State v. Williams rests upon the proposition that the fact of a defendant’s failure to go upon the stand should not be alluded to either by counsel for the govern*190ment or the court; hence the court was right in refraining from mentioning the matter in its charge. It is but just to Mr. Rogde to observe that the decision in State v. Williams had not been rendered when the case at bar was tried. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.