delivered the opinion of the court.
Actiou of replevin for a safe, commenced before a justice. Upon the trial in the circuit court, the verdict and judgment were in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff appealed.
Brewer and Stewart had been partners as merchants for about six months, in 1872. After the dissolution of their partnership, Stewart went into business separately, and conducted a store until his death in 1878. The. safe in controversy -seems to have been originally bought by Brewer before bis connection with Stewart. After they separated, in 1873 or 1874, it was sent by Brewer to the store of Stewart, where it remained until his, Stewart’s death, in 1878. The plaintiff
The proof of the plaintiff tended to show that the safe belonged to Brewer, and was sold by him to the plaintiff. The proof of the defendant tended to show that Brewer had sold the safe to Stewart, and that he had paid for it. As rebutting evidence, the plaintiff introduced- Brewer as a witness, and asked him to state the circumstances under which the safe was removed to Stewart’s store, and what the agreement between him and Stewart was in regard to it. The ■ defendant objected to the question, and the court sustained the objection, to which the plaintiff excepted.
The question, it is obvious, went to the very heart of the controversy, and the materiality of the' testimony is obvious whatever might be the purport of the answer: Hogan v. State, 5 Baxt., 615. His Honor’s ruling seems to have been based upon the idea that the real parties to the suit were Brewer and the personal representative of Stewart, and that the testimony was inadmissible under the Code, see. 3813d. That section is: “In actions or proceedings by or against executors, administrators or guardians,
The defendant, when examined as a witness in his own behalf, produced a book of accounts, which he said he had found among Stewart’s books, and proved, over plaintiffs objection, that it contained an account of Brewer in the hand-writing of Stewart. And the
The testimony touching the statements of Brewer’s wife in regard to the property in dispute, which were objected to, were admissible if she was shown to have been the general agent of the husband, and the fact of agency was fairly left to the jury upon a proper charge.
Reverse and remand.