83 Kan. 298 | Kan. | 1910
The opinion of the court was delivered by
M. S. Bryan, who was the administrator of the estate of Jasper King, deceased, brought this action to recover on a promissory note for $50.0, executed by N. A. Palmer, as principal, and E. Palmer, as surety. The defense of the Palmers was that the note had been paid during the lifetime of King. On the trial it was shown that N. A. Palmer, had moved to New Mexico, and that he had there undertaken to transmit money to Kansas for the payment of the note. There was testimony that he had inclosed currency amounting to $515 in an envelope, and with it was inclosed a form of a receipt for King to sign. Palmer undertook to have the letter registered, but for some reason the postmaster omitted the registration. There
The steps taken by Palmer at the post office in New Mexico, when he was hundreds of miles from King, in placing bills in the envelope, the statements made by him at the post office and his attempt to register the letter were not personal transactions or communications with King within the meaning of the code provision. King was hot an immediate party to any of the transactions respecting which testimony was given. He had no personal knowledge of what was said or done by Palmer at the post office in New Mexico, and if he were living could have given no testimony in contradiction of them. The code prohibits only such communications and transactions as are personal— those of which both parties have knowledge'. As to these the law places the parties on a level, and in effect says that since the deceased person can not testify to those conversations and transactions the lips of the living party will be sealed as to them. The theory of the prohibition is that it would not be safe to allow a
Under a similar statute the supreme court of Wisconsin held that testimony by the survivor as to the receipt of a letter written by the other party before his death was admissible. In the opinion it Was said:
“The deceased party could not, from the nature of the transaction, have made any directly contradictory statement. He was a party to the transaction, but not an immediate party, at least to that part of it concerning which the proof is offered. The fact to be proved is not one of which he had any positive knowledge, or which he could, if living, have positively denied. He could deny it indirectly or by inference only, by denying that he ever wrote the letter. But this would be testimony to another fact or point, as to which it is not proposed to examine the living party, and of which he had no positive knowledge.” (Daniels, executor, v. Foster and others, 26 Wis. 686, 691.)
In Dysart v. Furrow, 90 Iowa, 59, the supreme court of Iowa had before it the meaning and purpose of a provision similar to our own, and said:
“When by death, insanity or lunacy the lips of one party are closed, section 3639 wisely closes the mouth*301 of his adversary as to personal transactions and communications which the silent party might from personal knowledge deny, were he able to speak. Personal transactions and communications, as contemplated in the statute, are transactions and communications between the parties, of which both must have had personal knowledge.” (p. 61.)
(See, also, Sykes v. Bates, 26 Iowa, 521; Sankey v. Cook, 82 Iowa, 125; Stewart and others v. Stewart and another, 41 Wis. 624; Williston v. Williston, 41 Barb. [N. Y.] 635.)
Some of the testimony relating to the preparations made for transmitting the money and also to obtaining possession of the receipt closely approached the border line of incompetency, but, considering the spirit and intent of the statute, substantially all of the testimony objected to was admissible. The witness, it is true, spoke of sending a letter to, and receiving one from, King, and also stated that the letter received had been destroyed, but there was no attempt to'show the contents of the letters. It may be said, too, that most of the challenged testimony was well supported by other testimony.
Complaint is made that in the testimony as to the sending of the money and the attempt to register the letter remarks of a hearsay character were made to and by the postmaster. These remarks were mainly explanatory of accompanying acts, and in none of them do we find anything prejudicially erroneous.
The judgment is affirmed.