117 Ky. 217 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion on the court by
Affirming.
It appears from the record that appellee, Mrs. E. Stern, is the owner of a store in the city of Louisville, and that her husband, Jacob Stern, is the manager thereof, and that
The competency of this witness must be governed by the first subdivision of sec. 606 of the Civil Code Prac., which is as follows: “Neither a husband nor his wife shall testify, ev.en after the cessation of their marriage, concerning any communication between them during marriage. Nor 'shall either of them testify against the other. Nor shall either of them testify for the other, except in an action for lost baggage or its value against a common carrier, an innkeeper or a wrongdoer, and in such action either or both of them may testify; and, except in action which might have been brought by or against the wife, if she had been unmarried, and in' such actions either, but not both, of them may testify. [And except that when a husband or a wife is acting as agent for his or her consort, either of them, may testify as to any matter connected with such an agency.]” The words in brackets added by act of February 23, 1898, (Acts 1898, p. 1, c. 1.). The result of the question under consideration depends on the meaning and construction of this amendment of 1898. Under the common law, as well as under the provision of the Code, husband and wife were and are prohibited from testifying for or against each other. But the Code makes exceptions to this rule. The first ex
The third and last exception is this amendment, which permits either to testify as to' any matter connected with such an agency, when either has acted as the agent of the other, in any transaction. This amendment has never been construed by this court. It is a well-recognized rule in construing a statute that the court should endeavor to ascertain the meaning and intent of the General Assembly in enacting the statute, and give it the construction and effect intended. When the General Assembly enacted this amendment, it had before it the section of the Code referred to, and the prior body in the case of lost baggage had used the words “either or both,” and in an action by or against the wife with reference to her individual rights used this language: “Either, but not both, may testify.” In this amendment the words “either of them may testify” are used without adding the words “or both,” as in the first exception, or adding the words “but not both,” as used in the second exception, but did add words significant of the meaning and intent of the legislative will by adding these words, “as to any matter connected with such an agency,” it is to be assumed, therefore, that by the use of the words “either may testify” the law intended to restrict the testimony in relation to matters coming within such facts as might be known by one of the parties only. Is it not more reasonable to presume that the Legislature intended that, when part of the facts are within the knowledge of one and part within the knowledge of the other exclusively, each
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.