42 Mo. App. 295 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
This was an action on a bond given by the defendant Lampert, as master of the exchequer, which means treasurer, of an unincorporated lodge of a benevolent society. The action was not defended, except by Mrs. Schulte, executrix of the estate of J. P. Schulte, one of the alleged sureties. The only question at issue was whether Schulte ever signed the bond. No direct evidence to that effect was adduced ; but the evidence offered by the plaintiffs to prove the fact was the production of the bond in their custody, with his name signed to it by some one, and the evidence to the effect that he had admitted that he had become surety for Lampert on the bond.
I. Two of these witnesses were at the time when, according to their testimony, these admissions were made, members of the Missouri Lodge Number 2, of which the plaintiffs are trustees; but, at the time of giving their testimony, they had ceased to be members
II. Two other of the witnesses, called to prove such admissions, were members of the Missouri Lodge Number 2, both at the time when the supposed admissions were made, and at the time when'they gave their testimony. They were objected to on the same ground, but' the court overruled the objection and permitted them to testify. These witnesses were clearly incompetent. They were incompetent at common law, and they have not been rendered competent by the statute.
I endeavored to show in my opinion of Ashbrook v. Letcher, 41 Mo. App. 369, that the statute has not been construed with any considerable degree of consistency, nor upon any uniform theory. There are two theories of construing it; one may be called the analytical theory; the other the historical theory. The former theory is that it is a general statute, undertaking to cover the whole subject of disqualification of witnesses by reason of being parties to the action or being interested in its event; and that, proceeding with this purpose, the statute creates, first, a general rule, which is that no witness shall be disqualified for these reasons,
Under that theory the -witnesses were clearly incompetent : First. They were interested in the event of the suit' in such a way as rendered them incompetent at common law; and, second, they were within the terms-of the statutory reservation of the common-law rule. By the common law, a person, who had a direct interest in a trust fund, was not a competent witness to increase-that fund. Haydon v. Cornelius, 12 Mo. 321. On this ground the creditors of a bankrupt were incompetent as-witnesses to increase the fund of the bankrupt in the hands of his assignee, — a principle recognized by our-supreme court, arguendo, in Foster v. Wallace, 2 Mo. 231, 227. Here, the Missouri Lodge Number 2 was an unincorporated body; the plaintiffs were shown to be the custodians of its funds for the purposes of the trust created by the rules of the order; and the witnesses
It is argued that this case falls within the rule of Fulkerson v. Thornton, 68 Mo. 468, which is that, where the contract sued on was made on the one side by two persons, one of whom has since died, that fact does not disqualify the adverse party from testifying in the case. But the argument, which attempts to bring the case before us within that exception, is a complete petitio princeps ; for here it did not appear that any contract had been made by the deceased Schulte, but the sole issue to be determined was whether or not he was a party to any contract whatever in common with the living parties.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.