This appeal presents several evidentiary questions. The three principal issues are whether the Circuit Court for Washington County, in a suit by appellant Elizabeth Farah against the estate of John M. Sanderson, Jr., erred in declining to admit (1) Elizabeth’s testimony concerning her reasons for performing services for Mr. Sanderson and his wife, (2) testimony of Elizabeth’s husband, J. Ramsay Farah, concerning conversations he had with Mr. Sanderson and Elizabeth, and (3) testimony of three non-party witnesses concerning statements made by Mr. Sanderson of his intention to give money to Elizabeth and Ramsay. Items (1) and (2) require us to determine whether the trial court properly.prohibited Elizabeth and Ramsay from testifying under Md.Code Cts. & Jud. Proc. art., § 9-116, commonly referred to as the dead man’s statute. The third item presents a hearsay question.
The relevant facts are largely undisputed. On July 23, 1993, Elizabeth filed two claims against Mr. Sanderson’s estate in the Orphans’ Court for Washington County. The dispute arose over an alleged contract by Mr. Sanderson to make a bequest of $110,000 to Ramsay and Elizabeth in exchange for Elizabeth’s agreement to care for Mrs. Sander-son. After Mr. Sanderson died on February 25, 1993, the Farahs learned that he had failed to make the promised bequest in his will. The first claim for $100,000, filed jointly by Elizabeth and Ramsay, was based on Mr. Sanderson’s oral promise to leave Elizabeth and Ramsay $100,000 upon his death as payment for services Elizabeth had rendered to Mr. Sanderson and his wife. The second claim for $10,000, filed by Elizabeth individually, was based on Mr. Sanderson’s oral promise to reimburse Elizabeth for items she had purchased for the Sandersons.
The evidence at trial showed that the Farahs and Sander-sons developed a close friendship after they met at a church function in 1985. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Sanderson’s health began to decline, and the Sandersons employed several home care agencies, which, for various reasons, proved unsatisfactory. Around 1989, Elizabeth assumed daily responsibility for Mrs. Sanderson’s care and for all the Sandersons’ household chores, including laundry, meal preparation, and cleaning. The Farahs maintain that Elizabeth undertook those responsibilities in return for Mr. Sanderson’s promise to make a bequest of $100,000.
On May 16, 1995, the Orphans’ Court transmitted the following two questions to the circuit court:
“1. Did the decedent herein, John M. Sanderson, Jr. make a valid, enforceable contract during his lifetime to bequeath to the claimant, Elizabeth Farah, the sum of $10,000.00?
2. Did the decedent herein, John M. Sanderson, Jr. make a valid, enforceable contract during his lifetime to bequeath to the claimants, Elizabeth Farah and J. Ramsay Farah, the sum of $100,000.00?”
Prior to trial, Ramsay and Elizabeth Farah assigned and transferred their joint interest in the $100,000 claim to Elizabeth individually, thereby making her the only plaintiff/claimant in the circuit court proceeding. Despite the assignment of interest to and substitution of Elizabeth in the $100,000 claim, the circuit court ruled in limine that Ramsay was still a “party” under Maryland’s dead man’s statute and barred him from testifying at the trial about any statements made by or transactions with Mr. Sanderson.
At trial, Elizabeth testified on direct examination that for approximately two and a half years “she cared for and performed numerous household chores on a daily basis” for Mr.
Sanderson.
1
She was then asked “why did you do, at the Sanderson home, all the
Ramsay’s testimony at trial was also riddled with objections from defense counsel. In addition to prohibiting Ramsay from testifying about conversations he had with Mr. Sanderson regarding compensation for his wife, the court sustained appellee’s objections to questions about a conversation Ramsay had with Elizabeth regarding her decision to care for Mrs. Sanderson.
“Q. [0]n what basis did you ask your wife if she would do the job?
[Objection sustained.]
Q. Without any reference to Mr. Sanderson, what did you tell your wife?
[Objection sustained.]
Q. As a result of your discussion with your wife, what did she do?
A. She accepted the work.
Q. What work are you referring to?
A. To take care of Mrs. Sanderson and Mr. Sanderson.
[Objection and motion to strike.]
THE COURT: Sustained, jury will disregard.”
The court also prohibited Ramsay from testifying about whether he ever talked with Elizabeth about compensation for caring for Mrs. Sanderson. At the conclusion of direct examination of Ramsay, appellant’s counsel proffered the following:
“[I]f asked, Dr. Farah would testify that he had a conversation with Jack Sanderson at the time home care services were, uh, having a problem with those, that Jack Sanderson asked him if Elizabeth would care for Delores on a daily basis as needed and if she would agree to do so for compensation. And that he, Ramsay, Dr. Farah would testify, uh, agreed that there would be a payment of a hundred thousand dollars ($100,000.00) for their services, for the rest of Delores’ life, and, uh, further that Dr. Farah told Jack Sanderson that he preferred not to have the payment during Jack Sanderson’s life but at his death, uh, for tax reasons.”
The court sustained objections to admission of that testimony based on the dead man’s statute. The court also excluded as hearsay the testimony of three other witnesses who would have testified that Mr. Sanderson told them that he was going to give the Farahs $110,000.00 in return for their services.
In response to appellee’s motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of appellant’s case, the circuit court filed an opinion and order on November 16, 1995 that answered in the negative the two questions posited by the Orphans’ Court and granted appellee’s motion for judgment. In the opinion, the court found:
“[T]he Plaintiff, Elizabeth Farah, as well as Elizabeth Farah and J. Ramsay Farah, together, have failed to establish the existence of a contract between them and John M. Sander-son, Jr. for either ... $10,000.00 ... or for ... $100,000.00. The Plaintiffs in this case have simply been unable to adduce testimony of the existence of a valid, enforceable contract.”
From this order appellant appealed to this Court. We now affirm the circuit court’s decision.
DISCUSSION
I.
Elizabeth Farah’s Testimony
The Maryland dead man’s statute, codified in Md.Code Cts. & Jud. Proc. art., § 9-116, provides:
“A party to a proceeding by or against a personal representative, heir, devisee, distributee, or legatee as such, in which a judgment or decree may be rendered for or against them, or by or against an incompetent person, may not testify concerning any transaction with or statement made by the dead or incompetent person, personally or through an agent since dead, unless called to testify by the opposite party, orunless the testimony of the dead or incompetent person has been given already in evidence in the same proceeding concerning the same transaction or statement.”
The purpose of the dead man’s statute is to seal the lips of a party in a proceeding “by or against” a personal representative about facts that could be disputed only by the deceased.
Reddy v. Mody,
Obviously, the dead man’s statute barred Elizabeth from testifying that she had an agreement or contract with Mr. Sanderson. Based upon the statute, the trial court also excluded the proffered testimony of Elizabeth that she had performed services for Delores because she understood that she was going to be compensated. The distinction between the clearly prohibited statement — “Mr. Sanderson contracted with me” — and the proffered one — “I cared for Mrs. Sander-son because I expected to be paid” — is not discemable for purposes of the dead man’s statute when the only basis of the expectation of payment was an agreement by Mr. Sanderson to make the payment. Absent that inferred basis, the testimony would have been irrelevant. We find, therefore, that Elizabeth’s testimony that she “understood she was going to be compensated” as a direct result of an agreement with Mr. Sanderson was properly barred.
II.
Exclusion of Ramsay Farah’s Testimony
Prior to trial, the circuit court ruled that, despite the fact that Ramsay and Elizabeth assigned and transferred their interest in the $100,000 claim to Elizabeth individually, Ramsay was still a “party” for purposes of the dead man’s statute, and, therefore, he was barred from testifying about a conversation he had with Mr. Sanderson regarding compensation to be paid to Elizabeth. Elizabeth also challenges the court’s exclusion of Ramsay’s testimony regarding conversations he had with Elizabeth about her decision to care for Mrs. Sander-son. The gist of each of those conversations was that, in return for caring for the Sandersons, Elizabeth would receive payment on Mr. Sanderson’s death.
Elizabeth argues that the court erred in excluding Ramsay’s testimony about his conversation with Mr. Sander-son because, after the assignment of his interest in the $100,-000 claim and his withdrawal from the case, Ramsay was no longer a party and his testimony was not subject to the restrictions of the dead man’s statute. We do not dispute Elizabeth’s claim that, by its express terms, the statute applies only to the “testimony of a party to a cause.”
Montgomery Co. v. Herlihy,
This is, essentially, a question of statutory construction and application. In construing
We have discovered only three cases on point. Two of them support appellant’s view that the statute applies only to persons who are actual, technical parties to the action and that, if the witness, whose testimony would otherwise be excluded, has assigned his or her claim to another, the witness is no longer a party and may testify.
See Witte v. Koeppen,
“If every person who claims to have a contract with a deceased person can, by assigning his claim, free himself of the inhibition of the statute against testifying to transactions with the deceased, the statute for all practical purposes, would be rendered nugatory, and might as well be abolished. It may well be doubted whether the statute is a good one, but, as long as it remains the law, the courts, while not extending it, will give it the practical purpose thereof.”
Our application of the dead man’s statute to Ramsay’s testimony is guided by the prior pronouncements of the Court of Appeals and of this Court. The Court of Appeals has explained that the general purpose of the dead man’s statute is to impose silence upon interested parties as to transactions with or statements by the decedent.
Snyder v. Crabbs,
Appellant concedes that, if Ramsay had remained a party to the proceeding, the dead man’s statute would have excluded testimony from both him and his wife relating to the alleged agreement they had with Mr. Sanderson. That agreement, as noted, was with both Elizabeth and Ramsay. We agree with the Texas Court that it would frustrate the entire purpose of the statute if a claimant, who was in fact in concert with the decedent, were permitted to circumvent the dead man’s statute simply by assigning his claim to a third party, and then assert the status of a non-party to the action.
Although Ramsay was no longer a
named party
in the legal proceeding, we simply cannot ignore the fact that he was both a party to the contract with Mr. Sanderson and a party in the original complaint. Furthermore, as Ramsay never presented any evidence regarding the terms of his assignment, we are unsure as to what interest he may have retained in the contract claim. Although ordinarily the term “party” is used to designate the opposing litigant in a judicial proceeding, in
Reddy,
we explained that for purposes of the dead man’s statute “a party is one who has an interest in the property sought
or a person having a direct pecuniary and proprietary interest in the outcome of the case.”
We also find that the trial court correctly excluded Ramsay’s testimony concerning
IIL,
Three Non-Party Witnesses’ Testimony
Appellant complains that the circuit court erred in excluding the testimony of three non-party witnesses as to Mr. Sanderson’s intention, upon his death, to pay $110,000 to Elizabeth and Ramsay. Undoubtedly, that evidence was offered to prove the truth of an out-of-court statement and therefore constituted hearsay. The issue is whether it is admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. Appellant argues that the witnesses’ statements fall within three recognized exceptions — state of mind, admission of predecessor in interest, and declaration against interest.
First, appellant argues that the testimony should have been admitted under Md. Rule 5-803(b)(3), commonly referred to as the “state of mind” or “statement of intent” exception to the hearsay rule. Under this exception, certain forward-looking statements of intent are admissible to prove that the declarant subsequently took a later action in accordance with his stated intent.
See Ebert v. Ritchey,
Elizabeth next maintains that the statements are admissions of appellee’s predecessor in interest.
3
Relying on
Mannix v. Baumgardner,
Although the underlying facts of
Mannix
are analogous to Elizabeth’s claim, we find the two cases distinguishable. We
believe the
Mannix
Court upheld the admission by the decedent — in the form of the first will — because there was “direct testimony ... that a contract was made, and this [was] corroborated by a number of circumstances” including the will.
Id.
at 605,
“A statement which was at the time of its making so contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary or proprietary interest, so tended to subject the declarant to civil or criminal liability, or so tended to render invalid a claim by the declarant against another, that á reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless the person believed it to be true.”
Specifically, Elizabeth argues that Mr. Sanderson’s statement that he “was going to give $110,000 for all they had done for him,” amounts to an acknowledgment of indebtedness or a declaration against pecuniary interest.
The declaration against interest exception is based on the notion that statements acknowledging indebtedness are presumptively reliable, since a reasonable person would not acknowledge indebtedness unless it were true. 6 L. McLain, Maryland Practice, § 804(3).1 (1987). For such evidence to be admissible, however, the trial judge must be satisfied that the statement was, in fact, against the declarant’s interest and that the declarant understood that his statement could cause him a loss of money (or property or liberty).
See State v. Standifur,
Applying these principles to the proffered testimony, we do not believe that Mr. Sanderson’s statements come
within the declaration against interest exception. We have explained that “declarations against interest ... include acknowledgment of facts which would give rise to a liability for tort or ... breach of contract.”
Houck v. DeBonis,
For the foregoing reasons, we believe that the trial court properly excluded the testimony of the three non-party witnesses.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED; APPELLANT TO PAY THE COSTS.
Notes
. Prior to Mrs. Sanderson’s death in 1992, Elizabeth claimed that she was responsible for "house cleaning, laundry, shopping, meal preparation, and personal hygiene services.” After Mrs. Sanderson died, Elizabeth said that she continued to provide "house cleaning and housing services” to Mr. Sanderson.
. We do not believe this decision contradicts any prior applications of the statute permitting testimony from children or spouses who, undeniably, stood to gain simply by virtue of their relationship with a party.
See, e.g., Marx v. Marx, supra,
and
Trupp v. Wolff, supra.
In contrast to those witnesses, Ramsay actually had "the right to bring and control the action.”
South Down Liquors, Inc. v. Hayes,
Furthermore, we believe this decision is in line with our finding in
Herlihy, supra,
wherein we determined that the dead man’s statute "is of sufficient breadth as to encompass actions in which [a] personal representative substitutes for a plaintiff or defendant before or during trial, but after the action has been filed.”
Id.
at 512,
. Admissions are "the words or acts of a party-opponent, or of his predecessor or representative, offered as evidence against him.”
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Kuhl,
