50 Mo. 126 | Mo. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
There were two trials below, and before the first trial, the plaintiff being a non-resident, his deposition had been taken; but he was present and testified at the trial, as did also defendant’s testator, then living. The testimony of both was preserved in a bill of exceptions. Dillon died before the second trial, and at the trial the court admitted in evidence the deposition of plaintiff, upon the ground that Dillon’s former testimony, having been so preserved, might be read. Defendant, however, refused to read it, and assigns for error the admission of the plaintiff’s deposition.
Evidence of the former testimony of Dillon was admissible, and the minutes of it, if correct, could have been read. (Parsons v. Parsons, 45 Mo. 265; 1 Greenl., § 168 et seq.) In that case the plaintiff could have testified, unless the object and spirit of the statute be made to yield to its letter. But if defendant refuses to offer them, may the plaintiff still be a witness ? It cannot be
As has been so often stated, the object and spirit of the statute is to place parties upon an equality, so that one party shall not be permitted to testify to transactions cognizant to both, when the other can no longer be heard. This is one of the grounds of objection now made; for the deposition, it is said, may differ from the plaintiff’s former testimony, and hence is not met by that of decedent. If the deposition had been given in evidence at the first trial, so as to be met by the opposite party, this objection to its introduction after his death would not lie; but if it covers different points, or materially varies Norn the testimony that was before given, the objection, if made upon that ground, would have been a sound one. ■ In the present case there could have been no difficulty in determining this matter ; but if the party had again appeared upon the witness stand it might have created some embarrassment. Keeping in view, however, the rule here indicated, he should be interrogated upon his own side only upon the points embraced in his former testimony, and if he gave a different version of any of them, his testimony should so far be ruled out. But it is important to determine upon whom the burden should be imposed of showing this agreement or variance. It would seem that it should rest upon the party offering himself as a witness ; for being cut off by the letter of the statute, he should show that its spirit would be preserved by receiving his testimony. In other words, he should show the facts that entitled him to be sworn. Having done this, his testimony should be received.
The object of judicial investigation is the truth, and the tendency of modern ruling is, under reasonable rules, to. exclude nothing that can throw light upon the transaction. Statutes and rules are interpreted to this end, and it would be in the interest of concealment to shut out upon the second trial the testimony of the
The court committed no error in overruling the objection as made, and the judgment will be affirmed.