Court Opinion

ID: 7928286
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:01:44.951908+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:16.232548
License: Public Domain

Cooley, Gii. J:
We are not satisfied that any error was committed on the trial of this cause.
*110The fact that the administrator did not put himself upon the stand on the hearing before the commissioners, to contradict the testimony of the claimants, is not one from which inferences can safely be drawn against the estate. Many things might influence the administrator in abstaining from being sworn. It would usually be reason sufficient that the 'claimant’s case, as it then stood, was so weak that the commissioners must reject his claim; and that may have been the administrator’s opinion in this case. The result demonstrated that his testimony would have been of no importance, .and 'we may as fairly attribute his abstaining from taking the stand to a conviction that it was unnecessary as to any •other cause. Parties are usually quite excusable in abstaining from giving their own evidence if they deem it not absolutely essential, because interest always does an'd must subject it to more or less suspicion. And while this fact should be of slight weight when one sues in a representative character, we cannot say that one may not with propriety defer to it where ho thinks he can do so without prejudice to the interests he represents.
The latitude of examination that was allowed in the case of Mrs. Bryan and Mr. Russell'was fairly, we think, within the discretion of the court. The question in dispute was, whether the intestate had borrowed the sums, represented by the Wo notes, just before his death, or whether, on the other hand, one of the notes represented a sum which was afterwards included in the other. There was no possible method of meeting the complainant’s case, if it was untrue, except by the circumstances which would tend to show that the intestate received no such money at about the time alleged, and others of similar nature. It is difficult to draw any exact lines in such cases; the parties ought to be allowed large liberty in bringing forward circumstances which could fairly throw light upon the controversy; especially as the estate is placed at great disadvantage in not having the explanations of the intestate as guides in developing the facts. We do not think there was any abuse of discretion in this case.
*111Nor was there error in ruling out the questions put to the plaintiff concerning his continuous possession of the disputed note, and the amount of money he had at the dates of the two notes respectively. The facts it was sought to bring out were not material, and the purpose of the questions could only have been to support evidence the plaintiff had already given by proving other consistent facts. Such evidence coming from other persons might have had some such tendency; but when the question is whether one fact to which a witness testifies is correct, it can receive no support whatever from his swearing to another which, though consistent with the first, must, like that, rest entirely upon his own statement.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
The other Justices concurred.