*403Opinion by
Judge SettleReversing.
The appellant, Willis Mount, shot and killed Willis Nutty in the city of Paducah, He was indicted by the grand jury for murder, and in the trial which followed the jury failed to agree upon a verdict. But upon a second trial the jury found him guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and fixed his punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for twenty-one years. A new trial was refused him by the lower court, and the case is now before us for review.
The salient facts of the homicide, as shown by the bill of evidence, were as follows: On the night of December 10,1903, between 10 and 11 o’clock, appellant and several other persons were in a room over and connected with Stagg’s saloon, the room being in the third stoiy of the building in which the saloon was situated. Nutty entered the room, and, rapping a table with a silver coin, said he would play the field. !M. Phelps, one of the persons present, applying an indecent epithet to Nutty, said: “You came up here to shoot craps, and now you want to play the field.” Nutty replied that (meaning the opprobrious epithet) was no more than Phelps was. Phelps then remarked to Nutty that, if he (Phelps) was running the game, he would not allow him in it. "When Nutty came into the room, and until he and Phelps got into the conversation referred to, appellant was lying with two other men on a bed in the corner of the room, but when the discussion between Nutty and Phelps began he got up from the bed, and with his hand in his pocket remarked, “I wonder what he is going to do,” and then advanced toward where Nutty and Phelps were standing at the table. As appellant approached Nutty, the latter said to him, “Mount, I know you; you look like thirty cents to me,” Ap*404pellant thereupon drew his pistol, pointed it at Nutty, and fired. Nutty wheeled to the right, and appellant fired at him the second time. Nutty then fell to the floor and soon expired. One of the pistol balls entered the mouth, and the other the back, and both wounds, in the opinion of the physician, were mortal. 'After or during the discussion with Phelps, Nutty put the coin he held in his hand in a side pocket, and the- hand remained in the same pocket until he Was shot by appellant, but no pistol or other weapon was found on his body after his death.
Appellant attempted to justify the homicide upon the ground of self-defense and apparent necessity, his own testimony being to the effect that five years before Nutty had attempted to take his life-, and then cut him in the throat; that he had but a little while before his death left the penitentiary, and returned to Paducah, and repeatedly threatened appellant’s life on the day of his death, saying that he would kill him and leave the city. These threats were communicated to appellant — some of them within an hour of the homicide; that on the occasion of the shooting he (appellant) got up from the bed for the purpose of leaving the room, when he was addressed by Nutty in the language above quoted, intermixed with oaths and epithets, upon hearing which, and seeing Nutty suddenly throw his hand to his pocket, or behind him, he believed he was about to execute his threats to take his (appellant’s) life, and he thereupon shot him to save his own life, which he in good faith then believed was about to be taken. Appellant made proof by several witnesses of the threats of Nutty to kill him, but was himself uncorroborated by any other witness present as to the oaths and epithets claimed to have been applied to him by Nutty at the time of the shooting, or. as to sudden throw*405ing by the latter of his hand to his pocket or behind him. As already stated, the only testimony from other witnesses present as to the remarks and conduct of Nutty was that he said to appellant, “Mount, I know you; you look like thirty cents to me;” and only one witness (McGregor) stated that his hand remained in the pocket in which he placed the coin he exhibited after entering the room. A good deal of evidence was introduced by appellant to prove that Nutty was a violent, quarrelsome and dangerous man, and none was introduced by the prosecution to show that such was not his reputation.
Quite a number of alleged errors were assigned by appellant in the grounds for a new trial, nearly all of which are now relied on for a reversal, but we will only consider such of them as we think material. It is insisted for appellant that the court erred in refusing him a change of venue. The proof heard on the motion was conflicting- — so much so, indeed, that it is difficult to determine on which side of the question it preponderates; and this of itself is sufficient to deter us from interfering with the ruling of the trial court. The question was one to be settled by that court upon the proof. The burden was upon the appellant to show that he could not get a fair trial in- McCracken county. And while this court may properly review the decision of the lower court in granting or refusing a change of venue, it will not interfere with its exercise of discretion in that matter, unless it is made to appear with reasonable certainty that there was manifest error upon the part of that court in its decision of the question. (Dilger v. Commonwealth, 88 Ky., 550, 11 Ky. Law Rep., 67, 11 S. W., 651.) We may also add that the homicide occurred a year before the last trial. There had been a mistrial in the meantime, and it does net ap*406pear that at either the' first or last trial there existed any unusuahexcitement or public clamor against appellant.
It is likewise contended by appellant that the lower court erred in refusing him a continuance of the case. It appears, from the affidavit for the continuance that it was asked because of the absence of E. J. Bugg, Wm. Bishop and Jack Walker. The Commonwealth’s attorney agreed that the statements of the affidavit as to what appellant expected to prove by Bugg and Walker might be read on the trial as their' depositions, respectively, but refused to admit as the deposition of Wm. Bishop what the affidavit stated he would testify in appellant’s behalf if present. The court then announced that the case would be continued, whereupon the Commonwealth’s attorney expressed to the court and to appellant his consent that the stenographic notes of the witness, Wm. Bishop, taken upon a former trial of the case, might be read as his deposition in lieu of appellant’s affidavit as to what he could prove by him. Appellant refused to consent to the reading of the stenographic notes of Bishop’s testimony taken on the former trial. The coúrt then said he would permit the stenographic notes of Bishop’s testimony to be read if appellant would consent thereto, but, if such consent was not given, he would not allow the case to be continued. And upon appellant’s persisting in withholding his consent to the reading of the stenographic notes, his motion for a continuance was overruled by the court, and he was forced into trial without the presence or testimony of Bishop, to which he at the time excepted. There was no complaint on the part of the Commonwealth that appellant was not diligent in trying to procure the attendance at the trial of the three witnesses named in the affidavit, nor was it claimed *407that there was no probability of their being present at the next term of the court, or that their testimony (especially that of Bishop) was not material. The affidavit shows that Bishop, if present, would have testified that about a week before Nutty was killed he told Bishop “that he (Nutty) would kill that son of a b- Willis Mount before he left Paducah;” that Nutty was in Paducah at the time for a few days only, attending races and the fair; and that he (Bishop) communicated this threat to appellant the same night it was made, and advised him to look out for Nutty; that Bishop would further have testified that he and appellant were on a bed in the room where the killing took place and at the time Nutty and Phelps were quarreling; that appellant got off the bed, and Nutty started toward him; Bishop stepped between them, and Nutty had his hand in his pocket at the time; that he (Bishop) then started downstairs, and after he left the room heard the shooting. It is unnecessary to set forth the facts to which it was stated in the affidavit Bugg and Walker would testify, as they were both present and testified on the trial. Nor is it necessary or proper to compare the testimony attributed by the affidavit to Bishop, with his testimony given on the first trial as shown by the transcript made from the stenographic notes, which the court made a part of the record, and which was in fact filed by the official stenographer by order of the court after appellant had refused to consent that it be read as the evidence of Bishop. It is true it w'as filed with and as a part of the record before any evidence was introduced, but appellant, as shown by the record, objected to its being filed and excepted to the filing thereof, and it was not, in fact, read as evidence on the trial. In yLw. q£ the refusal of appellant to consent that it *408be read as the deposition of Bishop, it had no place in the record of the last trial. If it had been filed before the court overruled the motion for a continuance, it could not have been used or considered upon the motion, to contradict the statements of the affidavit for the continuance, for this court has repeatedly held that, for the purpose of such motion, the trial court must presume the statements of the affidavits are true, and that it is never permissible to allow the filing-of counter affidavits to contradict the statements of the defendant’s affidavit as to what his absent witness would prove. (Baker v. Commonwealth, 10 S. W., 386, 10 Ky. Law Rep., 746; Wells v. Commonwealth, 13 S. W., 915, 12 Ky. Law Rep., 111; Salisbury v. Commonwealth, 79 Ky., 425, 3 Ky. Law Rep., 111.)
The fact, therefore, if it be a fact, that the affidavit for the continuance states that the absent witness, Bishop, would prove certain facts that are not to be found in his testimony given on the former trial, as contained in the transcript made from the stenographic notes of such testimony, did not authorize the court to refuse a continuance because appellant would not consent that the transcript of the official stenographer might be read as Bishop’s deposition. The sufficiency of the affidavit and the materiality of Bishop’s evidence were conceded by the lower court in making the amiouncement that the case would be continued, when the Commonwealth’s attorney declared that he would not admit the' appellant’s affidavit as to what he expected to prove by Bishop as the deposition of the latter, and the mind of the court was evidently fixed as to appellant’s right to a continuance until the Commonwealth’s attorney said that he would consent that the stenographic notes of Bishop’s testimony taken on the first trial *409might be read. The effect of the court’s ruling was to either force appellant to unwillingly agree to the admission of the stenographic report of the testimony of Bishop given on a previous trial, which under the statute (sec. 4643, Ky. Stats., 1903), could not be done without his consent, or, if he refused such consent, to deprive him altogether of the benefit of Bishop’s testimony, which was admittedly material, and not only material, but some of it was as to a fact appellant could not, as shown by the bill of evidence, prove by any other witness, for no other witness testified that Nutty started toward appellant with his hand in his pocket as the latter got off the bed. Though McGregor testified that Nutty put his hand in his pocket, he says he did so in putting his money in it, and that he had not removed his hand from the pocket when shot- by appellant. Of the other persons in the room at the time of the killing, not one who was introduced as a witness testified that Nutty ever had his hand in his pocket, and none of them — not even McGregor — said that he saw Nutty start toward appellant. We are clearly of opinion that the lower court erred to the prejudice of the substantial rights of the appellant in refusing him a continuance.
Another contention of the appellant is that the court erred in not discharging the jury before the introduction of the evidence, upon the motion of appellant to that effect, supported by proof in the form of affidavits that E. L. Simmons, a member of the jury, had, before becoming a member thereof, expressed the opinion that appellant should be kept locked up, and further that it was error for the court to refuse him a new trial, as the affidavits furnished on the motion therefor showed that C. S. Smith, also a member of the jury, had formed and expressed an opinion *410before the trial that appellant was guilty and ought to be hanged.
The last two alleged errors may be disposed of together and in a few words. Sec. 281, Crim. Code Prac., provides: “The decisions of the court upon challenges, to the panel, and for cause, upon motion to set aside an indictment, and upon motions for a new trial, shall not be subject to exception.” The language of the section, supra, deprives this court of revisory power over error in the formation of a jury, or error to which the attention of the trial court is called for the first time on a motion for a new trial; hence we are Without authority to reverse this case because of the two alleged errors in question. (Howard v. Commonwealth, 118 Ky., 1, 80 S. W., 211, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 2213; Alderson v. Commonwealth, 74 S. W., 679, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 32; Curtis v. Commonwealth, 62 S. W., 886, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 267.)
Appellant further complains that incompetent evidence was admitted by the court to his prejudice. Thé only incompetent evidence we have discovered in the record is found in the testimony of the witness, Henry Douglass, who was permitted to state, in regard to the reputation of Bob Curling, a witness for appellant, that one Spaulding had told him that Curling had sworn to a lie against his brother at Union City. The testimony in question related to a particular act or transaction which was in no way a subject of investigation in the case at bar. The Commonwealth should have contented itself with proof as to the general reputation of the witness attacked, for truth or morality. The statement complained of should therefore have been excluded by the court.
Yet another complaint of appellant is that the trial *411court, over Ms objection, permitted certain improper and prejudicial statements to be made by the counsel for the Commonwealth in argument to the jury. We have carefully read the several alleged improper statements of counsel. Without discussing them in detail, we think some of them were objectionable, but only one of them was calculated to prejudice the rights of appellant, and it was made by the Commonwealth’s attorney, who said in closing his argument to the jury: “If you convict the defendant, in my opinion, a more damnable villain never entered the doors of the pemtentiary. ” This statement was rebuked by the court, and the jury told that it ought not to influence them. The statement was especially improper, because outside the record, grossly abusive to the prisoner at the bar, who was powerless to resent or prevent it, and so highly inflammatory in spirit and utterance as to be calculated to excite the passions and prejudices of the jury, when their minds and judgments should have been cool and dispassionate M dealing with the life and liberty of a fellow being; it being their duty, if his guilt was established according to the forms of law, to fairly and impartially mete out to him such punishment as was commensurate with that guilt, and, upon the other hand, equallv their dut;- to let him go acquit if, under the evidence, there was reasonable doubt of Ms guilt. We quote from the opinion of this court in Baker v. Commonwealth, 50 S. W., 54, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 1784, the following, which aptly illustrates our views upon this subject: * * * “The district attorney is a quasi judicial officer. He represents the Commonwealth, and the Commonwealth demands no victims. It seeks justice only — equal and impartial justice — and it is as much the duty of' the district attorney to see that no innocent man suffers as it is *412to see that no guilty man escapes; hence he should act impartially. He should present the Commonwealth’s case fairly, and. should not press upon the jury any deductions Horn the evidence that are not strictly legitimate. When he exceeds this limit, and, in hot zeal, seeks to influence. them by appealing to their prejudices, he is no longer an impartial officer, but becomes a heated partisan. His object, like the court’s, should be simply justice, and he has no right to sacrifice this to any pride of professional success. Ajnd however strong may be his belief , of the prisoner’s guilt, he must remember that, though unfair means may result in doing justice to the prisoner in the particular case, yet justice so attained is unjust and dangerous to the whole community.” The rebuke administered by the trial judge for the opprobrious and unwarranted language of the Commonwealth’s attorney, and his admonition to the jury not to be influenced by it, doubtless limited to some extent, but did not entirely destroy, its hurtful effect upon the jury; but, in view of the interference of the judge, we do not think the judgment should be reversed on account of the improper remarks of counsel. We are, however, of opinion that because of the refusal of the lower court to grant appellant a continuance, and on account of the admission of the incompetent evidence to which we have referred, he did not have a fair and impartial trial.
There was no formal objection to the instructions. They are clear in meaning and exceptionally well expressed.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.