delivered the opinion of the court.
In a desperate conflict between several of the Fuestons and Partons upon the one side, and several of the Lawsons and Roses upon the other, John and Ewell Lawson and James Fueston were killed, and several others wounded. The weapons used were pistols, and many shots were exchanged. The testimony, as might well be expected, is very conflicting. The appellant, Beth Fueston, was jointly indicted for murder with seven others, for the killing of John Lawson, the deceased having also'taken part in the difficulty.
' James Fueston, who was killed, was a son of the appellant. The latter has been convicted of manslaughter, and now appeals from a sentence of twenty-one years in the penitentiary.
As the case must be remanded for another trial, and as others may yet be tried for having taken part in the tragedy, we shall refrain from a discussion of the evi*232dence save so far as is necessary to a due consideration of the questions raised by this appeal.
The difficulty occurred at a church which appellant was in the habit of attending, and when religious services were being held. The appellant came there with his wife and daughter, and also some neighbors, who, however, do not appear to have been engaged in the trouble. It was in hot weather, and he was in his shirtsleeves. He then, apparently, had no weapon. The testimony is conflicting as to whether he, at any time during the-difficulty, had a pistol. Some witnesses say he did, and some that he did not. Assuming, however, that he did, yet there is no positive evidence that he shot the deceased, John Lawson. After a careful examination of the record, we fail to find that any witness says so. The deceased was shot twice. Several witnesses swear positively who fired one of the shots, but who fired the other does not appear by any positive evidence. The son of the appellant appears, according to the latter’s testimony, to have been first killed, and in his immediate presence. There is testimony showing that at the commencement of the shooting the appellant grabbed the deceased, and in the scuffle they went over a bank; and one witness says that after they did so he saw smoke, as if from a pistol, at the point where they then were, and this statement is possibly confirmed by another witness. But what may well be termed “the battle ’ ’ had then become general; the parties were then scattered about, and the firing was going on upon all sides. The deceased himself had a pistol, which he had been firing at some one. He was seen at another point after the scuffle with the appellant, and then it *233was that several witnesses say he was shot at least once. As to these matters there is perhaps some conflict of evidence, but when both the State and the accused had closed their testimony in chief there' was no evidence tending to show that the appellant either shot, or shot at the deceased, save the circumstances just detailed. The vital question was whether he had done so, or had aided or encouraged those who did do so, and we have said this much as properly leading up to the consideration of the competency of certain testimony.
The accused introduced one Wm. Jackson as a witness. He was an eye witness of the difficulty. His testimony was doubtless regarded as material by the accused, and so it appears to us. He testified as to various matters, and among them that he saw the accused ‘1 before and during the fight. He had no pistol. ’ ’ Upon cross-examination he said: “Did not see Beth Fueston have John Lawson down or shoot at him.” He was then asked: 1: Did you state before the grand jury, in Whitley Circuit Court, that you saw Beth Fueston shoot John Lawson?” The witness answered, in effect, in the negative.
After the accused had closed his testimony, the Commonwealth was permitted, over his objection, to introduce a member of the grand jury, and prove by him that Jackson stated before it that “he saw Beth Fueston put pistol against John Lawson and shoot.” It can not well be doubted but what this evidence was effective in the way of a conviction. It was un questionably very damaging to the appellant’s cause. Certainly the Commonwealth had no right to prove as a substantive fact, or as matter iü chief, that Jack*234son had said he saw the accused shoot Lawson. The witness had testified upon his examination in chief by the accused that the latter had no pistol. Conceding that this was equivalent to saying that the accused did not shoot the deceased, yet the testimony of the grand juryman was at most only competent by way of contradiction of Jackson’s testimony; but it was allowed to go to the jury without their being told that it was only to be considered for that purpose. Upon the peculiar facts of the case, in view of there being no positive testimony that the accused had shot or shot at the deceased, this should have been done. It doubtless was received by the jury as substantive testimony that the accused shot him. It was, in effect, evidence in chief upon the part of the State. The court was bound, as it no doubt intended, to afford the appellant a fair trial, but this, we think, was not done for the reason indicated. This testimony was introduced after the defense had closed its evidence, and when it was likely to be very effective with the jury. It was proven as the statement of an eyewitness to the tragedy, made not long after its occurrence, and coming as it did without restriction from the court as to its effect, the conclusion is almost, if not quite, irresistible that the jury regarded it in determining the question whether the accused actually shot the deceased.
To have insured a fair trial, the lower court should, upon the circumstances of this case, have instructed the jury-how and for what purpose they could consider this testimony. The whole law of the case was properly given to the jury, but for the error indicated the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for another trial consistent with this opinion,