137 Wis. 560 | Wis. | 1909
Tbe appellant presented in tbe county court a claim against tbe estate of Jobn W. Blum for two items of $150 each for money loaned. Tbe claim was disallowed, and upon appeal to tbe circuit court tbe cause retried, tbe latter court again finding against tbe plaintiff. To prove bis claim against tbe estate of John W. Blum tbe plaintiff offered in evidence two books of account, one containing the
By reason of the law rendering the plaintiff incompetent to testify to transactions or communications personally had with Bev. John W. Blum, deceased, the plaintiff could not use the books as memoranda to refresh his memory and then testify to the transaction. The appellant, however, contends that the five-dollar limitation above mentioned does not apply to books admissible under sec. 4189, Stats. ,(1898), and that under the latter section the books in question were competent evidence. But the books could not come within both sections. Sec. 4189 renders competent only “entries in a book or other permanent form other than those mentioned in secs. 4186 and 41896.” Any book of
It is further contended that one of the items of $150 was not an item of cash, but is represented by a written order drawn upon another party indebted to the plaintiff, which •was given to the deceased and cashed by him. We consider this another mode of delivering money to the deceased similar to a payment by cheek, and within the statute which declares that such books shall not be admitted as testimony of any item of money delivered at one time exceeding $5.
There being no other evidence sufficient to support the claim of the plaintiff, the circuit court properly ruled in favor of the defendant. It is not intended to commit this court to the view that books of account mentioned in sec. 4186, Stats. (1898), properly verified, would in any case be evidence of a loan of money as a separate transaction, but that question is left undecided.
By the Court. — Judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.