20 S.E. 206 | N.C. | 1894
The general rule (The Code, sec. 589) is that no person offered as a witness shall be excluded on account of his interest in the event of the action. The exception (The Code, sec. 590) is that neither a party interested in the event of the action, nor any one from, through or under whom such interested person derives his interest or title by assignment or otherwise, shall be examined as a witness, etc., concerning a personal transaction or communication between the witness and the deceased person. The witness Ephraim Emory lived with the plaintiff on the land in controversy and helped to support her. If she should lose the suit he would seek a home elsewhere with her, but he had no legal or pecuniary interest in the lot in controversy. The statute does not disqualify every witness who, in the broadest sense of the term, is interested in the event of the action, but only such as have a direct and substantial or (to apply the principle more exactly to the case before us) a direct legal or pecuniary interest in the result. Unless the witness bear such a relation to the controversy that the verdict and judgment in the case *112
may be used against him as a party in another action, he is not disqualified to testify. The fact that the witness as a member of the (164) family must move out along with the servants of the plaintiff, if the defendant should prevail in this suit, would not, he being neither privy nor party, estop him from setting up a claim to the land in a future action as against present defendants. Were this record offered in such a suit, it would be res inter alios acta. Mull v. Martin,
After the trial the defendant moved for a new trial on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence to establish a parol trust.
We think the testimony that the plaintiff had entered upon the land more than twenty years before the trial, under a bargain with one Saintsing, who was a son-in-law of Willis Emory, and had built a house upon it, and had paid taxes and lived thereon undisturbed, claiming the property as her own, with her father, Willis Emory, until his death; that the proceeds of a sale of a horse, a gun and other personal property had been applied in payment of the purchase money by her or for her, and that exchanges of portions of the two lots had been from time to time made, together with reasons given, according to the *113
witnesses, for agreeing to have title to both lots made to W. C. Emory, the father of the defendants, was sufficient to go to the jury as tending to establish the parol trust. Shields v. Whitaker,
Affirmed. (166)
Cited: Clark v. Edwards,