20 Mo. App. 389 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
Counsel have discussed on this appeal various questions; but we shall consider such of
I. Was the husband a competent witness in this action % He was joined merely as a formal party under the statute. He claims no interest in the subject-matter of litigation. The wife is the real party in interest, and the recovery sought was to enure to her sole benefit. That, at common law, the husband could not testify under such circumstances, is not controverted. If competent, it must be by reason of some enabling legislative act. The only innovation, in this respect, upon the common law rule, is found in section 4014, Revised Statutes of 1879, which is as follows: “ * * * no married man shall be disqualified as a witness in any such civil suit or proceeding prosecuted in the name of, or against his wife, whether he be joined with her or not as a party, when such suit, or proceeding, is based upon, grows out of, or is connected with, any matter of business, or business transaction, where the transaction, or business, was had with, or was conducted by, such married man, as the agent of his wife.”
There does not appear to have been any ruling by the supreme court directly on this clause of said section of the statute, presumably because of the fact that the enactment^ is of comparatively recent date. But that portion of the section, immediately preceding, enlarging the qualification of married women as witnesses, has frequently been before the supreme court. The two qualifying clauses are so similar in their provisions as to make the ruling on the one quite applicable-to the other. It is among the recognized canons for the interpretation of statutes that “the occasion and necessity <of the law, the mischief felt, and the object and remedy in view, are to be considered.” In the Matter of Bominos' Estate, 83 Mo. 441.
Under the clause qualifying the wife to testify in behalf of the husband, it is held that “her competency - depends solely upon the fact that the matter about which she is called to testify was conducted by her as
After the enlargement to this extent of the privilege of the wife as a witness, it became a recognized and felt injustice and inequality not to place the husband on the same footing, where the wife’s interests were involved in a matter conducted by him as her agent. So, in the revision, the legislature added the clause respecting the qualification of the husband. The obvious purpose was to place them upon an equality in the given particular. If anything, the legislature was more guarded in the language employed touching the husband’s qualification. It was supposed by the legislature, that in view of the fact that the wife and husband, when acting for each other in transacting and conducting business for the other, from their immediate connection therewith, would acquire and possess a special information essential to the protection of the rights of the principal, and, therefore, they should be permitted to speak as to such fact, when involved as the basis of the controversy, as if they were the parties in interest.
But it must never be forgotten, in the application of this statute, that it is not an unliniited qualification. The suit itself must be based upon, grow out of, or be connected with, the particular business transaction had with or conducted by the husband, as agent of the wife. For instance, had he made any contract touching the purchase of the goods, or the sale of them, as the agent of his wife, and a suit had come of this transaction, he would be a competent witness to testify concerning the contract, or transaction. Had he rented the storehouse in which this business was conducted, and a suit had grown out of the transaction, he would be a competent witness for the wife. So as to any other contract, or business transaction, made and conducted by him as her agent. This, we think, is the obvious purport and reasonable limit of the statute. Hoerle v. Kreihn, 65 Mo. 202.
To give the statute such enlarged construction is to-sweep away, practically, the limitations placed upon the qualification by the statute, and to make the husband an unqualified witness for the wife' whenever any question arises as to her ownership of property, where he chances-to be her agent in managing it, no matter if the controversy does not involve any business transaction conducted by him as such agent.
The wrong committed in this case was against the property of the wife, and was wholly independent of Ms agency. I must, therefore, hold that the husband was-an incompetent witness in this suit, and the court erred in so admitting Mm.
II. The evidence in this case shows that the wife-came by the money, with which the goods in question, were purchased, by inheritance, in the state of Kentucky, and while she was domiciled there with her husband. The question is raised in this controversy, as to the law by which the relation of the husband to this property is to be-governed. Unquestionably the law of the state of Kentucky. What was the law of that state at the- time the property was acquired ? No proof was offered by the plaintiff on this issue. The court at the trial assumed, in the absence of such proof, that the statute law of
On common law questions the presumption is, that the common law of another state is the same as that of our own state. Wilson v. Cockrell, 8 Mo. 9; Houghtailing v. Ball, 19 Mo. 86.
In respect of statutes, it is a question of fact as to what is the statute law of a foreign state, to be proved by the 'party seeking protection under it, as any other fact in the case. Charlotte v. Chouteau, 25 Mo. 465; Meyer v. McCabe, 73 Mo. 241. In the absence of such proof the court will presume that the common law was in force in the state of Kentucky, and that the property vested in accordance with its rules. Meyers v. McCabe, supra.
It is only in respect of those states which were never subject to the common law’that, in the absence of proof as to the lex loci contractus, the court will apply the statute laws of the forum. Flato v. Mulhall, supra; Sloan v. Torrey, 78 Mo. 625.
There can be no’’ admissible question, under the proof disclosed by this record, but that the property inherited by the wife in Kentucky, under the common law, became the property of the husband, and was subject to his debts, richouler Domes. Rel., sects. 80, 82, 89; Woodford v. Stephens, 51 Mo. 443; Kidwell v. Kirkpatrick, 70 Mo. 216; Sloan v. Torrey, supra.
The bringing of this money to Missouri, and investing it in the goods in question in the name of the wife, did not have the effect to convert it into the separate estate of the wife, as against the husband’s creditors. Meyers v. McCabe, Woodford v. Stephens, and Sloan v. Torrey, supra.
The court, therefore, erred in not sustaining defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiffs’ evidence, and in ref using
III. In one of the instructions given on behalf of the plaintiffs, the jury were authorized to assess, as an item of damages, the rental value of the storehouse in which the goods were at the time of the seizure, and which was retained by the sheriff for storage. There was no such issue tendered by the petition, and if there had been there was not one word of evidence as to the rental value of the store. This was manifest error. No proof can be admitted of a fact not within the allegations of the petition, and no issue should be submitted to the finding of the jury, about which there is no proof. Benson Railroad Co., 78 Mo. 504; Lester v. Railroad Co., 60 Mo. 268-9.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed, and the cause remanded. It is accordingly so ordered.