By the Court,
This is an action for the wrongful taking and conversion by the defendant of certain personal property of the plaintiffs. The defendant admits the taking, denies the ownership of plaintiffs, and justifies under an execution issued, &c., in favor of E. J. Ingalls v. E. S. Cottrell, and further alleges, in substance, that the said property was the property of Cottrell, and not the property of plaintiffs, and that the same was taken and sold under execution against the said Cottrell. The reply of plaintiffs denies all allegations in the defendant’s answer, and sets up a title to said property derived by a bill of sale from Cottrell, anterior to the issuance of execution in the case of Ingalls v. Cottrell, under which defendant justified. It appears by the bill of exceptions that one Delvin, a witness for the plaintiffs, was pres ■ ent at the sale and delivery of said goods, and testified that the sale and delivery was made to the plaintiffs about the first day of June, 1878, but that the said Cottrell remained in possession of the goods as steward of the plaintiffs. As part of the res gesta, the plaintiffs offered in evidence the declarations of said Cottrell — the judgment debtor of the plaintiff in the writ of execution, and vendor of the plaintiffs herein — made at the time of the alleged sale and delivery of the goods claimed by plaintiffs, which, upon ob
The exclusion of the testimony of these witnesses is the only material assignment of error. If the evidence was competent, it was upon the ground offered, as forming a part of the res gesta. The fact that the vendor remained in possession of the property after the sale, was a circumstance of fraud, and to repel the conclusion arising from this fact, the evidence excluded by the court was offered. "What was the main issue to be tried? Undoubtedly the good faith' of the sale by Cottrell to the plaintiffs. The bona fides of that transaction is the principal fact — the res gesta — and all that was said and done by the parties to that transaction, cotemporary with it, and which tends to illustrate, explain or elucidate its character, are parts of that transaction, and as such are admissible in evidence, and may be proved by either party at the trial. Probably as accurate a statement of the law as may be found on this .subject is in Lund and wife v. Inhabitants of Tyngsboro, 9 Cush., 36, in which Mr. Justice Fletcher, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “But when the act of a party may be given in evidence, his declarations made at the time, and calculated to elucidate and explain the character and quality of the act, and so connected with it as to constitute one transaction, and so as to derive "credit from the act itself, are admissible in evidence. The credit which the act or fact gives to the accompanying declarations, as a part of-the
Mr. Glreenleaf says:- “In regard to the competency of witnesses for or against the sheriff, it may be further observed where the issue is upon a fraudulent conveyance by the judgment debtor, his declarations made at the time of the conveyance are admissible as part of the res gesta, and