84 Va. 419 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first assignment of error is as to the action of the court in permitting James Barbour to testify in the case as a witness for the defendants to prove their plea of payment. The ground of this objection was that the said witness was interested in the result of the trial, and that the original obligee in the bond was dead, and incapable, therefore, of testifying. Our statute (Code 1873, ch. 172, § 21) provides that “ no witness shall be incompetent to testify because of interest.” The twenty-second section of said chapter, as amended by the act of April 2, 1877, (Acts 1877-78, ch. 256, § 1, p. 265,) provides that “and where one of the original parties to the contract or other transaction xohich is the subject of investigation is dead or insane or incompetent to testify by reason of infancy or other legal cause, the other party shall not be admitted to testify in his own favor, or in favor of any other party having an interest adverse to that of the party so incapable of testifying,” etc., and concludes with the- proviso: “ Provided, however, that no witness who would have been competent to testify as the law stood before the passage of this and the preceding section, shall be rendered incompetent thereby.” Tn this case the witness James Barbour had received the money necessary to pay off this bond from John S. Barbour, Jr., and had undertaken and bound himself to pay it off. He was introduced to prove the payment by himself in accordance with this agreement, and the ground of his interest in the result was that, if payment was not established, he would have to pay it himself. The plaintiff moved to exclude the testimony of this witness, because he was thus interested, and the original obligee of the bond (which was the original contract) was dead; the plaintiff insisting that the transaction under investigation was, under the plea of payment, the fact of payment. But the circuit court held that the statute no longer excluded any person by reason of interest, however great; and that the exception in the statute was
In the case of Grigsby v. Simpson, 28 Gratt., 848, which was ■■a suit upon a hond, under the plea of usury, the obligors were ■offered as witnesses to prove that the transaction was in fact had with the then plaintiff, who sued as assignee, and who lent the money for which the bond was given, the obligee being dead at the time of the trial, this court said: “The two witnesses offered in this case were two of the obligors. Moss, the obligee, was dead. The contract which was the subject of investigation in this case was the bond executed by these two witnesses with three other obligors, payable to Moss, the obligee; 'Moss was one of the ‘original parties to the contract,’ and he was dead. Certainly the case comes within the precise terms •of the statute, and upon its literal interpretation these witnesses must be excluded, because one of the original parties to the contract, made by and with them, (Moss, the obligee,) is ■dead. It was proposed to show by these witnesses (under the plea of usury) that the money was loaned by Simpson, the .-assignee, and not by Moss; that the transaction was in fact between the obligors and Simpson, and not between them and Moss, and that Simpson, the real party to that transaction, being then living, the obligors were competent witnesses, as they could be confronted with Simpson.” But Judge Christian, after citing the statutes of other States, and distinguishing •cases cited in those States, cited approvingly the case of Granger v. Bassett, 98 Mass., 468, as holding: “The test of incompetency is the cause of action in issue and on trial, not the fact to which the party is called to testify. If the cause of action was a matter transacted with a person who has deceased, the other party to that transaction, being also a party to suit, is not admitted as a witness at all, and cannot testify to any
In this case, the witness, James Barbour, was not a party to the contract, one of the original parties to which had died; he was not a party to the suit, and in no way is he included by the terms 'of the statute. That being so, his interest in the result of the trial, whatever that might be, did not affect his competency, as interest, under the law, does not disqualify, unless the witness is included by the terms of the statute. We are therefore of opinion that there was no error in the action of the circuit court in refusing to exclude him as a witness.
The next assignment of error which we will consider is the alleged error of the circuit, court in refusing to set aside the
Exception is taken to the instruction given by the court below as to the effect of the admissions of an assignor, before or after assignment, regarding a receipt referred to in the case in such light; but there is no error therein to the prejudice of the plaintiff, the receipt not being used to prove itself, but the fact of payment being directly and distinctly proved by the testimony of a competent witness, upon whose credibility it was the province of the jury to pass.
Upon the whole case, we are of opinion that there is no error in the said judgment, and the same is affirmed.
Judgment aeeirmed.