[465]*465OPINION
By the Court,
McNamee, J.:
Appeal is from the judgment based upon a jury verdict finding the appellant guilty of murder in the first degree and fixing the penalty at death. Appellant also appeals from the order denying a new trial.
On September 19, 1960, while one Paul Allison was driving a pickup truck outfitted with a camper on the [466]*466rear through Elko, Nevada, he picked up appellant who was hitchhiking. They stopped at Carlin, Nevada, and purchased some food and a fifth of gin. Thereafter, they stopped at Lovelock, Pershing County, for some gasoline. They then drove three or four miles west of Lovelock where they parked for a time and then drove back into Lovelock to purchase more liquor. Thereafter, they drove “quite a way, eight or nine miles, maybe ten,” beyond where they had first parked. According to the testimony of appellant, when he and Allison stopped the second time they continued drinking, and a fight ensued during which Allison was stabbed. Allison was found dead in the pickup camper in. a parking lot in Reno, Washoe County, Nevada, on September 24, 1960. Appellant was apprehended several months later in Oklahoma where he was in prison.
Appellant specifies nine errors:
1. In his opening remarks to the jury the district attorney, over the objection of appellant, was permitted to state that appellant was apprehended at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Oklahoma.
This statement was improper because it connotes the commission of an offense by appellant other than the one for which he was being tried. The objection, therefore, should have been sustained. State v. Lindsay, 63 Nev. 40, 161 P.2d 351.
The appellant, however, was not prejudiced by this opening remark because the place of apprehension was contained in appellant’s written confession and mentioned by him in his oral testimony.
2. During the direct examination of prosecution witness Gladden, the district attorney asked: “Now, based on your experience as a deputy warden at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, and your some eight years’ experience altogether at the prison, and based on your close contact with the inmate personnel, can you state the incidence of homosexuality with the inmate population ?”
Appellant’s counsel objected to the question and moved that it be stricken from the record.
[467]*467The district attorney maintained that the question was relevant to motive, saying: “One of the theories of the State’s case will be that, in addition to robbery, this was a homicide in the perpetration of a homosexual act.” However, when questioned by the court, he admitted that he did not intend to show that Gladden had any knowledge of the appellant in this respect.
The district attorney erred in asking the question, but no intentional misconduct appears as would justify a reversal on that ground. People v. Doetschman, 69 Cal.App.2d 486, 159 P.2d 418.
The court sustained the objection and stated to the jury: “The Court instructs you that under all the facts and circumstances of this case, and the state of the evidence to date, this is an improper question. The Court has sustained an objection to it. I ask you to completely disregard it, wipe it out of your minds, and let it have no more effect upon you than if this question had never been asked.”
Appellant did not move for a mistrial. As heretofore stated, he objected to the question and moved that it be stricken. The court’s action was in exact compliance with appellant’s request and, consequently, he cannot complain of the court’s ruling in this regard. In view of appellant’s admissions that he committed the homicide in question, we are of the opinion that the mere asking of the question did not affect any substantial right of the appellant or prevent him from having a fair and impartial trial.
3. The district attorney asked appellant on cross-examination : “Is it a matter of fact that you were dishonorably discharged from the Army?”
On direct examination, appellant had testified that he had used another name when he re-enlisted in the Army and stated he did not know of any reason why he had done so.
Clearly, on cross-examination, this question was proper as being relevant to impeachment. The court, [468]*468however, sustained appellant’s objection to the question, and no prejudice to appellant therefore resulted.
4. Nevada Wise, a Reno police officer, who on September 24, 1960, spent two hours examining the pickup camper, its contents, and the body of the victim, testified on cross-examination that he had made a written report of this investigation. Appellant thereupon made a motion to produce the written report so that he could further cross-examine the witness. This motion was denied. We are of the opinion that the trial judge should have granted the motion to produce. State v. Bachman, 41 Nev. 197, 168 P. 733; People v. Rosario, 9 N.Y.2d 286, 213 N.Y.S.2d 448, 173 N.E.2d 881. Its refusal to do so is not reversible error if no substantial right of the appellant was prejudiced by the trial court’s erroneous ruling. NRS 169.110.
Wise testified on direct examination that he had gone to the pickup camper to photograph the scene and to process it for latent fingerprints, and that he took photographs of the exterior and interior of the camper. Some of these photographs were received in evidence after Wise had testified that they correctly and accurately portrayed that which they purported to portray. Wise also identified certain articles received in evidence which appeared in the photographs. This testimony was corroborated by Officers Williams and Manin who were present while Wise was making the investigation and taking the photographs. The photographs depicted a stab wound in decedent’s back, the tied hands, and blankets and other articles covering the body.
Appellant in his written confession admitted stabbing and tying the hands of the victim and later covering the body. At the trial he testified that the confession as given was accurately transcribed except for certain discrepancies which he pointed out and described as being very minor.
Under these circumstances we cannot conceive how Wise’s testimony could have been materially impeached [469]*469by his written statement, or how the failure to furnish appellant the statement was in any way prejudicial.
5-7. The information alleges that the offense took place in Washoe County, Nevada. There was evidence from which the jury properly could have found that this allegation was true. The body, the fatal weapon, and the vehicle in which the homicide took place were all found in Reno, Washoe County. Also, appellant pawned deceased’s jewelry therein. The only evidence to the contrary was appellant’s written confession from which it could be inferred that the homicide took place near Lovelock in Pershing County.
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[465]*465OPINION
By the Court,
McNamee, J.:
Appeal is from the judgment based upon a jury verdict finding the appellant guilty of murder in the first degree and fixing the penalty at death. Appellant also appeals from the order denying a new trial.
On September 19, 1960, while one Paul Allison was driving a pickup truck outfitted with a camper on the [466]*466rear through Elko, Nevada, he picked up appellant who was hitchhiking. They stopped at Carlin, Nevada, and purchased some food and a fifth of gin. Thereafter, they stopped at Lovelock, Pershing County, for some gasoline. They then drove three or four miles west of Lovelock where they parked for a time and then drove back into Lovelock to purchase more liquor. Thereafter, they drove “quite a way, eight or nine miles, maybe ten,” beyond where they had first parked. According to the testimony of appellant, when he and Allison stopped the second time they continued drinking, and a fight ensued during which Allison was stabbed. Allison was found dead in the pickup camper in. a parking lot in Reno, Washoe County, Nevada, on September 24, 1960. Appellant was apprehended several months later in Oklahoma where he was in prison.
Appellant specifies nine errors:
1. In his opening remarks to the jury the district attorney, over the objection of appellant, was permitted to state that appellant was apprehended at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Oklahoma.
This statement was improper because it connotes the commission of an offense by appellant other than the one for which he was being tried. The objection, therefore, should have been sustained. State v. Lindsay, 63 Nev. 40, 161 P.2d 351.
The appellant, however, was not prejudiced by this opening remark because the place of apprehension was contained in appellant’s written confession and mentioned by him in his oral testimony.
2. During the direct examination of prosecution witness Gladden, the district attorney asked: “Now, based on your experience as a deputy warden at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, and your some eight years’ experience altogether at the prison, and based on your close contact with the inmate personnel, can you state the incidence of homosexuality with the inmate population ?”
Appellant’s counsel objected to the question and moved that it be stricken from the record.
[467]*467The district attorney maintained that the question was relevant to motive, saying: “One of the theories of the State’s case will be that, in addition to robbery, this was a homicide in the perpetration of a homosexual act.” However, when questioned by the court, he admitted that he did not intend to show that Gladden had any knowledge of the appellant in this respect.
The district attorney erred in asking the question, but no intentional misconduct appears as would justify a reversal on that ground. People v. Doetschman, 69 Cal.App.2d 486, 159 P.2d 418.
The court sustained the objection and stated to the jury: “The Court instructs you that under all the facts and circumstances of this case, and the state of the evidence to date, this is an improper question. The Court has sustained an objection to it. I ask you to completely disregard it, wipe it out of your minds, and let it have no more effect upon you than if this question had never been asked.”
Appellant did not move for a mistrial. As heretofore stated, he objected to the question and moved that it be stricken. The court’s action was in exact compliance with appellant’s request and, consequently, he cannot complain of the court’s ruling in this regard. In view of appellant’s admissions that he committed the homicide in question, we are of the opinion that the mere asking of the question did not affect any substantial right of the appellant or prevent him from having a fair and impartial trial.
3. The district attorney asked appellant on cross-examination : “Is it a matter of fact that you were dishonorably discharged from the Army?”
On direct examination, appellant had testified that he had used another name when he re-enlisted in the Army and stated he did not know of any reason why he had done so.
Clearly, on cross-examination, this question was proper as being relevant to impeachment. The court, [468]*468however, sustained appellant’s objection to the question, and no prejudice to appellant therefore resulted.
4. Nevada Wise, a Reno police officer, who on September 24, 1960, spent two hours examining the pickup camper, its contents, and the body of the victim, testified on cross-examination that he had made a written report of this investigation. Appellant thereupon made a motion to produce the written report so that he could further cross-examine the witness. This motion was denied. We are of the opinion that the trial judge should have granted the motion to produce. State v. Bachman, 41 Nev. 197, 168 P. 733; People v. Rosario, 9 N.Y.2d 286, 213 N.Y.S.2d 448, 173 N.E.2d 881. Its refusal to do so is not reversible error if no substantial right of the appellant was prejudiced by the trial court’s erroneous ruling. NRS 169.110.
Wise testified on direct examination that he had gone to the pickup camper to photograph the scene and to process it for latent fingerprints, and that he took photographs of the exterior and interior of the camper. Some of these photographs were received in evidence after Wise had testified that they correctly and accurately portrayed that which they purported to portray. Wise also identified certain articles received in evidence which appeared in the photographs. This testimony was corroborated by Officers Williams and Manin who were present while Wise was making the investigation and taking the photographs. The photographs depicted a stab wound in decedent’s back, the tied hands, and blankets and other articles covering the body.
Appellant in his written confession admitted stabbing and tying the hands of the victim and later covering the body. At the trial he testified that the confession as given was accurately transcribed except for certain discrepancies which he pointed out and described as being very minor.
Under these circumstances we cannot conceive how Wise’s testimony could have been materially impeached [469]*469by his written statement, or how the failure to furnish appellant the statement was in any way prejudicial.
5-7. The information alleges that the offense took place in Washoe County, Nevada. There was evidence from which the jury properly could have found that this allegation was true. The body, the fatal weapon, and the vehicle in which the homicide took place were all found in Reno, Washoe County. Also, appellant pawned deceased’s jewelry therein. The only evidence to the contrary was appellant’s written confession from which it could be inferred that the homicide took place near Lovelock in Pershing County. This was partially supported by the testimony of witness Bone that she rented a motel room on September 19, 1960, in Fernley, Lyon County, to a single man, and that the automobile license number on the guest registration card was that of the deceased’s vehicle.1
At the conclusion of the state’s evidence, appellant moved for an acquittal on the grounds that the court’s jurisdiction had not been proven or, in the alternative, that the court cede jurisdiction to Pershing County. Appellant claims error in the denial of this motion and error in the giving of Instruction 25.
The prosecution’s theory was that the homicide took place just outside Lovelock, Nevada, and Instruction 25 reads:
“When an offense is committed in this state in a car prosecuting its trip, the jurisdiction is in any county through which the car passes in the course of its trip, or in the county where the trip terminated. You are instructed that the vehicle described in this case * * * is a ‘car’ within the meaning of this instruction.”
NRS 171.040 provides in part as follows: “When an offense is committed in this state: * * * 2. On a railroad train, car, stage or other public conveyance, prosecuting its trip, the jurisdiction is in any county through which the train, car, stage or other public conveyance passes in the course of its trip, or in the county where the trip terminates.”
[470]*470In order to justify the giving of Instruction 25 we must construe the word “car” appearing in the statute to include in its meaning a private motor vehicle.
It is respondent’s contention that because of the punctuation in the statute, the words “or other public conveyance” must be read in conjunction with the preceding word “stage,” and that they do not refer back to a railroad train or car. It is clear to us, however, that the word “car,” as used therein, was not intended to include a private motor vehicle.
NRS 171.040 was taken from Section 783 of the California Penal Code in 1911. Subsequent to 1911, the California Legislature amended their statute by making it applicable to a public offense committed in that state on a motor vehicle prosecuting its trip through the state. Cal.Pen.Code, sec. 783. Nevada has enacted no such amendment.
We conclude, therefore, that the giving of Instruction 25 was error because subsection 2 of NRS 171.040 relates only to public conveyances, and that the word “car,” as used therein, does not include a private motor vehicle. It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine whether this error was prejudicial.
It is apparent that before the filing of the information the district attorney did not have proof of such nature as to permit him to know where the homicide took place. The accused’s statement, if accepted as true, could place the homicide in Pershing, Churchill, or Lyon County. On the other hand, from the evidence presented, it could be inferred that the homicide took place in Washoe County. If the state had sent the case to Pershing County, as requested by appellant, the same objection to a trial therein could have been raised by the appellant. No one can say with certainty where the killing took place. Under these circumstances, some states by statute permit the venue to lie where the dead body was found or where the injury occurred. McCaine v. State, 152 Tex.Cr. 108, 211 S.W.2d 190. Nevada has no such statute.
Some courts hold that where it cannot be determined [471]*471with certainty in which county the death occurred there would be no bar to prosecution for murder in the county where the kidnaping took place under a statute identical with NRS 171.030.2 State v. Wilson, 38 Wash.2d 593, 231 P.2d 288.
In support of his motion that jurisdiction be ceded to Pershing County, appellant cited NRS 200.110, subsection 1 of which provides: “If the injury be inflicted in one county, and the party die within another county, or without the state, the accused shall be tried in the county where the act was done, or the cause of death administered.”
Y/ith the uncertainty existing in this case, resulting from the finding of the body in Washoe County as well as the pawning of the victim’s jewelry therein, the jury could have determined that the homicide took place in Washoe County as alleged. Even if it determined that the acts resulting in the death were committed in part in one county, and in part in another, or in two or more counties, of which Washoe County was one, then, under NRS 171.030, venue was properly laid in Washoe County. The killing was admittedly committed by appellant, and “the acts or effects thereof constituting or requisite to the consummation of the offense” could have occurred in two or more counties, one of which was Washoe County.
Under the present state of our statutory law, with the evidence which developed in this case known to the prosecuting attorney at the time the information was filed, it would have been impossible for him to allege with any degree of certainty that the offense took place in any specific county, and he would be faced with the same dilemma if the judgment is reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.3
In State v. O’Shea, 28 N.J.Super. 374, 100 A.2d 772, 774, the court after holding that venue, although it [472]*472must be proved by the state, is not an element of a crime, went on to say: “The tendency of the law, at any event in those jurisdictions not tied down by constitutional or statutory limitations, Blume, The Place of Trial of Criminal Cases, 43 Mich.L.Rev. 59 (1944), is not to allow technical questions of venue to be made a refuge for the guilty. Cf. the new rule, R.R. 3:6-1 (b). Chief Justice Beasley, in the course of his remarks in State v. Le Blanch, 31 N.J.L. 82 (Sup.Ct. 1864), speaks of a ‘mere question of venue — a matter so pliant that it would expand under the slight pressure of convenience.’ ”
We conclude, therefore, that venue could properly be laid in Washoe County. See People v. Fellows, 63 Cal.App. 557, 219 P. 80.
In this state, where indictments are returnable in the district court, jurisdiction and venue are to be distinguished.
There is no question concerning the jurisdiction of the Washoe County court. Nev. Const, art. 6, sec. 6, gives the district courts in the several judicial districts in this state jurisdiction in all criminal cases not otherwise provided by law.
The accused did not have a constitutional right to be tried in any particular county and, under the circumstances of this case, no such right was conferred upon him by statute. He did have the right, under NRS 174.410, to have a change of venue on the ground that a fair and impartial trial could not be had in Washoe County, but no such application for removal was made and no contention is made that the jury selected in Washoe County was improperly constituted, erroneously impaneled, or that they were not fair and impartial.
We therefore conclude that the giving of this improper instruction pertaining to venue did not constitute a miscarriage of justice and did not deprive appellant of any constitutional or statutory right, it [473]*473appearing with no evidence to the contrary that the crime was committed in Nevada.
8. The lower court instructed the jury that if the homicide took place in the perpetration of or attempt to perpetrate robbery or burglary it would be murder in the first degree. Appellant contends this was error because the state failed to prove the essentials of any such felony. The contention is without merit. There was ample evidence which would warrant the finding that the killing took place while appellant was engaged in the act of robbery, or in the attempt to rob. In either event the act would constitute a murder in the perpetration of robbery as specified in NRS 200.030. State v. Fouquette, 67 Nev. 505, 221 P.2d 404.
9. Appellant’s last claim of error is that the confession taken while appellant was a prisoner in the Oklahoma State Penitentiary was not given voluntarily.
Evidence was given that appellant did not ask for counsel when he gave his confession, and this was not denied by appellant. From the evidence, supported by appellant’s own oral testimony, the trial court properly determined that the confession was voluntary. The mere fact that the appellant was under restraint at the time the confession was given does not in itself make the confession involuntary. Ex parte Sefton, 73 Nev. 2, 306 P.2d 771. The trial court even deleted therefrom, outside the presence of the jury, certain evidence of other independent and unconnected crimes.
This court is most reluctant to disregard error as harmless under NRS 169.110, particularly in a capital case. See Rainsberger v. State, 76 Nev. 158, 350 P.2d 995. However, in the present case, in view of the overwhelming proof of guilt, we are convinced that the jury would not have come to a different conclusion, either as to the verdict of guilty or as to the penalty fixed, even if the errors which we recognize had not been committed. State v. Skaug, 63 Nev. 59, 161 P.2d 708, 163 P.2d 130; cf. Garner v. State, 78 Nev. 366, 374 [474]*474P.2d 525. In other words, it may not be said that any substantial right of appellant was prejudiced by the court’s erroneous rulings.
Affirmed.
Badt, C. J., concurs.