Appellant was tried upon an information charging him with the crime of incest, and from a judgment of conviction he appeals to this court.
A number of the assignments .relate to certain conduct of the prosecution and rulings of the trial court, preliminary to the trial. Some of these assignments present matters that cannot occur on another trial, and others are not likely to arise again, and, as the judgment must be reversed on other grounds, these assignments need not be further noticed-.
[1] The appellant is a widower with seven children. The oldest of these is a girl who at the time of the trial was 17 years old, and it was with her that the alleged crime is charged to have been committed. At about the time of the arrest of the appellant, all of his children, including the prosecutrix, were committed to the custody of the sheriff, to be held as witnesses at the trial. Shortly thereafter, appellant sent to the prosecutrix a suit case containing certain articles, among others a catheter and a bottle containing liquid of some kind, though what kind of liquid" does not seem to have been disclosed. Without anything to show the purpose of sending the catheter,.it was introduced in evidence. .The prosecutrix had testified that she was pregnant at that time,, and it was assumed 'by the prosecution that the catheter was sent to her -by defendant -to be used to produce an abortion. Appellant, when upon the witness stand, admitted that he had placed the-catheter in the suit case, and his counsel asked -him why he had sent it. This question was objected to on the ground that it called for the conclusion of the witness. The objection was sustained and- error is assigned!. Appellant should have been allowed to answer this question. If there had been evidence to -show that a catheter is an instrument that can be used for no other purpose than to produce an abortion, or if 'it were an instrument *394known to have no other use, a different question would be presented. But there is no such evidence, and we know, as a matter of common knowledge, that it is susceptible of other and legitimate uses. The purpose of its introduction was to show guilty intent on the part of appellant, and he should have been given the same opportunity to rebut or to break the effect of such evidence as any other, and should have been given an opportunity to explain his purpose if he could. He might have been able to show that it was sent for a perfectly legitimate purpose.
[2] The defendant requested the court to charge the jury:
“That if they find that any witness has knowingly testified falsely in any important matter in the trial of this case, the jury are at liberty to disregard the entire testimony of such witness, except where such' witness is corroborated by other competent evidence.”
The request was refused and error is assigned. This instruction is peculiarly appropriate in this case, and the refusal to give it constituted reversible error. Some of the testimony of the prosecutrix, improbable at best, was flatly contradicted by the testimony of other witnesses for the state, and all her testimony was contradicted by the defendant. There w^is sufficient of -‘her testimony, however, that was not contradicted by any witness for the state, to warrant a conviction provid'edl such testimony was believed by the jury. The jury may have, believed that the part of her testimony that was contradicted by other witnesses for the state to have been false and still felt it incumbent upon themselves to accept as true all of her testimony that was not contradicted by other witnesses for the state. But this is.not the correct rule. If they believed part of her testimony to be false, they were at liberty to disbelieve and to disregard it all, and they should have been so instructed by the court.
[3] Appellant contends that he was prejudiced by references, made biy the state’s attorney in his closing argument to the jury, ■to an injury inflicted by appellant on one of his younger children with a buggy whip. The testimony relating to said injury, if true, showed appellant to have been shockingly cruel, and, after having heard the testimony relating thereto, the jury would very naturally have felt that appellant deserved conviction and punishment, although there may not have been sufficient evidence to *395satisfy them that he committed the offense chárged in the information. But the offense disclosed by this testimony was in no wise related to the offense charged in the information. It" was wholly immaterial to any issue in the case, and all reference to that affair, ’ either in the testimony or in the argument,''should have been excluded by the court. But this question is not presented by any proper assignment, andl therefore cannot be a ground for reversal.
[4] Appellant also contends that he was prejudiced and’ prevented from- having a fair trial by certain other alleged misconduct of the state’s attorney. During the closing argument to the jury, the state’s attorney made the following remarks to the jury:
“There is one thing I want to call your ttention to, that I believe above everything else, and that is that I believe - Mrs. Goodnow,' who is now dead and undoubtedly reaping 'her reward, was one of the .best women in the world. I believe she suffered more hardships, I believe life was cruel, more cruel, to her than any person I have ever heard! of. I believe she was a good woman, a true woman, and I have but one fault to find with Mrs. Goodnow, and that is that she didn’t kill that snake before she had been married to him more than three years.”
The making of these remarks was 'highly improper. In the first place, there is not a scintilla of evidence in the record to show that the defendant was ever unkind or in any wise mistreated his wife, and, if there was, it would be wholly immaterial to the issues in this case. 'Counsel for appellant repeatedly objected to-the making of such" remarks while they were being m-ade; but the court failed to make any ruling on such objections or to give the matter any attention ’whatever. Such exhibitions as this -by a states attorney, and especially at a stage of thé trial when defendant’s counsel has no opportunity to say anything to change the impression produced, can have no other effect than to inflame and prejudice the minds of the jurors against the- defendant, and ought not to be tolerated by a trial court. Where a trial court refuses to check d prosecuting attorney when making such remarks as the above, the ju-ry is likely to accept'the court’s silence as an indorsement of what is being said1, and there is grave danger that the jury will take such improper matter into- consideration when making up their verdict. B-ut this matter, like the one *396just considered, is not presented ¡by a proper assignment, and for that reason cannot be a groundl for reversal, and; such matters are reviewed here only in order that they'may be avoided in case of another trial.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.