133 A. 508 | Pa. | 1926
Bridget Martin, an elderly widow, died on February 5, 1921, and, by will, Burke, the present plaintiff, was appointed executor of the estate. Investigation disclosed a deposit in her name of $4,700 in the First National Bank of Wilkes-Barre, and the ownership of some furniture. Later, it was discovered that a property formerly possessed by testatrix had been sold in 1920, and the purchase price paid in cash to the decedent. Of this amount, it was learned that $3,150 had been placed in the Second National Bank by her sister, Mrs. Kennedy, the defendant, to the order of "Mrs. Bridget Martin or Mrs. Anne Kennedy," and that the latter had withdrawn, on February 1, 1921, all but $150, which small sum was claimed as a gift. Defendant insisted the entire balance was delivered to the decedent upon request, setting forth in her affidavit of defense that this amount was handed over in the presence of witnesses, and placed in the bedding by her sister, then a patient in the Mercy Hospital, where she died four days later. As to the ultimate disposition of the cash, all knowledge was denied by defendant, nor did she make inquiry after the death of Mrs. Martin as to its whereabouts, though interested to the extent of one-fifth in the assets of the estate.
The money in question was traced to the bank, where it was deposited and subsequently withdrawn by Mrs. Kennedy. It became necessary for the plaintiff to show, in the suit brought by the executor for its recovery, that the fund placed in the Second National Bank had been the property of the decedent. For this purpose the defendant was called for cross-examination before the arbitrators, who first heard the case, and later, at the trial, on appeal, before the common pleas. She then narrated the circumstances as to the receipt of the money, and its *347 subsequent repayment. As she was the only living person present when the cash was alleged to have been returned, her statement as to this could not be expressly contradicted, but all of the facts surrounding the transaction were developed, and these, with other testimony, so clearly threw doubt on the truthfulness of the story told that the court properly held her evidence as a whole was a matter for the jury to pass upon.
The sole legal question raised on this appeal is whether plaintiff was bound by defendant's statement on cross-examination that she had paid over the entire sum to Mrs. Martin four days before the latter died, when decedent was in most serious physical distress. Before discussing the legal principles involved, we may examine briefly the testimony of Mrs. Kennedy, and indicate how it was contradicted by proof of other facts and circumstances. Defendant admitted that $3,150 was given her to place in a joint account on January 11th. The money was not taken to the bank where Mrs. Martin kept her other funds, but to a second institution, and there deposited, subject to the order of either party. Mrs. Kennedy stated the card required on the opening of a credit in this form was signed by Mrs. Martin twice, but the jury was plainly justified in finding this to be untrue, and that the name of the decedent was placed thereon by defendant or her daughter, the decedent being at the time many miles distant, and also unable to write her name. The withdrawal slip on February 1st was executed alone by defendant, or her daughter, and the former received the cash, which, according to the affidavit of defense, was later handed to the sick woman in the presence of witnesses. At the trial, the reading or signing of this affidavit was flatly denied by defendant. According to her narrative, she made inquiry of a nurse and the doctor as to the location of the money, but both parties contradicted this statement. The hospital attendants testified that, although they changed the bed clothing at least twice each day, no roll of bills as described *348 was observed by them. It is further significant that no investigation was made by defendant to determine what had become of the cash, though she was with her sister frequently until the evening preceding the death, nor did she ask concerning it thereafter, though acquainted with the fact that a considerable portion of the estate belonged to her. Still more suggestive is the denial of any knowledge of the fund, made in answer to an express inquiry by counsel for the estate, and her reply that the item of $4,700 and $13, which latter she had found in her sister's purse, constituted all the property known to have been possessed by the decedent. It was not until weeks after, when confronted with possible prosecution, that the information as to the $3,150 was forthcoming, and the statement then made that the money had been given back. The narrative of the defendant when called for cross-examination, and again when testifying in her own defense, is so full of contradictions, and the story told so improbable, under the circumstances, that the court would have been in error in holding that the unsupported declaration of the return of the $3,000 was to be taken as true beyond dispute.
Whatever the rule may have been as to the contradiction of adverse witnesses called for cross-examination prior thereto, it was expressly declared in this State by the Act of April 15, 1869, P. L. 30, section 2, that the party calling his opponent to give evidence "shall not be concluded thereby, but may rebut it by counter testimony." This made possible the offer of witnesses to show the making of contradictory statements: Brubaker v. Taylor,
But the party calling his opponent is always at liberty to prove the facts to be otherwise than the witness has represented them: Mississippi Glass Co. v. Franzen, 143 F. 501; 5 Chamberlayne on Ev. 3744; 40 Cyc. 2768; 28 R.C.L. 643; note, 6 A. E. Ann. Cases 711; note, Ann. Cases 1914 B 1122. "There may be such a degree of improbability in the statements themselves as to deprive them of credit, however positively made": Elwood v. Western Union Tel. Co.,
Not only are the proven circumstances to be examined here, but the interest of the defendant in the result of the litigation must also be considered. "A witness, *350 though unimpeached, may have such an interest in the question at issue as to affect his credibility. Thus, where the testimony proceeds from a person who would be guilty of a criminal fault unless he vindicated himself from the presumption arising from the transaction, a question of credibility is presented for the jury, and they may disregard such testimony": 28 R.C.L. 661. In the instant case, the defendant, if her story was found untrue, became responsible for the judgment recovered, and also liable to prosecution for misappropriation of the funds of the estate.
It is further to be noted that the calling of Mrs. Kennedy was made necessary by the situation of the plaintiff, as she was the only living person who could testify that the $3,150 deposited in the bank was that of the decedent. Mrs. Kennedy was heard again in her own defense, and then fully examined in chief. The rule that a party cannot discredit his own witness does not apply where circumstances make necessary the production of one who is adverse, and who is subsequently called and heard in support of his own contention: Morris v. Guffey,
The record in this case has been read with care, and we are convinced that the truthfulness of the narrative of the defendant was a question for submission to the jury. Not only was she expressly contradicted in practically every material fact testified to, — excepting, of course, the alleged repayment in cash to Mrs. Martin, — but her evidence as a whole was so inconsistent, and the transaction as detailed so improbable, that the jury could well find from all of the attending facts and circumstances that the witness was not credible.
The judgment is affirmed. *351