This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $7,253.88 upon a promissory note found to have been given “for value” by defendant’s testate, Benjamin L. Liveson, to plaintiff. The action was commenced against said Liveson about two months before his death, which occurred March 4, 1917, prior to the trial. The trial court found that the note was lost after the commencement of the action and prior to the filing of the supplemental complaint filed after the death of Liveson, and has not since been found, notwithstanding diligent search therefor.
1. It is earnestly urged that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings of the trial court with relation to the giving of the note. In the light of the record it cannot reasonably be contended that there was not substantial testimony in favor of plaintiff on every disputed point. The contention of insufficiency is based upon matters going to the question of the credibility of the witnesses, and upon the theory that the proof of a claim against the estate of a deceased person must be clear and convincing.
It is, of course, true that the burden is on the claimant to establish his claim by a preponderance of evidence to the entire satisfaction of the trial judge, who alone, in the absence of a jury, has to do with all questions as to the credibility of the witnesses. As our law puts it with regard to a witness, “the jury are the exclusive judges of his credibility.” (sec. 1847, Code Civ. Proc.), and this
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is equally applicable to the judge where the case is tried without a jury.
Subdivision 3 of section 1880 of the Code of Civil Procedure renders incompetent as a witness “Parties or assignors of parties to an action or proceeding, or persons in whose behalf an action or proceeding is prosecuted, against an executor or administrator upon a claim, or demand against the estate of a deceased person, as to any matter or fact occurring before the death of such deceased person.”
It seems clear to us that at the time he testified Mr. Rapaport did not come within the excluded class. Certainly he was not a party to the action or the assignor of a party as to any interest whatever in the claim in suit. All that he ever had, at best, was a lien on any judgment that might be recovered, as security for the payment by plaintiff of a debt due him from plaintiff. There was no assignment of the debt and no attempted assignment of this lien. There was simply an absolute release of the lien on payment of the debt by plaintiff’s attorneys, and we can see no force whatever in the suggestion that such a release constituted an assignment, either to such attorneys or to plaintiff. Plaintiff has always been the sole owner of the claim, subject only to a lien on any judgment that might be recovered thereon, created by agreement, for his personal debt to Rapaport, which lien was absolutely extinguished prior to the trial by the payment of the debt by his attorneys, presumably for him and at his request. He was in no sense a successor in interest of Rapaport as to any interest in the claim. It is likewise clear that Mr. Rapaport cannot be held to have been at the time he testified a person “in whose behalf the action” was being prosecuted, for whatever possible claim he once possessed had then been fully satisfied. It may be that the reason for satisfying his claim was to forestall any objection to his testimony as a witness, but this would be altogether immaterial. The vital thing is that the claim was absolutely satisfied, with the result that the witness could no longer be held to be one upon whose behalf the action was being prosecuted, and therefore no longer within either the letter or the spirit of the statute.
It is not disputed that Mrs. Badover was a competent witness unless excluded by the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 1880. of the Code of Civil Procedure. ■ Our statute makes all persons “without exception, otherwise than as specified” in sections 1880 and 1881 of the Code of Civil Procedure, competent witnesses, expressly declaring that, except as provided in those two sections, “neither parties nor other persons who have an interest in the event of an action or proceeding are excluded.” Subdivision 3 of section 1880 has already been quoted in discussing the objection to Rapaport’s evidence. It excludes “parties or assignors of parties” to such an action as this. Obviously Mrs. Badover is neither a party nor the assignor of a party to the action. It also excludes “persons in whose behalf” such an action is prosecuted. It is clear that appellant’s claim must stand or fall upon the true meaning of these words as used in this statute. Is the wife, within the meaning of the statute, a person “in whose behalf” an action is prosecuted against an executor or administrator by her husband upon a claim asserted by him alone against the estate of a deceased person, based upon a note alleged to have been given him by the deceased and constituting, in part at least, community property?
That the other party to the marriage is a competent witness for the plaintiff in such an action where the property involved is the separate property of the plaintiff was expressly decided by this court in
Cullen
v.
Bisbee,
It was substantially held in
Uhlhorn
v.
Goodman,
*782 The action not being one on behalf of the wife, the learned judge of the trial court did not err in ruling that she was a competent witness in this action prosecuted by her husband.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shaw, J., Lennon, J., Sloane, J., Wilbur, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
