The opinion of the court was delivered by
Nicholls, O. J.The action of the court in overruling defendant’s motion to quash the indictment was not erroneous. The motion was made too late. The facts disclosed by the evidence adduced bring the present case within the doctrine announced in State vs. Collins, 48 An. 1454. The jury drawn in this case was through the proviso of the repealing clause of Act No. 99 of 1896, withdrawn from the provisions of the fifth section of that act requiring publication.
The ninth, tenth and eleventh bills of exception reserved by de*290fendant are the first which we take up. From them it appears that after he had introduced the testimony of himself, his daughter, Thomas R. Carroll, J. S. Donato and others, whose evidence he declared proved that Sandoz (the deceased) had attempted to shoot before he (Sandoz) was shot, defendant offered evidence to prove previous threats made by the deceased and provocation, but that said evidence was ruled out by the judge for the reason that no overt act on the part of the deceased had been proved. That defendant moved the court that the evidence on the question of the overt act be taken down in writing in order that the same be annexed to his bills of exception to the end that the Supreme Court might decide whether there was sufficient proof of the overt act to justify the admission of the rejected evidence, but that this application was refused, the court stating that “no overt act had been shown; that the question of overt act or hostile demonstration was addressed to the discretion of the trial judge and that there was no law which authorized the taking of the testimony for review by the Supreme Court.”
The court erred. Act No. 113 of 1896 authorized the accused to demand that the testimony be reduced to writing and made it the duty of the court to grant the request. It is possible that had the testimony been taken down the record would not have been placed in such a form as to have enabled us to review the ruling of the lower court; but neither this court nor the District Court are permitted to speculate upon that subject. The express statutory right granted to a defendant by the act can not be denied because the exercise of it might be barren of results in the particular case. That fact could only be tested on appeal when the record would come up.
We are of the opinion that the court erred in refusing, as shown by the eighth bill, to allow defendant when on the stand as a witness to recite threats of the deceased which had been communicated to him, on the ground that at the time of the killing no overt act or hostile demonstration on the part of the deceased h d, in the court’s opinion, been shown.
The particular connection in which the evidence was sought to be made use of seems to have been overlooked. It has been held in this State that threats made by the deceased are only exceptionally admissible in evidence. Usually prior proof is required of some overt act by the party killed at the time of the homicide to warrant *291the reception of testimony in regard to them, but the question was not presented in this case under the circumstances which required that a prior overt act on the part of the deceased should have been shown before evidence of communicated threats should be admissible. The particular matter then being considered was not evidence as to justification or mitigation of the homicide, but justification or explanation of the circumstances under which a certain statement made by defendant had been made. The parties had turned aside temporarily from the facts directly connected with the homicide at the time of its occurrence to consider an incidental collateral issue concerning evidence upon the trial. The State had shown by Canahan a declaration made by defendant calculated to powerfully impress the .jury adversely to accused if left unexplained. The State had opened the door to the inquiry and made it imperatively necessary for defendant to show the exact facts. When it had been testified to that defendant had declared that “he intended to kill the deceased,” or “ that he would killhim,” we think it was perfectly proper for him to explain, if he could, that if he made the statement, it was because he anticipated from threats made by deceased and communicated to him, that he would be forced to kill him in self-defence. A very different coloring would be given to defendant’s expression viewed from that standpoint, from that which it would have, if permitted to rest at the point where the State wished to “close the inquiry. As a matter of course, defendant in availing himself of an opportunity given him to rebut any prejudicial influence which might result from his declaration, should not be permitted to push his testimony beyond what was legitimate solely for that purpose. There was a limit to his right which the court was authorized to see was not transcended. We must assume, in the absence of any showing, what his testimony had been, or what it was intended to have been, that the court’s action (other than that in respect to the excluded testimony as to communicated threats) was justified by the facts.
The exceptions of defendant in the second bill of exceptions and the argument of counsel upon it are much broader than the action of the court, referred to in the bill, called for. As we understand matters, defendant had filed a motion for a change of venue on stated grounds — this motion was fixed for trial — defendant summoned witnesses in support of his motion, who were present in court *292for examination, but upon the application of the District Attorney the hearing of evidence in support of the motion was postponed until-after the jury panel had been examined on its voir dire in order to-ascertain from that examination whether a fair and impartial trial could be had. The bill is argued as if the court had then and there-finally cut the defendant off from the right of examining witnesses-to sustain his motion. That is not the import of the ruling, which-extended only to a temporary postponement of the hearing and to a decision upon the order of proceeding. In so considering it, we find no cause of reversible error. In the Am. and English Ency. of Law, page 99, we find it laid down that where an application is made for a change of venue the court may deny the motion until it can be-shown by an examination of a sufficient number of jurors whether a fair and impartial trial can be obtained or not (citing State vs. Gray, 8 West. Court Rep., Nevada, 72) * * * that there is no error in postponing the consideration of a motion to change the venue until an attempt is made to impanel a jury (citing People vs. Plummer, 9 Cal. 298; Hunter vs. State, 43 Ga. 483; Ward vs. Moorey, 1 Wash. Ter. 122).
The third bill contains a double complaint, the first being that the court did not give the accused the latitude he was entitled to in the cross-examination of the jurors"when examined on their voir dire;the second being that after the jury had been so examined the court overruled defendant’s motion to have his witnesses heard in support of the averments of his motion for a change of venue and for the purpose of rebutting any inference that could be drawn from the examination of the jurors, that he could obtain a fair aud impartial-trial in the parish of St. Landry.
The precise course followed in the lower court does not appear in the record. We judge, however, that the thirty jurors of the regular panel selected for the third week of the session were called and each separately examined upon his voir dire — questions being first propounded by the State and then by the defence — that those whose answers were of a character to show them incompetent were set aside, while those who were deemed by the court proper jurors were held in reserve to be ultimately tendered to both parties. That when so tendered on the actual formation of the jury, defendant peremptorily challenged individual jurors as they-were presented; that under this proceeding the regular panel was exhausted (only six *293jurors having been taken therefrom) ; that thereupon the court then ordered the sheriff to bring in talesmen, who were in turn examined and accepted or rejected until twelve jurors were found; that in the formation of the jury in this manner the defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges. We do not find that bills of exception were taken to the action of the court in respect to the individual jurors accepted, but there is a bill covering the general line of proceeding and touching the restriction placed upon the cross-examination of the jurors by the defence. The court accepted the course adopted as having [by the fact itself that twelve jurors were found who in its estimation were proper jurors] conclusively established that the defendant could obtain a fair and impartial trial in the parish of St. Landry, and limited the scope of the inquiry on that subject to the questions propounded and answers made thereto by the jurors and talesmen. He excluded all testimony outside of this. The application for a change of venue was based upon allegations sworn to that he could not obtain a fair and impartial trial in St. Landry because of the intense and wide-spread prejudice against him in the public mind; that this prejudice was political and partisan, and permeated every branch of the court; that during the last political campaign the parish was divided into two fiercely • hostile parties marching and countermarching through the parish — that there were several collisions between them resulting in serious injury to persons and property — in some cases in death. That the contest resulted in the election of the then presiding judge of the court and ■the then prosecuting attorney. That the district clerk and the sheriff ■both belonged to the same side as the judge and District Attorney; that political feeling and prejudice and bias were heavy in the atmosphere in and aboutthe court house. That the court (however unconsciously) was influenced by that feeling was shown by the fact that it had appointed none but partisans upon the jury commission. That the clerk and jury commission were partisans, and that they ■carried their partisan feelings into the performance of their duty, ■was attested by the fact that they selected for the then term of court, under the jury law of 1894, a grand jury panel composed exclusively •of partisans, and that on the venire of the petit jury drawn for six weeks of the term there were not over half a dozen names that were not partisans belonging to the side of the clerk and jury commissioners. That defendant was an active and avowed partisan on *294the side opposite to that of the presiding judge and District Attorney and the deceased was a still more active and avowed partisan of the other side — that the encounter which resulted in the homicide with which defendant was charged grew out of the election and was a direct consequence thereof — that it happened in the town of Opelousas on the day following the election and defendant narrowly escaped being mobbed at the time — that the partisan feeling-referred to was directed against himself individually as well as-against the party he belonged to generally; that partisan feeling was so strong, and deep-seated in St. Landry that the man in the parish who was not affected by it was an exception; that under the circumstances it was utterly impossible for one accused of a crime which grew out of the last political campaign or which was closely connected with it to obtain there at that time, and perhaps for years to come, a fair and impartial trial.
The District Attorney complains of this application as being insulting to the presiding judge. There are certainly portions of it which are exceedingly objectionable; not only in respect to the judge, but as to other matters. We have purposely abstained from transcribing them. We do not think that the mere fact itself that a suitor should allege in a prosecution pending against him that the judge of the court has acted in a manner such as to have illegally prejudiced his rights furnishes ground for legal complaint, when the assertion of such a claim would be essential to his protection. The law has pointed out no method of attacking or annulling by direct action a verdict in a criminal case and a judgment based thereon for wrongful action on the part of the presiding judge in the performance of his duties. A defendant would certainly be entitled to protection at some time and in some shape or form; from the necessity of the case he would have to set up his complaints in the pending suit, and he should be allowed to introduce his testimony in support of the same. We would not expect the presiding judge to express-any opinion adverse to himself in the premises, but the whole matter would fairly come before the appellate court in reaching its conclusions as to whether actual wrong or injury had been done.
As a matter of course such a complaint should contain no abusive, opprobrious or intemperate expressions. See Wharton, Sec. 49.
An examination of the motion will show that several of the matters therein charged were matters more for a challenge to-*295the general panel or array than for an application for a change of venue. They were not advanced for the former purpose. We are authorized, however, we think, to consider them incidentally in dealing with the question of the change of venue. Accused maintains that in view of the method of the selection of the jury commissioners, the manner of collecting the jury and of obtaining talesmen, he was illegally hampered in his effort to show that a fair and impartial trial could not be had in the parish by limiting the witnesses testifying on that subject to witnesses not of his own choosing.
Section 1028 declares that an application for a change of venue “may be made orally in open court or by petition in chambers, and shall be accompanied with proof under oath of the party or his attorney that reasonable notice has been given to the District Attorney of such application. Thereupon the judge shall hear the party making the application, as well as the attorney representing the State, and, if on such hearing and examination of the evidence adduced he shall be of opinion that the party applying can not have a fair and impartial trial in the parish where the indictment is pending, the judge shall award a change of venue to the adjoining parish of the same judicial district, or of an adjoining district, and if possible to that in which a District Court shall next be held.”
From an examination of the proceedings taken below, those on the motion for a change of venue seem to have been substantially merged into an examination of jurors and the empaneling of a jury. As a substantive motion and proceeding, it seems to have been lost sight of and disappeared. Accused was not permitted to offer witnesses, but was confined to the cross-examination of the jurymen and tales-men who were produced before the court. We do not think that the answers of the jurors and talesmen should have concluded the accused. He was entitled to traverse, contradict and disprove their statements if he could. As the condition of a juror’s mind, in respect to his being unbiased and impartial, rests entirely upon his own assertion, his declaration on that subject surely should not close the door to an investigation and examination of facts which would tend to show that the juror either unconsciously or designedly was not stating the truth. Before reaching his conclusions upon the motion for a change of venue we are of the opinion the court should have heard the witnesses whom the accused sought to have testify. As the extent of the line of cross-examination of the jurors which *296the defendant was permitted to make was made a subject of complaint in this same bill of exception, we take pccasion to say that in our opinion the court narrowed the examination too closely. It was particularly desirable under the averments of the motion to change the venue, that the jurors should be subjected to a very rigid test. As the testimony which defendant sought to introduce was excluded we are unable to say whether he was entitled to a change of venue or not. All that we can do, as matters stand, is to set aside the court’s action on that subject and reserve to defendant, as we do hereby reserve to him, the right to renew his motion for a change.
Complaint is made in the fourth bill that the court “ refused on the day the case was fixed for trial to allow additional compulsory process or alias subpoena to issue to a witness named Charles Medici, to have return made upon said process and to grant time until this should be done, defendant objecting to go to trial.” Defendant in the bill states that he had on the 14th September (when the case was fixed for trial for the 17th) applied for and obtained compulsry process for the witness, who was living at the time in the parish of Ascension; that the subpœna had been received by the sheriff of the latter parish on the 16th, but he made no effort to serve the same, as would appear by a letter from him of that date to the clerk of the St. Landry court. Directly connected with this complaint is that urged in the fifth bill, that the court refused to grant defendant a continuance to obtain the testimony of the witness Medici, as asked for on the grounds urged in his affidavit and motion therefor. Both applications were denied on the ground that the State stood ready to admit and did admit that the witness if present would testify as stated in the affidavit for the process, and that under such an admission defendant was legally called upon under the provisions of Act 84 of 1894 to go to trial. We find in the record the letter of the sheriff of the parish of Ascension referred to. In it he says that “he returned to the clerk the notices sent for service; that in the first place the person named was unknown to him, and in the second place, even if he could make service, the person would find it impossible to be in Opelousas by 10 o’clock A. M. on the 17th — that he (the sheriff) had received the notice only on the 16th of September.” There seems to have been no- attempt to secure the service — and no return was made upon the subpoena by the sheriff. It is stated in one of the bills that the *297original application for a subpoena was annexed to it, but we do not find it attached as declared. It is useless for us to decide whether the action of the court, taken on that occasion, was or was not correct, as the case is remanded on other grounds, and it is not likely that this particular question will arise again under precisely similar circumstances. We notice that in the application for a continuance Medici is referred to as “formerly” of the parish of Ascension, and that there is no declaration or statement where he then was. Whether as a fact Medici ever lived in the parish of Ascension is uncertain — the fact is alleged, but it is nowhere sworn to. It was the duty of the defendant to have shown affirmatively the residence of Medici, or that there was good reason to believe that the witness could be reached by subpoena at the place to which it was directed. It would have been of no practical use to have issued a second subpœna to a person in Ascension parish who had “formerly” been a resident there. However irregular the action of the sheriff of the parish of Ascension was, defendant evidently adopted his conclusion that the witness was no longer to be reached there. We are of the opinion that when this case was fixed for trial the defendant should at once have called the special attention of the court to the fact he would require on his behalf the presence at the trial of a material witness who was in another parish and insist that in fixing the day of trial sufficient time be given to the sheriff for a proper search for the witness, for due return on the process issued and for the witness to comply with the orders of court. On proper showing made we do not presume the court would have pressed the case to trial.
We think a defendant when he has counsel should, as soon at least as he is indicted, take steps to ascertain where the various witnesses whom he will need live, or where they can be reached, and that he can not properly rely for the purposes of a continuance upon the discovery of that fact through mere experimental process to be sent to sheriffs of parishes in which it is possible the witnesses may be found. Such a practice would lead to great abuse.
A question has been raised as to whether a person charged with crime, who would (but for the provisions of Act No. 84 of 1894) be entitled to a continuance of his case in order to procure the attendance on his behalf of an absent witness, can, in view of Art. 8 of the Constitution, be legally and constitutionally forced to trial (under *298authority of the act mentioned) by an admission on the part of the-District Attorney that the witness, if present, would testify to the facts stated by the accused in his motion for process or for a continuance. Article 8 of the Constitution declares that in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to be confronted with the witnesses against him and to have compulsory process for-obtaining witnesses in his favor.
In Act No. 84 of 1894 it is enacted that “in all criminal cases whenever either the State or the defendant asks for a continuance on the-ground of the absence of an important witness, the other shall be entitled to an immediate trial on admitting that if said absent witness-were present that he would testify as stated in the affidavit made fora continuance, but in no case shall the defendant be required, in order to get a trial, to admit that the statements made in the affidavit for a continuance.”
The right of an accused person to insist upon the presence in court of the witnesses material to his defence has been frequently the subject of discussion and adjudication. Many authorities will be found-collected in Rice’s Work on Evidence, Vol. 3, Chap. 19. “ Of the-evidence necessary to secure a continuance” (Sec. 114). “Right not affected by admissions of opposite party,” also in the same author, Chap. 30, pages 269 and 270.
We are unwilling to pass upon the constitutionality of a statute unless imperatively required t.o do so. No such necessity exists in the present case. We content ourselves with saying for the present that the law is at least in derogation of common right, and that recourse to it should be avoided if possible.
The twelfth bill comes to us under contradictory statements, made by the court and counsel. Not having the evidence taken in the case before us, we accept as correct the court’s declaration that when the testimony objected to was offered the State announced that it was offered in rebuttal of the defendant’s evidence, and that when introduced it was actually in rebuttal. We have stated heretofore (State vs. Spencer, 45 An. 1) that, in our opinion, justice to an accused party requires that the State should at once offer on its side all the evidence which it has and not reserve its real or main attack until after defendant had closed his case. That there were, however, so many reasons why, under special circumstances, this course should, be departed from, and so many occasions on which such departure *299from it would be proper, that it could not be invoked as a matter of legal right. That this matter would have to be left in each case to the sound judicial discretion of the court, which, having knowledge of the general rule, would protect the defendant by enforcing it, unless by reason of some exceptional state of facts.
In Rice on Evidence, Vol. 3, See. 218, it is said: “ The rule is well settled that in rebuttal the people are restricted to evidence controverting the facts proven by the evidence of the defence and that no evidence confirmatory of the original case can be introduced by way of rebuttal, even though it clearly establishes the prisoner’s guilt.” (McLeod’s Trial Pamphlet, p. 222; Rex vs. Hilditch, 5 Car. & P. 299; Rex vs. Stimpson, 2 Car. & P. 415; Brown vs. Giles, 1 Car. & P. 118; 2 Philips Evidence, Note 500.) * * * “ No rule for the conduct of a trial is more familiar than that the party holding the affirmative is bound to introduce all the evidence on his side before he closes.” (Hastings vs. Palmer, 20 Wend. 225.) “ He must exhaust all his testimony before the testimony on the opposite side can be heard.” (Ford vs. Niles, 1 Hill, 301; Rex vs. Stimpson.) “He can afterward introduce in rebuttal only — rebutting evidence in such cases means not merely evidence which contradicts the witnesses on the opposite side and corroborates those of the party who began, but evidence in denial of some affirmative fact which the answering party has endeavored to prove.” (Silverman vs. Foreman, 3 E. D. Smith, 322; Rex vs. Stimpson, supra.) “These rules may in special cases be departed from in the discretion of the trial judge; but a refusal to depart from them is no ground of exception.” (Marshal vs. Davies, 78 N. Y., 414.) * * * Rice, after having quoted the opinion of Lumpkin, Judge, in Walker vs. Walker, 14 Ga. 242, 250, wherein he expressed himself in favor of the reception at any time of additional cumulative and corroborative evidence of facts previously proved or which tends to strengthen and add force or probability to such evidence — pushes this matter to its extreme length, saying: “So largely is the admission or exclusion of evidence not strictly in rebuttal a discretionary matter with the court that we are justified in formulating a general rule that material testimony in a case should be admitted at any time before the'formal submission of the case to the jury. The presiding judge in the exercise of this discretion has absolute immunity from all review unless it should clearly appear that there was a wilful abuse *300of the discretion confided to him. Of course where important testimony is withheld with the obvious purpose of placing either party to a disadvanage the trial court would be abundantly justified in refusing its admission.” (Gaines vs. Commonwealth, 50 Pa. 319; Dozier vs. Jerman, 30 Me. 216, 220; Huntsman vs. Nicholls, 116 Mass. 521; Morse vs. Potter, 4 Gray, 292; Marshal vs. Davies, 58 How. Pa. 231.)
Fourteenth Bill. The court in its reasons for refusing to grant defendant’s request [made while the jury was being examined generally on their voir dire], “that tales jurors be not’summoned within the town of Opelousas,” stated that it knew of no law which would Warrant such a request. That Sec. 7 of Act No. 99 of 1896 directed the manner in which talesmen should be summoned and the court had complied with its requirements in its order on the subject to the sheriff. The order referred to was that “ the sheriff of St. Landry will go out into the town of Opelousas and summon twenty-five or thirty talesmen jurors, securing if possible persons living in the country and remote from the town. He will go through the town and near the railroad at the cotton yards and endeavor as above stated to secure the attendance, if possible, of jurors living outside the corporate limits. Upon his failure to secure these he will summon jurors in the town from outside this court room.”
The seventh section of Act No. 99 of 1896 declares that whenever the District Judge thinks proper he shall require the jury commission to select additional jurors for service either as regular jurors •for service, or as talesmen, pursuant to formalities prescribed in Sec. 5 of this Act, and they shall be summoned without delay or within the time the said judge requires; but nothing shall be construed so as to limit the right of the judge in criminal matters to order the summoning of talesmen from among the bystanders or from any portion of the parish remote from the scene of the crime which the judge may designate.
This bill is not pressed very strongly, possibly because of appellant’s reliance upon his bill of exception covering the refusal of the .judge to hear testimony upon the motion to change the venue. The lawmaker evidently presumed that there would exist a greater state of excitement at or near the place of homicide than there would at .a distance, and therefore intimated that, as a rule, it would be well that talesmen should be drawn from places remote from the scene *301of a homicide. We do not look upon the provisions of the seventh section as mandatory upon that subject, without regard to the facts of any special case. A certain discretion has to be left to the court, to be exercised by it in such manner as that wrong and disadvantage be worked to neither State nor to the accused. The bill is not pressed in a way to call for special action upon it.
We do not pass upon a number of bills of exception which we And in the record, for the reason that some of the matters complained of are not likely to occur on the next trial, and others are presented to us under conditions such as to make it difficult for us to properly deal with them.
For the reasons herein assigned, it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the District Court based thereon, which is herein appealed from, be and they are hereby set aside, annulled, avoided and reversed; and the cause is hereby remanded to the District Court for further proceedings according to law.