The cause was tried to the court, and all the evidence offered was admitted, subject to objections by defendant as to its competency, etc., with the understanding that the court would decide the questions of evidence, thus raised, when he should decide the case; and on the final hearing the court held all the evidence, as well the letters, as the parol testimony of the defendant in aid thereof, incompetent, and excluded the same in his consideration of the case.
One item of evidence thus offered and rejected is a letter written and signed by the defendant, Cruson Bane, under
The precise ground of objection to the admission of the letter in evidence is, that it was not addressed to a party in interest or to his agent. Without now deciding whether an admission in writing that a debt is unpaid, must, under our statute, be made to a party in interest, or to his agent, though it must be admitted that the tendency of the modern cases is, to hold that it must (3 Pars. on Cont. 5th ed., 85 and cases cited in notes; Bloodgood v. Bruen, 8 N. Y. 362), we are of the opinion that this letter was competent testimony, as was also the oral testimony of the defendant offered and rejected. The oral testimony was to establish the contents of-, a letter proved to have been written and destroyed. To that extent the testimony was the letter itself, it was in place of the letter, which being destroyed, rendered the oral testimony primary evidence. It was on the same subject-matter and between the same parties, and was a writing necessary to make the first letter fully understood, and was, therefore, within the rule prescribed by Revision, section 3992. Prom both letters it does appear that the admission in writing was made to a person claiming to have possession of the note for collection, and who was supposed by the defendant to have authority
III. The court also refused to consider, and rejected as incompetent a letter dated at the defendant’s residence June 3, 1868, and addressed to “ Dear Uncle; ” but to which there was no signature. The court did not err in thus ruling, since our statute requires the admission to be in writing signed by the party to be charged thereby. Rev., § 2751.
IY. Another letter, which is marked “ A,” but is without date, and is signed “from Cruson Bane to Robert Bane,” was also rejected by the court, and not considered, for the reason that it was held incompetent, on the ground that it did not identify, refer to or specify the note sued on. This point was directly examined and passed upon by this court in Penley v. Waterhouse, 3 Iowa, 418 (i. e., 445), and while it was admitted that the authorities were in conflict (and many of them were cited), it was, nevertheless, held, that it was proper to leave the question to the jury to determine whether the defendant intended to acknowledge the particular debt sued on. We see no good reason to now justify us in overruling that decision The court erred therefore in rejecting this letter.
V. Another letter of date April 19, 1868, addressed to ' Dear Uncle, Robert Bane,” and signed by the defendant, was also rejected for the same reason as the last. In this,
VI. The plaintiff introduced the defendant as a witness, and he testified that the debt referred to in the letters written, by him was the note in controversy, etc. This testimony the court also rejected as incompetent. There was no error in so doing. The statute requires the admission to be in writing; parol evidence is not competent to prove it.
Reversed.