Court Opinion

ID: 4938185
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:21:16.93489+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:46.383138
License: Public Domain

Savage, C. J.
Action on the case for the alleged negligence of the defendant in the operation of an automobile whereby the plaintiff’s intestate was run against, thrown down, and otherwise so injured that he subsequently died, after a long period of conscious suffering. At the trial, against the objection of the plaintiff, the defendant and his wife were permitted to testify as to the circumstances of the accident, and the case comes up on the plaintiff’s exceptions to the admission of that testimony.
We think the exceptions must be sustained. At common law, parties were not competent witnesses in their own suits. In this State, by statute, parties in general may be witnesses in their own behalf, but not when at the time of the trial, “the party prosecuting, or the party defending, or any one of them, is an executor or an administrator.” R. S., Chap 84, Sec. 112. An exception to the rule of exclusion exists when “the representative party is nominal only. Same section. This exception does not apply in this case. This suit, like ordinary suits by executors or administrators, is brought for the benefit of the estate of the deceased.
The statute makes no distinction between actions of contract and actions of tort. Nor do we think there is any distinction in reason. The statutory policy that living-parties should not be permitted to tell their stories when the lips of adverse parties are sealed by death applies with equal force to torts and contracts. In torts, as in contracts, all the parties ordinarily are cognizant of the circumstances attending the tort. And if by reason of death some of them cannot *512testify, the others should not. That is the policy of the statute. And this policy has been enforced many times by the court. Farnham v. Virgin, 52 Maine, 576; Kelton v. Hill, 59 Maine, 259; Brooks v. Goss, 61 Maine, 307; McLean v. Weeks, 65 Maine, 411; Sherman v. Hall, 89 Maine, 411. Nor is the defendant’s wife a competent witness for him. Berry v. Stevens, 69 Maine, 290; Hubbard v. Johnson, 77 Maine, 139.

Exceptions sustained.