53 N.C. 375 | N.C. | 1861
The lessors of the plaintiffs were admitted to be the heirs-at-law of __________ Klutts, lately the wife of James Klutts, the defendant, who claimed as tenant by the curtesy. To establish his title, the defendant proved by a witness that she was called in as a midwife to Mrs. Klutts on her confinement; that when she arrived she found that the woman had been delivered of a child, which was then dead. The defendant offered to prove by this witness the declarations of the mother to the effect that the child had been born alive; that it had cried and survived its birth a few minutes; and that the conversation occurred shortly after the birth of the child. The evidence was objected to and excluded by his Honor, and the defendant's counsel excepted.
Verdict and judgment for plaintiffs. Appeal by defendant.
A wife is not a competent witness for or against her husband; S. v.Jolly,
The declarations in this case were made shortly after the birth of the child and, we will suppose, as soon as the midwife arrived, at which time the act of delivery was over — "a fact accomplished." So, whether the child was born alive or dead could in nowise affect or have any bearing upon that fact. The suggestion, therefore, that this declaration of the wife was admissible as a part of the res gestae is not supported.
The position that the declarations of the mother in respect to her child is "natural evidence," and admissible on that ground, is also untenable.
This kind of evidence is not based upon the competency of the witness, for it is the evidence of facts, as distinguishable from the testimony of witnesses, as is said in Biles v. Holmes,
PER CURIAM. No error.