139 Mo. 322 | Mo. | 1897
Plaintiff, as administrator of Charles T. Fowler, sued defendants Griffith, the Great Western Type Foundry and S. A. Pierce for the conversion of certain printing presses, type, etc., claimed as the property of plaintiff’s intestate. Several trials have occurred in the circuit court, and this is the second appeal. The first will be found reported in 128 Mo. 53, where a full statement of facts will be found.On the first appeal the judgment was reversed and a new trial was ordered. The retrial resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendant and the plaintiff appealed.
We briefly restate the facts. In 1885 one Clark, being the owner of the property, mortgaged it to Fowler, plaintiff’s intestate, to secure a note for $3,000. Clark sold the property to one Reber, subject to the mortgage, to whom it belonged in April, 1889. In January, 1889, Fowler took possession of the property under his mortgage, and on the twenty-third of that month made a written contract for the sale of it to W. J. A. Montgomery. On the twenty-sixth of January, 1889, Montgomery mortgaged it to Griffith to secure a note for $1,050. April 6, 1889, the property was sold publicly under the Clark mortgage to Montgomery. This sale was made in order to carry out the previous private sale. The purchase price was not paid, but the parties agreed, as the evidence tends to prove, to keep the Clark mortgage alive in order to secure the purchase money. Montgomery was put in possession of the property, and removed it to another building in Karisas City, and made the ordinary use of it. On April 9, Montgomery mortgaged the property to one E. H. Wittie, to
Under the powers contained in his own and the Wittie mortgages, Griffith sold the property to defend-' ant' Pierce, who was the agent of-, and acted for, the defendant type foundry, which disposed of it in the usual course of business.
The petition charges a conversion of the property. The answer is a general denial.
The issue tried was whether the Clark mortgage was kept in force by the arrangement between Powler (plaintiff’s intestate) and Montgomery, so as to take precedence over the mortgages under which Griffith sold.
The issues were submitted on instructions approved on the former appeal, and no objections were made to them. The errors assigned on this appeal are to the rulings of the court in the admission of evidence.
I. On the trial defendant Pierce was called as a witness on his own behalf, and, over plaintiff’s objection, was permitted to testify to certain declarations made by Powler, plaintiff’s intestate, tending to prove that after his sale to Montgomery he made no claim to the property and encouraged witness to buy it.
Plaintiff objected to this testimony for the reasons, first, that Powler being dead, Pierce was incompetent under the statute to testify to conversations between Powler and himself; and, second, because the estoppel attempted to be shown by this testimony of Pierce had not been pleaded by defendants.
Upon objection made, defendants offered to prove, and plaintiff admitted, that the deposition of this witness had been previously taken by him, and was then on file in the cause. The court, upon examination of the deposition, found that the witness hád therein testified to the same declarations he was called upon to
Fowler being dead, and the suit being prosecuted in the name of his administrator, Pierce, a party to the suit, was incompetent, under the terms of the statute, to testify in favor of defendants, to declarations made by deceased. E. S. 1889, sec. 8918.
Defendants insist that, by talcing the deposition of Pierce, the administrator waived his incompetency.
It is said in Tomlinson v. Ellison, 104 Mo. 114: “ The fact that plaintiff had taken defendant’s deposition in the same action amounted to a waiver of any alleged incompetency on his part.” In that case the suit was prosecuted by the administrator of Ford, who had caused the deposition of defendant to be taken. It will be seen, however, that the statement of the legal principle quoted was not necessary to a decision of the case, and can only be regarded as the dictum of the judge who wrote the opinion. Counsel for plaintiff now, with much earnestness and ability, questions the correctness of the principle announced; but, after a careful reconsideration, we are satisfied that the incompetency of a party to testify, when the opposite party is dead as declared by statute, may be waived by his administrator, and that taking his deposition in the case, though not used at the trial, will constitute a waiver.
The statute removes the disability of’parties in interest to testify, but in order to avoid the injustice of permitting one party to testify when the other party is dead, the proviso is added. The purpose is to place the parties, as nearly as possible, on an equality; and thus afford protection to the estates of deceased persons. The living party is riot made absolutely incompetent,as a witness, but “he shall not be permitted to testify in his own favor.” He may be called as a wit
Under the decisions of this court the statute has been construed liberally, in order to carry out the purpose of placing the parties upon an equality. It is said in the case of Stone v. Hunt, 114 Mo. 71, after a review of the decision: “Where, therefore, the testimony of one of the parties to a suit has been taken in the form of a deposition, or his testimony has been preserved by a bill of exceptions, and such party is dead, ;the living party may testify in his own behalf, and this, too, whether the representative of the deceased does or does not produce and introduce the testimony of the deceased. Such a rule leaves the parties upon an equality, and is in accord with the object of the statute.”
Under a like liberal construction of the statute, there can be no doubt that an administrator can waive the incompetency of the opposite party, and will accredit- him as a witness by using his evidence at the trial. A physician is made incompetent to testify concerning information acquired from his patient in a professional matter, yet his incompetency may be waived by the patient. Blair v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 396; Davenport v. City of Hannibal, 108 Mo. 477. In New York it was held, under a similar statute, that where a physician .thus declared incompetent, testified at the instance of his patient upon one trial, the party so calling him could not insist on his exclusion as a witness to the same facts at a subsequent trial of that case, Edington v. Ins. Co., 77 N. Y. 564.
No fair distinction can be made between a waiver implied from an examination of an incompetent wit
Plaintiff had the right to examine defendant Pierce as a witness, but in doing so he waived the right to insist on excluding him when called by defendant. This would certainly be so as to all matters concerning which he was examined by plaintiff. He can not, in fairness, be allowed to assert his competency, if his evidence is found to be favorable, and to deny it if found to be unfavorable. He must lie in the bed he makes for himself. The deposition was on file in the case, and the parties were equally entitled to the use of it in the absence of the witness. The witness being present, either party was entitled to his evidence on matters about which he had been examined.
II. Plaintiff, by his petition, claimed to be the legal owner of the property. A public sale of the property under the mortgage to Montgomery was shown. Such a sale, if regular, would, of course, discharge the lien of the Clark mortgage and foreclose Reberis equity of redemption. The sale was admittedly made for this purpose. There seems to have been no question about the regularity of the sale except that the purchase price was never paid. Fowler, who held the Clark mortgage, had the right to insist upon payment before completing the sale and delivering the 'property to Montgomery. When he executed the bill of sale, de
Now plaintiff undertook to prove, on the trial, that the sale was only a pretense, as between Fowler and Montgomery. He thus introduced into the case without pleading, the equitable effect the assignment and reassignment of the mortgage debt, in lieu of the payment of the purchase price, would have upon the rights of parties dealing with Montgomery while the property was in his possession and under his absolute control.
Whatever may be the effect in equity, as between themselves, of the arrangement, between Fowler and Montgomery for keeping the Clark mortgage alive, it certainly could not affect the rights of defendants unless they purchased with notice thereof. Under the pleadings, and the evidence offered by plaintiff, defendants had the undoubted right to prove, in rebuttal, that Fowler,' after the pretended sale, made no claim to the property, though he knew that Pierce contemplated a purchase of it. Such evidence not only tended to prove a fact that would operate as an' equitable estoppel on Fowler to deny the completeness of the sale, but it tended to contradict the evidence in regard to the alleged private arrangement between Fowler and Montgomery. Under the circumstance we think the evidence was admissible for either purpose, without pleading the estoppel. The evidence was in rebuttal of that introduced by plaintiff. Greenway v. James, 34 Mo. 328; Young v. Glascock, 79 Mo. 576; Bremen Bank v. Branch, 104 Mo. 440.
Eowler invested Montgomery with all the indicia of ownership; a public sale to him, followed by a bill of sale, delivery of possession, removal of property and dominion over it. As to third persons, without notice of any secret agreement between the parties, the title vested in Montgomery. The court might have so instructed the jury. The evidence was, therefore, harmr less. Evidence of a fact which the law presumes, can not hurt. But the evidence, we think, was admissible, as tending to contradict that given by Montgomery in regard to his agreement with Fowler.
Finding nothing in the record of which plaintiff can justly complain, the judgment is affirmed.