Snell v. Gregory

37 Mich. 500 | Mich. | 1877

Campbell, J.

Gregory sued plaintiffs in error upon the common counts and gave them a bill of particulars showing his claim to rest on a balance due for work done under a contract made by himself and one Thomas Brown with plaintiffs in error on which a settlement had been made and balance struck at 81,255.36, and showing that Brown had assigned his interest to Gregory.

On the trial it was objected that the declaration should have been special, and should have averred the assignment. In Kelly v. Waters, 31 Mich., 405, we decided otherwise. The defendant when sued on the common counts can always be informed as fully by demanding a bill of particulars as by averments in the declaration, and that is all that is needed for his protection. This case is one which is plainer than Kelly v. Waters, because here the recovery was upon an account stated and balance agreed upon.

The plaintiff below proved a part of his case by calling Snell, one of the plaintiffs in error, and was allowed upon some points to contradict him by other evidence. This is alleged as error, it being claimed to have been a violation *502of the rule forbidding the impeachment of witnesses by those who call them.

There is nothing in any known rule of evidence to prevent a party from contradicting his own witnesses, and it would be a very dangerous thing to introduce such a rule. Every one would then be at the mercy of his own witnesses, and if the first witness sworn should swear against him he would lose the testimony of all the rest. This would be a perversion of justice. It is claimed, however, that where an adverse party is called, he should not be contradicted even although a witness might be. This would lead to the singular result of giving a person less protection against an adverse witness than against an indifferent one. When parties are called on for discovery in equity, they may always be contradicted, and common justice requires that they should be subject to this. The rules of evidence should be so framed as to draw out and not conceal the truth.

There is no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed with costs.

Cooley, C. J., and Graves, J., concurred. Marston, J., did not sit in this case.