.This writ of error brings up for review the judgment entered upon the conviction of the plaintiff in error upon an indictment for statutory arson.
At the trial the plaintiff in error took, among others, exceptions to the refusal of the court to charge certain requests to charge, and took also a general exception to the charge.
The main insistence here is that the court wrongfully refused to instruct the jury on the law of alibi, notwithstanding he was expressly requested so to do and notwithstanding alibi was the defence set up by defendant, and notwithstanding there was evidence tending to support such alibi.
Request No. 12 reads: “If a reasonable doubt of guilt is raised even by inconclusive evidence of the alibi, the defendant is entitled to the benefit thereof and should be acquitted.”
That request was denied, and we think there was evidence tending to establish an alibi. It is true that it was inconclusive, but in these circumstances, when the trial court was requested to charge the law of alibi, he should have done so.
*376Where (as here) a request to charge calls for the application of a correct legal principié is applicable to the testimony and clearly material to defendant’s case, he is entitled to have it distinctly charged in such way as not to leave room for misapprehension or mistake by the jury. State v. De Geralmo, 83 N. J. L. 135.
The indictment in that case was for rape; defendant presented testimony tending to prove an alibi. He requested the court to charge “that if reasonable doubt of guilt is raised, even by inconclusive evidence of the alibi, defendant is entitled to the .benefit of it.” (This was the very language of the twelfth request to charge in the case at bar.) By way of reply, the trial court said, “I will charge you that the evidence must satisfy you of the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” The Supreme Court held that this was not a legal compliance with the request, the court not having dealt with the subject-matter of the request in any part of the charge.
That is precisely the situation here. The trial court charged generally that the state was bound to satisfy the jury of defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, but did not advert to the law of alibi at all.
In Roe v. State, 45 N. J. L. 49 (cited in the above mentioned case), the court said:
“One of the most important duties of the court is to declare the law applicable to a case to the jury when requested so to do.”
The error was prejudicial to the defendant and hence requires a reversal.
Since there must be a new trial we remark that we find no other error in the record.
The judgment will-be reversed and a new trial awarded.