146 Ga. 272 | Ga. | 1916
T. B. Sale executed to T. Burwell Green his note for $500. The note contained this entry on the back of it. “I guarantee one half payment of within note. D. M. Lyon.” The note was sued on by the executrix of the payee. The principal maker, Sale, made no defense. Lyon pleaded a discharge of liability because the payee had released Sale. On the trial it was
The surety offered to prove by the principal maker (Sale) that after the note became due, in consideration that the automobile for the purchase of which the note was given was to be used by the payee, the latter agreed to release the witness from the payment of the note, and that the witness had never told the surety anything, concerning such agreement to release. The court repelled the testimony, on the ground that the witness'was a party at interest-and incompetent to testify in the suit brought on the note by the executrix of the deceased payee. The statute declares that where a suit is instituted by the personal representative of a deceased person, the opposite party shall not be permitted to testify in his own favor against the deceased person as to transactions or communications with such deceased person. Civil Code (1910), § 5858.(1). If Sale had filed a defense of accord and satisfaction of the note by delivery of the car to the deceased payee for use by him, Sale would have been incompetent to testify as to such defense. Is the statute applicable where he files no defense, and is offered as witness in behalf of his surety to establish his surety’s defense which is dependent on the witness’s exoneration from the debt? The statute prohibits the witness from testifying in his own favor. If his testimony be not in his own favor but in favor of a codefendant, he is not disqualified as a witness. This is illustrated by the case of Reed v. Baldwin, 102 Ga. 80 (29 S. E. 140). There the executors of a deceased payee sued a husband and wife on a note signed by them as joint makers; the wife pleaded that the debt was her husband’s, and she signed as his surety. It was held that the husband was a competent witness in support of the plea of the wife, because his testimony was not in his own favor, in that he sought to discharge his wife from liability as a joint principal. The principle of this was applied in Hawes v. Glover, 126 Ga. 305, 314 (55 S. E. 62). In the instant case Sale filed no defense; he is not offered as a witness in his own behalf; his testimony can not and will not affect his liability to the plaintiff; the discharge of his •surety is of no concern or interest to him. His testimony can not be said to be in his own favor, because he is not affected by the
Judgment reversed.