177 A. 748 | Pa. | 1935
At the audit of the account of the executors, a claim against the testator on an alleged oral guaranty of certain bonds was presented by the receiver of a national bank. To prove the contract, the receiver offered the testimony of two witnesses. The evidence of one of them was excluded on the ground that he was a stockholder of the closed bank and, as a surviving party, incompetent under the Evidence Act: May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, section 5 (e), 28 P. S., section 322. The learned auditing judge found that, notwithstanding the receivership and payment of his 100% assessment as shareholder, and the fact that the receiver estimated the liabilities would exceed the assets, the witness had a pecuniary interest directly affected by the allowance of the claim: Foster v. Collner,
The other witness gave testimony which, if believed, was sufficient to show that decedent's promise was not within the prohibition of the statute of frauds (Kirby v. Kirby,
Decree affirmed at appellant's costs.