Court Opinion

ID: 9834337
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 23:29:42.355366+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:13.877768
License: Public Domain

HODGES, J.
The appellee, D. C. Spears, sued J. Q. O’Connor, administrator of the estate of W. W. Baker, deceased, to establish a claim against the estate for the sum of $1,-798.24. Previous to the suit the claim had been properly presented to the administrator for allowance, and by him refused. The claim was founded upon a written statement of an account, itemizing in detail what appears to be a board bill due from W. W. Baker to the appellee, D. C. Spears. It concludes with the words: “Balance due D. C. Spears October 21, 1926, $1768.24,” and is signed “W. W. Baker.” In addition to the written, account above referred to, appellee claimed the sum of $30 due for the care of the decedent from October 21, 1926, to the date of his death. As a defense in the court below, the appellant relied on a plea of non factum and a general denial. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and a judgment rendered establishing the claim for the full amount.
The evidence shows that W. W. Baker, the decedent, was the father-in-law of the appel-lee, Spears; that for some time prior to his death Baker had boarded with Spears; that on the date the statement above referred to was signed they had a settlement, and this instrument was intended to be a final statement of the amount then due Spears.
Among the errors assigned in this appeal is the action of the court in admitting the following testimony from D. C. Spears: “I live at Petty in Lamar County, Texas. My wife’s name was Nettie Belle Baker before she married. She is a daughter of W. W. Baker, deceased. We were married in 1901. W. W. Baker died at my place on November 12, 1926. He had been ill about thirty days. The contract shown me came from me:’ I made out that contract, and it is in my handwriting. I know the signature of the party to that instrument, and was present when it was signed and saw it signed. Mr. W. W. Baker signed it on October 21, 1926. He signed it in my office in my shop, and it was then put in my desk and staid there until after he was dead. This was the same year of Mr. Baker’s death, and he died on November 12.”
The bill of exceptions shows that the testimony was objected to upon the ground that the witness was allowed to testify to a transaction between him and the decedent, contrary to the provisions of article 3716 of the Revised Civil Statutes. In a qualification to that and other bills presenting substantially the same objections, the court states, in substance, that the testimony was admitted without objection, and that a great portion of the testimony from Spears, relative to the execution of the instrument sued on, and the consideration upon which it was based, was brought out by the appellant’s attorney on cross-examination.
Appellant also assigns as error the admission of the following testimony from Mrs. Spears, the wife of the appellee: “I am the wife of D. C. Spears, and a daughter of W. W. Baker. I know his hand-writing. The name signed to the instrument which your hand me is the signature of W. W. Baker.”
The objection to that testimony is based upon the fact that the witness was in effect a party'to the suit, and that the testimony elicited was prohibited by article 3716. The *420assignment will be overruled. Tbe witness was not testifying to a transaction with tbe decedent. Sbe was merely giving ber opinion of tbe genuineness of tbe signature. Martin et al. v. McAdams et al., 87 Tex. 225, 27 S. W. 255.
There was no error in admitting tbe written statement of tbe account signed by Baber after bis signature bad been properly proven. There were other witnesses besides tbe ap-pellee and bis wife who testified to tbe genuineness of that signature.
Tbe judgment will be affirmed.