70 Tenn. 101 | Tenn. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant had borrowed from the intestate the amount of money sued for, but claimed that he had repaid it on the 6th of January, 1869, out of money that day received from one McCandless, for land sold to him by’ intestate, defendant, and W. L>. Patton, all brothers. W. D. Patton was introduced as a witness, and proved that he was present when the McCandless money was divided between his brothers, the share of the defendant being $2700, and the share of the intestate $1950. He further deposed that, after the division, defendant asked intestate for the note which he held as evidence of' defendant’s indebtedness, adding that he wished to pay it. The intestate replied that the note was at home, and he would get it and hand it to defendant. That thereupon, the defendant counted out from his share of the McCandless money the sum due, and paid it to the intestate. It is proved by another witness that a few days afterward, the intestate not being able to find the note, had executed a
These facts are not denied by the plaintiff, but the theory upon which the action was brought is, that the money was returned by the intestate to the defendant, and the receipt surrendered. There is no direct evidence of these facts, if facts they be, but they are sought to be established by circumstances and the admissions of the defendant.
One of the circumstances most relied on was the possession by the intestate before, and at his death, of the receipt. Another circumstance, which rested alone on the testimony of the intestate’s widow, was the amount of money carried home by the intestate on the 6th January, 1869.
The testimony of the widow, so far as it is necessary to be stated, all of which was admitted over the objections of the defendant, except one clause ruled out on objection, was as follows:
“ She was the wife of John B. Patton, deceased. She always kept charge in his lifetime of his valuable papers, and also kept his money. After his death she found the receipt among his valuable papers. She knew the receipt by its color, blue, and saw it among his papers before his death, and knew it by its color, and the way it was folded.” Then follows the clause, the objection to which was sustained: (“She said her husband told her, on the 6th of January, 1869, when he came home, that the money he handed her was the McCandless money.”) Witness continued, objection being taken, but overruled: “ She said the money was*104 in two rolls, that sbe counted the money, and found that there was in all $1950.”
The bill of exceptions is so worded that it is not certain that all of this testimony was objected to. But so much of it as related to the receipt, and the last clause in relation to the money, were certainly objected to, and the objection overruled by the court. The possession of the receipt by the intestate at the time of his death, and the fact that the intestate, on the 6th of January, 1869, carried home only $1950 of the McCandless money, were important circumstances to rebut the defense of payment. The question is therefore directly raised, whether in a suit brought by a personal representative for the recovery of a debt due to his intestate, the widow of the intestate is a competent witness for her husband’s estate, to prove facts which came to her knowledge by means of the marital relation.
By the common law, parties were, in general, excluded from being witnesses for themselves, and the rule was extended to husband and wife, neither of them being admissible as* a witness in a cause, civil or criminal, in which the other was a party. The exclusion of husband and wife was founded partly on the identity of their legal rights and interests, and partly on principles of public policy which lie at the basis of civil society. Co. Litt., 6b; Barker v. Dixie Rep.Temp., Hardw., 264; Vowles v. Young, 13 Ves., 144. On the latter ground, whatever has come to the knowledge of either by reason of the confidence which the marital relation produces, cannot be given in testimony,
The rule of the common law was fully recognized and adopted by this court in Brewer v. Ferguson, 11 Hum., 565, where upon an issue of devisavit vel non over the husband’s will, the wife, although not interested in the result nor a party to the suit, was held incompetent to prove the “conduct and conversations” of the husband during the marital relation, tending to establish the alleged insanity of the husband. “ We are not disposed,” says Totten, 3., in delivering the opinion of the court, to follow the cases referred to by the counsel, in which the rule of the common law, founded in public interest and policy, has been relaxed or qualified, as where it may seem to the court that the fact proposed to be proved is not of a confidential nature; or where the marriage relation no longer exists, by reason of a divorce, or the death of one of the parties, and the witness is adduced to prove facts or admissions that occurred during the marriage.”
In Kimbrough v. Mitchell, 1 Head, 540, the husband had brought an action for damages for an assault and battery committed on him by the defendant, who was a brother of the wile. The wife, from whom the husband had obtained a divorce after the assault and before the trial, was offered as a witness by the defendant, to prove how the difficulty occurred between the plaintiff and defendant, and the ill usage of the husband which led to it. The witness was held to
These rulings were followed in Booker v. McAuley, 4 Heisk., 424. There, on a suit against the personal representatives of a trustee, to charge him with the trust assets, the widow of the trustee, who had no interest in the event of the suit, was offered to prove the payment of money to the husband as a part of the trust fund, the amount paid, that the husband handed her the money at the time, that it remained in her possession except a definite sum loaned to a person named, and that she handed the identical money to the defendants as the administrators of the husband. The court held that the testimony was properly excluded. “We conclude, therefore,” says Judge Freeman, after reviewing the previous decisions, “on high grounds of public policy, which demand to be upheld and maintained as subserving the general social interests of the community, that the wife was incompetent.”
In the meantime the Acts of 1868, ch. 75, and 1870, ch. 78, providing, with limited exception, that no person shall be incompetent to testify because he or she is a party to or interested in the issue tried, were enacted by the Legislature. Rev. Code, sec. 3813a, et seq. At the same session of the Legislature during which the last mentioned act was passed, it was also enacted that where the husband and wife sue or are sued jointly, the wife shall not be held incompetent to testify as to the matter in controversy “ that transpired while she was a feme sole or before marriage, although the husband may have acquired an interest in the subject matter of the controversy by the marriage.” Rev. Code, sec. 3813/, 1869, 19, 3. These acts came before this court for construction in Goodwin v. Nicklin., 6 Heisk., 256, and the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. R. R. Co. v. Delaney, an unreported case there cited. It was there held that husband and wife are not made competent witnesses “for or against each other” by these acts. That was a suit by husband and wife, in right of the wife, against the third person, and the wife was offered as a witness to testify in her own behalf.
The point is not decided, but the Chief Justice expresses the opinion that, inasmuch as the complainants rest their claim to relief on the same title and upon the same allegations of misconduct on the part of the husband, the husband was not a competent witness to testify against the complainant Lucretia II. Smith.
. Treating the decision as merely maintaining the ruling that the statutes making parties competent, as witnesses' do not enable husband and wife to testify against each other, the case is in accord with the current. If, however, it is to be construed as holding that merely because the husband and wife, introduced as witnesses, contradict each other, neither would be competent, either as to their own rights or the rights of third persons, its correctness would be more than doubtful. In a controversy between third persons, neither husband nor wife having a direct interest in the suit, they are, it seems, admissible as witnesses, although they contradict each other, or depose to facts to the prejudice of the other. Henman v. Dickinson, 5 Bing., 183; Fiteh v. Hill, 11 Mass., 286; Griffin v. Brown, 2 Peck, 308; Baring v. Ruder, 1 Hen. & Mun., 168.
And certainly, since the statutes declaring that no person shall be incompetent to testify because he or she is a party to the record or interested in the issue, there can be no doubt that the husband or wife who is a party to the suit and directly interested may testify in his or her own behalf, although the other may not be admissible for or against such party. Before the statutes, the rule that an interested party to the
The bill was filed by a mechanic, under a contract with the defendant McVann, to enforce his lien on land for work and labor done and materials furnished in erecting a house. McVann being indebted to the defendant Maddox, had, in satisfaction of the debt, and in .execution of a previous contract in parol, conveyed the land to the wife of Maddox, to her sole and separate use, the conveyance being made after the mechanic’s debt had been created by the completion of the work. The defense on the part of the wife was, that the complainant, with full knowledge of the parol contract between McVann and her husband, had agreed to look alone to McVann for payment, and had waived the lien on the land given by the law for such work.
The rule, as modified by statute, now is, that a husband or wife, who is a party to and directly interested in a suit, may be a witness, but the husband or wife of such party, although nominally before the court, may be incompetent to testify for or against such party, on the ground of public policy. And incompetency depending on the relation of husband and wife, will continue after the marital relation has terminated by death or divorce.
In this view, the evidence of Lavinia Patton in support of the action of the personal representative of her husband, so far as it deposed to facts which came to her knowledge by means of the marital relation, was inadmissible. Under this rule would fall her statements, that she kept charge in his lifetime of her husband’s valuable papers and his money; that she saw the receipt among his papers before his death; that the husband brought home money on the 6th of Jan-ary, 1869; that the money Avas in two rolls, that she counted it, and found that there were in all $1950.
It is doubtful whether, previous to the recent statutes, the husband or wife would have been competent as a witness for any purpose in this State, under our decisions. The actual rulings, when the decision is construed by the facts of the particular case, only go to the competency of the husband or wife to testify as to statements made by the other, and as to such facts as necessarily came to his or her knowledge . by means of the marital relation. But the language of several of the learned judges seemed to recognize the rule as excluding the witness for any purpose. Previous to the recent statutes, such entire exclusion was the logical result of the rule, for the unity of interest of the husband and wife would necessarily exclude both, where either was incompetent. Since the statutes, however, incompeteney by reason of direct interest, and a fortiori, of indirect interest through the husband or wife, is done away with. Incompetency on the score of public policy alone remains, and that should obviously be confined to facts derived from the marital relation alone — at any rate, after the relation has, as in this case, come to an end by the death of one of the parties.
No opinion is expressed whether in a direct suit between husband and wife, where each is a material
The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.