The defendant was indicted.for the crime of man-■slaugliter and was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor in the Penitentiary. He has appealed. A bill of exception was taken to the ruling of 'the judge a quo admitting a child six years old to testify against the prisoner. Two reasons are given why the evidence should not have been received — because it was impossible for a child so young to understand the nature of an oath; and because in consequence of the youth of the witness defendant was deprived of the opportunity to cross-examine him.
It is not a fact that no child six years of age can understand the nature ■of an oath. Greenl. on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 367, says: “ On the other-hand, it is not unusual to receive the testimony of children under nine, and sometimes even under seven years of age, if they appear to be of .sufficient understanding; and it has been admitted even at the age of five.” See, also, Roscoe’s Crim. Ev. 94.
*328Under the age of fourteen a child will not be presumed to have a sufficient understanding to be a witness, and inquiry is made by the judge to ascertain his capacity to be sworn, and his admission or rejection must depend upon the sbund discretion of the judge. The law fixes no precise age when the witness shall be excluded. In the present case the district attorney examined the child and considered him of sufficient understanding to be sworn. We can not imagine why the witness could not be cross-examined by the defendant; in fact, it appears he was cross-examined by the judge.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the lower court be affirmed with costs.