On the trial, the prisoner introduced as a*, witness Mrs. Beck, who testified: “ I am a sister of the prisoner’s wife; on the afternoon of the day of the homicide, I saw the prisoner come out of his house with a bottle of camphor, in a great hurry. I went with the prisoner to the deceased ; prisoner rubbed the deceased with camphor a great-deal, did all he could for him. I did not rub the prisoner - any. My mother, Mrs. Rainey Owen, brought water from the spring and put it on his head. I went as fast as I could to the-place, when I heard what was the matter; saw a rock close by on the ground that would weigh four of five pounds the prisoner sent Joyce Owen for Mrs. Harris and Alford Owen for the doctor. The prisoner and deceased always-appeared very friendly, and visited frequently.”
On cross examination, she stated that she did not tell Mrs.... Ellen Lane on the day of the homicide, that the deceased was sitting up, and she did not think he was hurt as bad as -- he pretended to be. The State then called Mrs. Lane to-contradict Mrs. Beck. The prisoner objected to this evidence, but it was received by the Court, and Mrs. Lane tes-*126-tified that “ Mrs. Beck and herself had a conversation on «the day of the homicide, when she asked Mrs. Beck how ^deceased was, and Mrs. Beck replied: “ I sit him np against the fence and washed the blood off him. I do not think he is hurt very bad; he makes out like he is hurt a great deal worse than he is.”
It is very clear that the State questioned Mrs. Beck as to . a collateral matter, and by a well-established rule of the law .of evidence, was bound by her answer. There are exceptions .to the general rule, that the answers of a witness as to collateral matters drawn out by cross examination are conclu.sive, and these exceptions are discussed in State v. Patterson, 2 Ired. 346; and State v. Kirkman, 63 N. C. Rep. 246, but they have no application to our case. In Clark v. Clark, 65 N. C. Rep. 661, it is said : “ When the cross examination in.stead of being general, descends to particulars, then the party is bound by the answer and cannot be allowed to go into evidence aliunde, in order to contradict the witness, for it would result in an interminable series of contradictions in -regard to matters collateral, and thus lead off the mind of the jury -fro^a. the matter at issue.”
If the rule be such in a civil case, certainly it would apply with greater 'force in a criminal prosecution. We cannot weighjhe effect that this contradiction of Mrs. Beck, on a collateral matter, may have had with the jury; it may have .so prejudiced the prisoner’s case as to lead to his conviction; but be that as it may, we are to apply to the case a well-..established rule of the law of evidence, which entitles the prisoner to a venire de novo.
Venire de novo.