This аction is primarily one by the payee of a promissory note against the maker. A third party is joined with the note maker as a defendant, upon allegations that the latter has transferred all, or practically all, of her property to such third party as a gift, and in fraud of the plaintiff’s rights. Judgment is asked for thе amount due upon the note, and that the transfer of property be set aside, or that so much *581 of the property transferred as might be necessаry for the purpose be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the amount due upon the note.
The court has found, among other things, that the plaintiff failed to prove the execution and delivery of the note. With this fact found, the judgment in favor of the defendants was inevitable, and it cannot be disturbed unless the court committed some error of law related in some way to its conclusion in this particular. It matters not what erroneous action it may have taken in respect to other unrelated featui’es of the case, what mistaken views it may have entertained as to the significance of other matters, or upon what insufficient reasons it may have based its judgment. The result must stand unless error be found which touches in some material wаy this single essential conclusion of fact.
It is contended that there was such error committed by the court in reaching this conclusion upon the evidence. The issue distinctly raised by the answer, whether or not Mary J. Atwood, the alleged note maker, in fact made and delivered it, was one which called for thе weighing of conflicting testimony, and involved a determination of the credit to be given to witnesses whose testimony was contradictory. The trial court was the final judge upon these matters, and its decision cannot be disturbed by us unless it appears that, attaching such credibility as it might to the various parts of the cоntradictory testimony, it could not reasonably have reached that decision. No such situa^ tion is presented upon this record, and the conclusion of the court must stand.
The plaintiff further charges that the court erred in finding, as it did, in respect to a large number of other matters, and in failing to find, as requested, in rеspect to those matters and others; and we are asked to correct the finding in those particulars. It is unnecessary to *582 pursue these assignments оf error, since no correction or addition could furnish the foundation for a judgment in the plaintiff’s behalf, as long as it did not appear that the note was made and delivered.
Complaint is made of the action of the court in respect to the printed record upon appeal in a former action between the same parties, reported in
It is difficult to discover just cause for complaint on the part of the plaintiff here. Even assuming that the question of the admission of the portions of the record read by the defendants’ counsel was an open one when the reading was permitted, we fail to see why the court’s position was not a sound one, and, further, how the plaintiff could have been harmed thereby, since all the matter objected to, called out by the defendants.’ reading, bоre no relation to the vital fact of the execution and delivery of the note.
The plaintiff assigns as error the admission upon the offer of the defendants of a deposition used upon the former trial of the defendant Mary J. Atwood, who, it appeared, was living and within the jurisdiction of the court, but mentally incompetent. There is no distinction between a deposition, and former testimony given in court, as to the principles to be applied. 2 Wigmorе on Evidence, § 1408. In each case the .controlling test is: Can the witness’ knowledge be utilized by other means? If not, the use of the former testimony, other conditions in respect to it being met, is justified in the interest of justice by the necessity of the situation. It is the best evidence of which the case admits.
The death or absence from the jurisdiction of the
*584
witness has frequently furnished thе occasion for the introduction of his former testimpny. Situations where the knowledge of the witness has become unavailable by reason of his mental incompetency have been less frequent; but the authorities are in general accord in taking the only logical and just position that they comе under the same rule. 2 Wigmore on Evidence, §§ 1402; 1408; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 163;
Regina
v.
Marshall,
Car. & Mar. 147, 148;
Whitaker
v.
Marsh,
62 N. H. 477, 478;
Howard
v.
Patrick,
As for the other recognized conditions, they were all present in the case of Mrs. Atwood’s deposition. The former cause was between the same parties and involved an investigation of the same set of facts under the same, or substantially similar, issues, so that therе were the opportunity and motive for adequate cross-examination in the interest of the present plaintiff. 2 Wigmore on Evidence, § 1387;
Lane
v.
Brainerd,
Other assignments оf error pursued by plaintiff’s counsel in their brief, relating, as they do, to the secondary phase of the case arising out of the prayers that the transfеrs by Mrs. Atwood to her codefendant be set aside, or the property appropriated to the satisfaction of the judgment upon the note, call for no discussion in view of the fact that there can be no recovery upon it under the finding.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
