So far as it is material’ here, Section 4604 of the Code provides that no party to an action may, in certain actions,be a witness “in regard to any personal transaction or communication between such witness and a person at the commencement of such examination deceased.” She is a party to one of these actions. See Burton v. Baldwin, 61 Iowa 283. She was permitted to testify that she was married to E. B. Worthington, was not divorced from him, and remained his wife until he died. It has been held that the statute prohibits proving an express agreement for compensation. Herring v. Herring, 94 Iowa 56, at 59; Cowan v. Musgrave, 73 Iowa 384; Sauer v. Nehls, 121 Iowa 184, at 186. To the same effect is Stevens v. Witter, 88 Iowa 636; Boeck v. Milke, 141 Iowa 713; Sheldon v. Thornburg, 153 Iowa 622; Ballinger v. Connable, 100 Iowa 121, at 130. Code Section 3139 provides that marriage is a civil contract. Gilman v. Sheets, 78 Iowa 499, at 501, 502, intimates that some methods of proving marriage might be incompetent under the statute. We think that, aside from this intimation in the Sheets case, the precise point has never been under consideration in this jurisdiction. But it is well settled elsewhere. In Hopkins v. Bowers, 111 N. C. 175 (16 S. E. 1), the court said:
*580 “If marriage is not a personal transaction between the contracting parties, what is it?”
In that, case, under a statute in effect like our own, it is held the trial court properly ruled out evidence sought to be elicited of one Ann Boothe, to show marriage between her and Nash Boothe, and said:
“She was a party to the action and interested in the result, for both plaintiffs claim under Nash Boothe. * * * We are unable to accept the view of the defendant’s counsel that it [marriage] is solely the act of the officiating minister or Justice of the Peace.”
To the same effect is Berger v. Kirby, 105 Tex. 611 (153 S. W. 1130); Bowman v. Little, 101 Md. 273 (61 Atl. 223); Crane v. Stafford, 217 Ill. 21 (75 N. E. 424); and Weatherall v. Weatherall, 56 Wash. 344 (105 Pac. 822, 825). Under a statute provision that no person shall testify for himself concerning any transactions with a decedent in an action by a widow for the allotment of dower in her deceased husband’s lands, she is incompetent to testify to the marriage. Bartee v. Edmunds, (Ky.) 96 S. W. 535. To the same effect are Imboden v. St. Louis U. T. Co., 111 Mo. App. 220 (86 S. W. 263); Matter of Brush, 25 App. Div. 610 (49 N. Y. Supp. 803); Shorten v. Judd, 56 Kans. 43. One claiming a part of a decedent’s estate, on the ground she was decedent’s common-law wife, is incompetent to testify on that question. Schwingle v. Keifer, 105 Tex. 609 (153 S. W. 1132). In Edelstein v. Brown, 100 Tex. 403 (100 S. W. 129), in an action by the heirs of a woman against her reputed husband for their share of the community property, the court held that the alleged husband was incompetent to testify that he had never been married to decedent.
We hold this testimony was not permissible, under the statute.
II. But appellee urges that no proper objection was made, and appellant has so waived his right to complain.
“A general objection to the competency of a witness (the reference being, in fact, to his testimony) made at the close of his evidence, comes too late.”
Davis v. Hall, 128 Iowa 647, 648, relied on by appellee, is against, rather than for, appellee. In it is said:
“The objection to the competency of J. J. Hall to testify to the transaction with his wife was not raised when he was sworn, or when he was asked to relate the facts and circumstances as to the making of the deed to his wife, but was put forward for the first time after the witness had testified to his version of the transaction. This, we think, was too late, and the court was justified in treating the objection as waived.”
That the ajtpellant, in cross-examining, repeatedly brought out statements that the parties were married, is no answer. If it was error to receive the testimony of marriage, in chief, this error was not waived because, in an attempt to shake this testimony, the witness repeated the objectionable statement made in the examination in chief, over apt objection.
We are firmly persuaded that, if this testimony was objectionable because of the provisions of Section 4604 of the Code, that objection to it was made, and was not waived.