27 Me. 53 | Me. | 1847
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The only question presented in this case is,
whether Alexander Barstow was a competent witness for the plaintiff. Having recovered a judgment against Barstow, upon which an execution had issued, and a return had been made upon it of nulla bona by an officer, the plaintiff commenced an action upon the case, against the defendant for knowingly aiding and assisting Barstow in the fraudulent concealment or transfer of certain personal property, to secure the same from creditors and prevent its attachment or seizure upon execution. The action is founded upon the forty-ninth section of the stat. c. 148, which provides, that a person so conducting shall be liable to any creditor for double the amount of the property, not exceeding double the amount of the creditor’s debt. Bars-tow was called as a witness, to prove, that the defendant knowingly aided him in such a fraudulent concealment or transfer of property ; and for the purpose of presenting the question for deliberate consideration, the witness was excluded, and a nonsuit was ordered.
The same question has since been presented in the action of Aiken v. Kilburn, pending in the county of Franklin.
In an action on a statute containing similar provisions it was decided, that recovery and satisfaction of the judgment against one thus aiding a debtor would operate pro tanto to extinguish the original debt. The thirty-fourth section of the statute, c. 148, provides, that such shall be the effect of the satisfaction of a judgment obtained against one, who has aided a debtor to conceal or dispose of property disclosed by him as a poor debtor.
If Barstow should be admitted to testify in this case, and
The rule is admitted to be well established, that a witness so situated is competent to testify in actions of tort. One co-trespasser is a competent witness to establish the plaintiff’s right to recover damages of another co-trespasser. Morris v. Dau-bigny, 5 J, B. Moore, 319. And yet a satisfaction of the judgment thus recovered, will operate to relieve the witness from his liability to make compensation for the same injury. The recovery of a judgment against a person other than the present debtor, without satisfaction of it, is but an additional security for the debt or claim, except in actions of trespass or trover for goods, in which the judgment operates as a transfer of the property to the defendant. Broome v. Wooton, Yel. 67, note 1, by Metcalf; Drake v. Mitchell, 3 East, 251; Campbell v. Phelps, 1 Pick. 62.
It is quite clear, that a witness so situated may testify, either in an action of tort or of contract, under a strong" bias and expectation of benefit to be derived from his testimony ; and equally clear, that he can have no certain interest in the event of the suit; for he may never be relieved or benefitted in any way by enabling the plaintiff to recover judgment. As the rule of evidence requires, that the witness should have a cer
Mr. Justice Cowen supposed, that he might have noticed and examined, in an opinion drawn by him in that case, all the decided cases bearing upon the question; and yet the case of Eastman v. Winship, does not appear to have been noticed.
In the present case the action is in form ex delicto, and according to the decided cases, the witness should be considered competent. And yet he is not presented as a witness usually is, when held to be competent in actions ex delicto, who being himself a wrongdoer, and as such liable to the plaintiff, testifies that another person is also equally liable. For although the defendant, and the proposed witness were joint perpetrators of the alleged fraud, the statute does not make the debtor liable therefor to the creditor, in the same manner as it does the defendant who aided him.
The case of Paine v. Hussey, 17 Maine R. 274, cited in the argument, differed essentially from this case. The witness
Although the position of the witness in this case was such, that it might justly have a strong influence to impair the credibility of his testimony, he does not appear to have had such a ■certain interest in the event of the suit as would exclude him.
Nonsuit taken off, and the action to stand for trial.