Court Opinion

ID: 6503995
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:16:24.2135+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:41.155362
License: Public Domain

DARGAN, J.
If a subscribing witness to a written instrument become afterwards interested, he is incompetent to testify in support of his own interest; and if his interest is acquired, without the agency or fault of the party who wishes to establish the execution of the instrument, he may resort to other evidence, than the testimony of the subscribing witness. Greenl. Ev. 607; Howel v. Stevenson, 15 Com. Law Rep. 516; Cowen & Hill’s notes to Phil. Ev. vol. 3, note 894.
It cannot be necessary that a party should call a witness who is incompetent to testify, nor be at the expense of having him subpmnaed. If the opposite parly wishes to examine him against his interest it is his duty to have him subpoenaed, but it would answer no purpose to compel the party to produce the witness when he has not the legal right to examine him. If therefore, the witness to the bill of sale, had become interested subsequent to its execution, the defendant who desired to prove its execution, should have been permitted to do so, by calling witnesses to prove the hand writing, and he Avas not bound to offer first the subscribing witness, to ascertain Avhether the plaintiff would object to him or not.
The suit Avas brought against the executors of John Robertson, the Avitness to the bill of sale was his son, and a legatee uarder his will, and we think it very clear, that lae was prima fade incompetent to testify in behalf of the executors, for, whether he Avas a specific, a pecuniary, or a residuary legatee, he has an interest in creating a fund for the payment of the debts, that his legacy may be received Avithout abatement. It is true, that under some circumstances, a legatee under a Avill might not be incompetent or interested; for instance, if the suit was by the executors to recover a debt due the estate, and there Avere no debts outstanding against the «sí-ate, a legatee Avho was entitled, under the will, to a speci*108fic chattel, and whose interest could not be affected by the result of the suit, might be a competent witness for the executor. ' But when the suit is for a sum of money against the executors, that the witness is a legatee under the will, raises the presumption of interest, and renders him incompetent.
But it is contended, that his interest could not be made to appear without the production of the will itself. This we do not understand to be the. rule. Testimony to prove or disprove a witness to be interested is always addressed to1 the court, and, although the interest of a witness may be made to appear by a written instrument, I do not understand that it is indispensably necessary to produce the written instrument, but his interest may be shown either by his own testimony on voir dire, or by any other person who can testify to his interest, and who knows that he is to be benefitted or injured by the result of the suit. Indeed it would often lead to great injustice if a party was bound to produce the highest evidence of the interest of the witness. The deed or instrument in writing may not be in the power of the party objecting to the competency of the witness, or he may not have known that he would be offered, and to hold that the instrument creating his interest must be produced, would often compel parties to submit to illegal proof. 5 Con. Rep. 258; 7 Greenl. 51; 1 Gill. & John. 366.
But it is said, that the bill of sale, which the defendant was endeavoring to prove, was irrelevant, and therefore, that there was no error in rejecting it. It must be borne in mind that the court rejected the evidence offered to its execution, and no question was raised in the court below, whether it was relevant testimony or not. As the party was precluded from offering the bill of sale as evidence, by the ruling of the court, in rejecting the testimony introduced to prove its execution, no question in reference to its relevancy, was decided by the court below, and if we were to hold that the error committed could be cured, by deciding in this court another question that was not raised in the court below we might do the plaintiff in error great injustice. The correct rule, we think, is this, when an error is shown to exist, the presumption is, that the party complaining has been injured by it, and we must reverse the judgment, unless it satisfactorily appears that no in*109jury could have resulted from it. The court erred in rejecting the testimony offered to prove the execution of the bill of sale, and we cannot presume that it would not have been relevant proof, if it had been permitted to be offered to the jury, but on the contrary, we must presume, that the defendant could have shown it to be relevant, had he been permitted to prove its execution.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.