167 S.E. 69 | N.C. | 1933
Civil action to recover for "board and washing, special nursing, care and keep" of J. T. Pyatt during sixteen months next immediately preceding his death.
From a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $400, the defendant appeals, assigning errors. The appeal presents the competency of plaintiff's testimony, admitted over objection, of which the following may be taken as *800 typical: "Mr. Pyatt lived with me 16 months prior to his death. . . . I boarded him, taken care of him during that time. . . . We prepared vegetables, cereals, and such foods as a sick person needed. . . . He got worse as he continued to live with me. I got $10 a month from him with which to pay his bills. . . . After my wife died, I arranged with my sister-in-law, who had been boarding with us for sometime, to care for Mr. Pyatt. He was living with me at the time of his death."
This evidence offends against C. S., 1795, which disqualifies a party or person interested in the event, or a person under whom such party or person interested derives his interest, from testifying as a witness in his own behalf against the executor, administrator or survivor of a deceased person, concerning a personal transaction or communication between the witness and the deceased, except where the executor, administrator or survivor, is examined in his own behalf, or the testimony of the deceased person is given in evidence concerning the same transaction or communication. In re Will of Brown, ante, 347.
Testimony of a similar nature was held incompetent in the following cases: Pulliam v. Hege,
But it is contended that, on redirect examination, the plaintiff testified, without objection, "I was living with Mr. Pyatt and fulfilled all agreements with him," which rendered the admission of the previous incompetent evidence harmless as the facts thereby sought to be shown were otherwise fully established. As supporting this position, either directly or in tendency, the following authorities are cited: Eaves v. Cox, ante, 173,
This more or less casual statement of plaintiff, made without objection on redirect examination, was neither intended nor sufficient to overthrow the 19 or 20 objections entered to his testimony during his examination in chief.
We are aware of the criticism leveled against this statute, C. S., 1795 as "a lingering remnant of a discredited antiquity" (North Carolina Law Review, December, 1932, p. 61), but it is the law as written, and we must enforce it.
New trial.