72 Pa. 228 | Pa. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered, by
— On the trial of this case A. S. Foster, Esq., was offered as a witness on the part of the defence, objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel, and rejected by the court for the following reason : “ Mr. Foster is attorney for the defendant Follansbee, opened the case for him to the jury and examined the witnesses for said defendant, and the court on this ground excludes him as a witness.” This is assigned for error.
In Frear v. Drinker, 8 Barr 521, Mr. Justice Rogers says: “It is also contended an attorney is not a competent witness for his client. In England it has been lately ruled that an attorney is not to give evidence under certain circumstances.” He cites two cases before Mr. Justice Patteson and Mr. Justice Erie, and he says, “ The furthest the court has yet gone is to discourage the practice of acting in the double capacity of attorney and witness, but there is nothing to prohibit an attorney from being a witness for his client when he does not address the jury.”
“ It is said, and I agree, that it is a highly indecent practice for an attorney to cross-examine witnesses, address the jury, and give evidence himself to contradict the witnesses. It is a practice which, as far as possible, should be discountenanced by courts and counsel. But these cases are not open to this objection, because it appears negatively, that the counsel did not address the jury. It is sometimes indispensable that an attorney, to prevent injustice, should give evidence for his client.” In the earlier cases in Pennsylvania, the objection to the examination of the attorney in the cause was his interest in it, as in the case of the late Judge Baldwin in Miles v. O’Hara, 1 S. & R. 32, in 1814. In the first case, Newman v. Bradley, 1 Dallas 240, in the year 1788, Howell, who was of counsel for the plaintiff, gave the chief evidence to support the action, and he and Tod argued the cause before the jury, and there was a verdict for the plaintiff. “ When Howell offered himself as a witness Levy objected, that he was interested, inasmuch as his judgment fee depended on his success in the cause. But the objection was overruled by the court.”
The question may therefore be considered as settled in England and Pennsylvania, and also in Massachusetts: Potter v. Inhabitants of Ware, 1 Cushing 519. There was therefore error in holding Mr. Foster was not a competent witness.
The paper-books on both sides speak of testimony, and argued upon it, without printing the evidence on which the remarks are based, which obliges us to disregard what might otherwise be of importance.
The answer of the court to the third point appears to be open to the technical objection that the plaintiff could not recover in his own name, but must use the name of the firm of Walker & Armstrong.
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.