Court Opinion

ID: 6505035
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:17:21.542971+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:42.715557
License: Public Domain

GIBBONS, J.
The question presented by the bill of exceptions is, whether the witness, Eoane, after he had been *542released by the plaintiffs from liability to them on account of his debt, was a competent witness to prove the facts alleged in the declaration.
It is objected, that he is not competent, in the first place, on the ground of interest. But we are not able to perceive any valid objection on this ground. His original relation to the parties to this suit was that of á debtor owing two creditors. He gives money or property into the hands of one, to pay himself first, and the balance to hand over to the other. The latter creditor has a clear right of action, in his own name, against the former, to recover this balance as soon as it is ascertained. It is a legal right, growing out of the acts of the debtor, and which enures to the benefit of the latter creditor by operation of law. It is not a right growing out of the assignment of a chose in action by the debtor, but one created and springing up from certain acts done by the debtor, and which the creditor can enforce in his own name. Hitchcock et al. v. Lukens & Son, 8 Por. 333.
In this position of the parties, however, the debtor would not be competent to establish the facts out of which the right arises, without a release from the debt which this balance was to extinguish. But, with this release, we can see no interest that he has in the result of the suit that should render him incompetent. He certainly has none in favor of the plaintiffs, because the debt which this balance would go to extinguish, is already extinguished so far as he is concerned. If he has any interest left, after receiving this release from the plaintiffs, it is that they should not recover, in order that he himself might recover this balance after the plaintiffs had failed. But in this view of the case, he would be swearing ■ against his own interest, and this could not render him incompetent when offered by the plaintiffs.
But it is objected, in the second place, that Roane was incompetent on the ground of public policy. This objection would be good, if it was a chose in action that he had assigned to the plaintiffs, and he then was offered to support it by his own oath. But this case is distinguishable from that class of cases, where a witness is excluded from public policy. See Houston v. Prewitt, 8 Ala. 846, and Clifton v. Sharpe, use, &c., 15 Ala. 618. We have already stated, that this was *543not an assignment of a chose in action by Roane to the plaintiffs, but a payment of money by him to the defendant, for the use of the plaintiffs ; and we are not aware of any principle of public policy that would render him incompetent to testify as to the fact of such payment, if his interest in the fund is extinguished. We therefore think the court below ruled the law correctly, in permitting the witness to testify; the judgment is, consequently, affirmed.