61 So. 594 | Miss. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant filed a bill for discovery against appellees, husband and wife. To this bill appellees filed separate demurrers, each assigning three grounds of demurrer, viz.: (1) That the bill prays for discovery not under oath. (2) The bill as to discovery is a fishing bill. (3) That the bill, in praying discovery by this defendant, endeavors to force him, contrary to law, to give evidence against his wife. Accompanying the demurrers, separate answers were filed by appellees, denying under oath all of the allegations of the bill, and particularity the allegations charging fraud.
The hill alleges that, at the time of the filing of the bill, complainant therein was the owner of an enrolled judgment of three thousand, six hundred and fifty-one dollars and three cents against appellee F. H. Hutson; that F. H. Hutson, during the life of this judgment, had purchased with his own funds certain described land, but
It seems that the chancellor sustained the demurrer upon the first ground thereof, to wit: “That the bill prays
We are of opinion that the discovery prayed for by the bill is, in effect, an effort to compel the husband and wife to testify against each other. Under the common law husband and wife were incompetent to testify either for or against each other. This has been changed by the statute. Section 1916 of the Code of 1906. The statute does not permit either to testify against the other, except in “all controversies between them.” The law is now that husband and wife are only competent to testify, where one of them is a party to the suit, when he or she is introduced as a witness by the other.
In the instant case the prayer of the bill asks that each be required to discover matters and things to be used as evidence against the other. It is said that what the one may discover cannot be used against the other, and this may be true; yet we think the policy of the law goes further, and renders the husband or wife incompetent to give evidence in any proceeding which may aid the opponent of the other in a lawsuit wherein both husband and wife are made parties. Leach v. Shelby, 58 Miss. 681. As far as the husband and wife being competent to testify against each other, the law remains as it was at common law, except in controversies between them. The policy of the law, which renders either of them incompetent to testify against the other is discussed in Byrd v. State, 57 Miss. 243, 34 Am. Rep. 440. George O. J., in that ease quotes with approval Greenleaf on Evidence, as follows: “It is essential to the happiness
Affirmed.