227 N.W. 501 | Minn. | 1929
The assignments of error raise the question whether the husband, Jacob Dale, was competent to testify to oral conversations had with one W. C. Thom, defendant's cashier at the time the mortgage and note were given, who had died before the trial, relative to the issue of fraud in the case, under G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9817.
1. The inchoate interest of the husband in the real estate of the wife, other than a homestead, did not make the husband incompetent, as a person interested in the event of the action, to testify as to a conversation with a deceased person upon the issue as to the validity of this mortgage. Thill v. Freiermuth,
2. The question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings of fraud is presented.
"To justify the cancelation or rescission of a written instrument the evidence should be clear and convincing, but a fair preponderance of the evidence is sufficient. Fraud or mistake as a ground for cancelation or rescission is not required to be proved by any more or different evidence than the same facts are required to be proved in other cases." 1 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed.) § 1202; Martin v. Hill,
While the evidence as to fraudulent representations in the present case is limited to the testimony of plaintiff's husband and meager corroborating circumstances, yet if believed that evidence is sufficiently clear and convincing. We do not attempt to recite the evidence. The case has been twice tried, and two district judges passing upon the same evidence have held it sufficient to sustain recovery. We find it sufficient to sustain the decision.
3. It is contended that plaintiff was permitted to give testimony on her direct examination which by necessary inference amounted to evidence of or concerning conversations with a person since deceased relative to the matters in issue. She did give testimony which was objectionable on that ground and could have been excluded under rules stated in Reeves v. Sawyer,
At the time plaintiff's husband was on the stand objection was made to any conversation had "by this witness" with the cashier of the bank, who had died before the trial, on the ground that the witness was incompetent to testify to such conversation because of interest in the event of the action. Later, during the examination of the same witness, defendant's counsel stated: "Your Honor, it is understood that all, that our objection is given throughout the entire record, as to all conversations with the deceased by this witness; and that the ruling is reversed." Later counsel questioned whether his objection would cover testimony of this witness in reference to another conversation testified to by him as having been had out on the farm, and it was agreed that the objection covered it. Counsel for plaintiff then said: "I understood that this objection covers everything."
Plaintiff was not called as a witness until a later stage of the trial after other witnesses had testified. No objection was made to her competency nor to any of her evidence, except in one instance when she started to tell something said to her by the cashier. Defendant's counsel promptly moved to strike out her statement, and it was stricken. When it is considered that the objection here in question is not to the relevancy of the evidence but to the competency of the witness to testify thereto, and the record is barren of any statement or suggestion that the objection to the competency of another witness shall apply to the witness whose competency is now challenged, we fail to see how the objection can be so applied. The statement of defendant's counsel, that he understood the objection covered everything, cannot reasonably be construed to refer or apply the objection to witnesses who had not then been called. There were arguments by counsel to the court upon these objections, but the record does not disclose what they were. *457
In the motion for a new trial defendant moved that "all statements and testimony of the plaintiff in reference to conversation with the deceased, W. C. Thom, be held inadmissible under such statute, and that all such conversations be stricken from the record." The motion for a new trial, unless perhaps under exceptional circumstances and upon some sufficient showing, will not relieve from the necessity of objections to and rulings on the evidence at the trial.
4. It is claimed that the husband, Jacob Dale, was a necessary party to the action. Under our statute the note and mortgage were joint and several obligations of the makers. Defendant, if it so elected, could sue either maker alone. It would seem to follow that either maker could sue without joining the other as a necessary party.
Order affirmed.