This is a suit on a promissory note executed on June 18, 1934, due one year after date, on which plaintiff, in her declaration, alleged that the last payment, in the amount of $300, was made on January 30, 1941. Suit was commenced on December 24, 1946, process was served on defendant, maker of the note, who died January 3, 1947, after which plaintiff’s declaration was filed, the special administrator of deceased’s estate was substituted as party defendant, defendant’s answer was filed denying the making of the last payment alleged by plaintiff and setting up as an affirmative defense the statute of limitations, and the cause was tried before the judge without a jury. From judgment for defendant of no cause for action plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff’s right to recover depended upon her establishing by a clear preponderance of the evidence the alleged $300 payment on the note by defendant on January 30,1941. Being limited as to her own testimony on the point by the statute barring the testimony of an “opposite party” on matters equally within the knowledge of the deceased (CL 1948, § 617.65 [Stat Ann § 27.914]), plaintiff sought to establish that payment by the testimony of her husband to the effect that in January, 1941, defendant was a Ford dealer; that a.t that time plaintiff, her husband and defendant had a conversation in which defendant said he could obtain for them a Mercury automobile at wholesale price from a dealer named Reister and that it was then agreed that in exchange for defendant so doing plaintiff would credit defendant on the note in the amount of $300 (witness admitted that he had previously testified that the credit to be given defendant on the note was the difference between the wholesale and retail *104 price); that on January 29,1941, plaintiff’s husband and defendant went to Reister’s and got an order on the Ford Motor Company for a Mercury and were told at the factory to pick up the car at Reister’s on the next day; that on January 30, 1941, plaintiff’s husband and defendant got the Mercury at Reister’s ; that exhibit 3 is a customer’s invoice showing the sale on January 30, 1941, of a Mercury by A. W. Reister, Inc., to plaintiff’s husband for the wholesale price of $864.69 cash; that plaintiff’s husband paid that amount to someone in Reister’s office; that the retail price was $1,071.88; that plaintiff’s husband received delivery of the automobile and paid for it by a check drawn on a, bank account owned jointly by himself and his wife; that the amount of the check was deducted from plaintiff’s share in the joint account; that plaintiff’s husband knew no one at Reister’s and that the defendant handled the whole deal there; that plaintiff and her husband frequently went together to call on defendant in the interests of making collections on the note; that in 1946 the defendant, in the presence of plaintiff and her husband, examined the note and a paper attached thereto purporting to show payments on the note, including the disputed $300 payment on January 30,1941, and that defendant then said, “Now, I owe you quite a little money” and asked plaintiff if she would cut the amount if he paid it right up and that this was agreed to orally; that previous collections on the note had been used on joint ventures of plaintiff and her husband but were credited to plaintiff. An employee of Reister’s identified exhibit 3, testified that a Mercury was sold and delivered on January 30, 1941, to plaintiff’s husband, that the husband signed for it, that he was charged the wholesale price for it, and that dealers are not permitted to sell cars at wholesale to others than dealers, thus indicating defendant’s connection with the deal.
*105
The court held that the testimony of plaintiff’s husband concerning the automobile transaction and credit on the note was barred by the statute because he either had had an interest in the transaction or had been acting therein as the agent of his wife. In support of the court’s ruling in this regard defendant cites
Abbott
v.
Jones,
Likewise, none of the cases cited is authority for the proposition that the husband’s interest in the instant case was such as to bar his testimony. The test is not, as indicated by the trial court, whether the husband had an interest in the transaction which occurred in January, 1941, but, rather, whether he had a direct pecuniary interest in the subject matter of the litigation before the court so as to constitute him at that time an “opposite party” to the estate of the deceased. That this is the rule is apparent from the
Abbott
and
Cutter Cases
cited by defendant. To the same effect, see
Caswell
v.
Smith’s Estate,
Payment need not be in money. It may be in the form of goods or services.
Blair
v.
Carpenter,
At trial plaintiff computed the amount due her in principal and interest on the note at $40,126.07. The amount was not disputed 'by defendant. ■
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for entry of judgment for plaintiff in the amount of principal and interest due plaintiff on said promissory note. Costs of both courts to plaintiff.
