16 Mo. 419 | Mo. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action on a note for thirteen hundred dollars, against Smith and Scroggin, securities of James Brown. Brown purchased several slaves of Thomas Holland, the plaintiff, who warranted them to be sound. The note in suit was executed to secure, as it was alleged, part of the purchase money, a portion of it having been paid down, and bore date ten days prior to the bill of sale. The alleged unsoundness of one of the slaves, estimated to be worth seven hundred dollars, was the defence to the action. Brown afterwards died. On the trial, the warranty of the soundness of the slaves, contained in the bill of sale, was read, and some evidence, conducing to show the unsoundness of one of them, at the time of sale, and his subsequent death, was given in evidence to the jury by the defendants, when Mrs. Brown, the widow of James Brown, the
The case now before us is different from those which have been under consideration. In all those suits, the question was, whether the wife should be ,» witness against her deceased husband’s interest, and she was excluded upon the ground of public policy, whose aim is to create and cherish between husband and wife the most boundless confidence, by stamping with a seal of secrecy, which death itself should not break, every transaction which transpired during their joint lives. Here, the wife is offered as a witness for the interest of her deceased husbands estate. She is, then, to be excluded, if at all, by ¡reason of her identity of interest, and not on the ground of any public policy. There is no identity of interest between husband and wife after the death of one of them. In such case the wife is like any other witness., who, being incompetent at the time he acquires a knowledge of the facts about which he testifies, yet is' afterwards rendered competent, by the extinction of his interest. After some examination, no case has been found in which the wife, under circumstances like those of the present case, has been excluded. She is now under no temptation to commit perjury for her husband. Her testimony, if contrary to the expectations of those who produce her as a witness, cannot affect the conjugal state. This is said in reference to the disqualification of the wife, resulting from the mere fact of the former marriage. If she has a pecuniary interest, she is disqualified by the common law. But by our late code, an interest in fh.é event of a suit does not disqualify a witness.
In the case of Coffin v. Jones, 13 Pick. 443, a widow was permitted to testify for the interest of the estate of her deceased husband, and this case is similar to the one now before-the court.
We are of opinion, that it plainly enough appears from the record, that the slave alleged to be unsound was a part of the consideration of the note on which this suit was brought,.
The refusal of Brown to sell the slave, when a good offer was made him, was evidence open to comment, but was proper for the jury, on the question whether or not the slave was sound at that time. Not that Brown would have sold the slave, had he been unsound, but to show his conduct when the offer was made.
2. The case of Wade v. Scott, 7 Mo. Rep. 509, shows, independently of the statute, that the breach of warranty of soundness of the slave is a defence to the note on which this suit, was brought. The plaintiff, by failing to join the principal or his representative in the suit, cannot deprive the surety of the benefit of a defence, to which he is entitled by the nature of the contract and circumstances in proof. Nor is it an objection to the defence, that the warranty was made to Brown alone. The warranty was a part of the consideration of the note, and in a suit against any party to it, he may show its breach in reduction of the sum sought to be recovered.
The other Judges concurring, the judgment will be reversed and the case remanded.