To entitle a witness to the privilege of not answering a question as tending to criminate him, the court must see from the nature and circumstances of the evidence which the witness is asked to give, that there is reason to apprehend injury if he is compelled to answer, and where that is made to appear, much latitude will be allowed him in determining the effect of any particular question. The danger to be apprehended must be real and not imaginary. The witness himself is not the sole judge whether his evidence will bring him into danger. The judge must see and determine from the circumstances of the case, and the nature of the evidence, whether there is reasonable ground to appreLend danger. The witness was by the judge told that he need not answer any question as to what he had done or said, that tended to criminate him, but he must tell if he had seen others play at cards for money, and this, the wit. ness said he would not answer. Can it be pretended that, if his answer had been he had seen “A” play at a game for money, that it furnishes, or tends to furnish, evidence against himself ? Under that, evidence that “A” was guilty of playing a game of cards for money would be shown without necessarily proving who was in the game with “A.” And the answer could not tend to criminate the witness or furnish a link in a chain of circumstances to make a case against the witness. 3STor would the fact if the witness was engaged in the game at the same time excuse him from answering; nor that he might fear “A” might be called to testify against him be an excuse for refusing to answer the question.
The law will not permit k man to keep the names of those who violate the law, and their offenses, secret, because of a fear that they might give evidence in their turn against him. To admit such a rule would make such protection to those engaged in gaming, that all who entered a gaming house and played, could be protected by a claim of privilege on the part of others engaged in playing and make that privilege an inducement to those present to engage in gambling and thereby encourage gambling and thus defeat prosecutions for a violation of the statute by engaging in the game. While the question originally asked by the foreman should have had added to it some such term as, “ not naming or including yourself,” yet when brought before the court and fully and correctly informed as to his rights, which, under the ruling were protected, he still declared that he would not answer the question, under such declaration and refusal to answer he was in contempt of court. Ward v. The State, 2 Mo. 98, and Smith v. The People, 20 Ill. App. 591. The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.