83 P. 1029 | Kan. | 1906
Thomas M. Armstrong brought an action, as administrator of Joseph Armstrong, to recover upon a note given to the latter and executed by S. Huston and S. H. Koger. In the plaintiff’s pleading both the makers of the note were named as defendants, but service of summons was had only upon Koger. At the trial Koger offered in evidence the deposition of Huston, taken in Oklahoma, in which the witness stated that he was the principal upon the note and that Koger was merely a surety; that in the lifetime of the payee, by an arrangement made with the witness, the time of payment of the note had been extended for a valuable consideration, without the knowledge or consent of the surety, thereby effecting his discharge.
An objection was sustained to the admission of this deposition upon the ground that it was within the rule (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 4770) forbidding a party to
It is also suggested that the rejected evidence was incompetent because it stated conclusions rather than facts. It was couched in very general terms but was for the most part admissible.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to grant a new trial.