52 Ga. 385 | Ga. | 1874
This was a bill filed by Mrs. M. E. Varner, in her lifetime, against the defendants to set aside a deed executed by her to them on the 13th day of April, 1870, for certain described
1. It is a well settled rule of law, that when one has parted with his or her title to property, that he or she cannot, by his or her declarations made subsequently thereto, be allowed to defeat or disparage that .title. If the law was otherwise, no,
2. The next question to be considered is the admission of the testimony of George and Nathan Napier, over the objection of complainant, Mrs. Varner being dead at the time of the trial. The 3854th section of the Code declares that where one of the original parties to the contract or cause of action in issue or on trial is dead, the other party shall not be admitted to testify in his own favor. In this case Mrs. Varner was dead, but her testimony had been taken by interrogatories before her death, which were offered and read in evidence by the complainant, in which she fully stated her version and understanding of the contract at the time it was made. What is the reason and spirit of this statute and what motive had the legislature in the enactment of it? The reason, spirit and intention of the statute is, that when one of the parties to the contract is dead, and cannot give his version of the contract, the other party thereto shall not admitted to testify in his own favor. If, however, the party who is dead did testify while in life fully in relation to the contract, as in this case, and her testimony is read to the jury, shall the other party to the contract then be excluded from, giving his version of it because the other party is dead at the time of the trial. Would such a construction of the statute be in accordance with the reason and spirit thereof? It may be within the strict letter of the statute, but it is no more within the reason and spirit of it than the law which enacted that whoever drew blood in. the streets should be punished with the utmost severity, when it was held that law did not extend to the surgeon who opened the vein of a person that fell down in the street with a fit. The drawing blood in the streets by the surgeon was within the strict letter of the law, but not within the reason or spirit of it. So in this case, if the complainant
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.