7 Ala. 66 | Ala. | 1844
— The fifth section of the act of 1819, “to regulate the rate of interest,” enacts, that “ when any suit or action may be brought in any Court of record in this State,
In this posture of the case, the Court should have rejected in toto what the defendant testified. But instead of thus ruling, it was adjudged that so far as he was uncontradicted his testimony was properly before the jury; and even further, that they should take the part of his evidence that was contradicted, if corroborated by other proof.
It was no objection to the admission of the deposition that the defendant was the bearer of it from the commissioner to the clerk of the Court, and himself deposed, that he had delivered it in the same condition in which he received it. Such a course of procedure is not inhibited by the rule which declares, that one shall not be a witness in his own cause; for his statement was of a fact merely preliminary to the admission of the evidence, and intended to prevent spurious testimony from being imposed upon the Courts. If the plaintiff had reason for believing the deposition had been interpolated or otherwise altered, he might, upon application to the County Court, have obtained a continuance in order to take it de novo, or to procure the necessary proof to have it suppressed. But the practice which permits parties to bring their own depositions into Court, is too strongly commended by conve»
Without adding any thing more, it has been already shown that the County Court erred in the admission of the defend-» ant’s testimony, and in the instructions to the jury. The judgment is consequently reversed and the cause remanded.