Court Opinion

ID: 3649504
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:04:36.426335+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:12:14.760345
License: Public Domain

There was a judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appealed.
The facts appear in the opinion of Associate Justice Furches.
One Benjamin Johnson had an action of ejectment against defendant's intestate during his lifetime, and plaintiff alleges that he was summoned as a witness by the Sheriff of Harnett County for the defendant in that action, and attended court as such for a number of terms; that he filed his witness tickets in the clerk's office; that the courthouse has since been burned and his tickets destroyed by fire.
Plaintiff was allowed to testify, under the objection of defendant, that he attended court as a witness, and the number of days he so attended. Defendant's objection was overruled, and he excepted. This is the only point in the case.
The objection is put, under section 590 of The Code, as a transaction with the deceased. This section has given rise to a great many questions, it being an entire departure from the common-law rule. But this Court, soon after its enactment, in construing the proviso, which prohibited parties in interest from testifying as to "communications and transactions" with deceased persons, gave as a reason for this exception to the general rule that all persons might be witnesses in their own behalf, and placed it upon the ground that the only person who could contradict such testimony was dead. Hallyburtonv. Dobson, 65 N.C. 88. But they did not extend the exception so far as to exclude an interested witness, because the deceased, if living, might contradict what he swore. To give it this broad construction would exclude every interested witness and destroy  (270) the general rule, and in effect invalidate the statute. Isenhourv. Isenhour, 64 N.C. 640.
Applying the rules laid down in these cases, it would seem that this evidence was competent. It does not seem to be a transaction or communication between plaintiff and defendant's intestate; but it is certainly not such a transaction or communication as the intestate alone had knowledge of and could have contradicted.
It was held by this Court, in Gray v. Cooper, 65 N.C. 183, that while the plaintiff could not testify as to the contract of hiring his slaves to the defendant's intestate he might testify that defendant's intestate had them in his possession during the years 1862 and 1863, as this was a matter that might be contradicted by others.
In March v. Verble, 79 N.C. 19, it was held that while the plaintiff could not testify as to the contract with defendant's intestate he might testify that he had owned the "bull" and that it was the only one of the kind he had owned.
In Cowan v. Layburn, 116 N.C. 526, it was held that plaintiff was competent to prove that she carried provisions to defendant's intestate *Page 160 
while she was sick; that this was not a transaction between plaintiff and defendant's intestate that fell under the exception in section 590.
The only case cited and relied on by defendant's counsel was Kirk v.Barnhard, 74 N.C. 653. There is no discussion in that case of the point decided, and we cannot give it the construction contended for by defendant. To do so would be to put it out of harmony with too many decisions of this Court.
As we are instructed by the authorities cited, the judgment of the court below must be
Affirmed.
Cited: Cheatham v. Bobbitt, post, 347; Moore v. Palmer, 132 N.C. 976;Davidson v. Barden, 139 N.C. in re Bowling, 150 N.C. 510.
(271)