Court Opinion

ID: 7361737
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:04:41.920806+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:39.720702
License: Public Domain

ANDERSON, J.
Section 1794 of the Code of 1.896 was intended to remove the ban of incompetency placed by the common law against parties of interest as witnesses, “except that no person having a pecuniary interest in the result of the suit or proceeding shall be allowed to testify against the party to whom his interest is opposed as to any transaction with or statement by the deceased person whose -estate is interested in the result or proceedings.” “The policy of the exception is the exclusion of parties in interest from testifying to transactions with or statements by a. deceased person, when ihe purpose of the evidence is to diminish the rights of the deceased or those claiming in succession to- him. * * If death has sealed the lips of one party, the law intends, as to this species of evidence, to seal the lips of the living.” — Boykin v. Smith, 65 Ala. 294. Justice Brickeiu, in discussing the exception in the case of Louis v. Easton, 50 Ala. 470, said : “The exception must embrace every case in which it is sought to fasten on an estate a liability by the testimony of the party with whom that liability is- created.” Can it be doubted for a moment that the testimony of the plaintiff, Dr. Ritts, as to¡ the number of visits he made deceased and what lie- did to relieve him, did not tend to fasten a liability upon the estate of the deceased and to diminish the same, in view of the fact that the testimony of other witnesses as to *361the value of plaintiff’s services is hypothesized upon the number of visits and character of "the treatment? We think not.
The Texas court of Civil Appeals, in discussing a statute similar to ours in the case of Garwood v. Schlichenmaier, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 176, 60 S. W. 573, says : “We think the following portion of the testimony quoted was, under article 2302, Savles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1897, inadmissible: T treated him for said disease from February 22 to April 25, 1899. I treated him nearly every day during said period, sometimes every tivo or" three "days. I wrote prescriptions for him frequently, and gave him medicine in my office.’ We cannot agree with" appellee in his contention that this testimony is not ‘as to any transaction with the intestate within the meaning of the statute referred to.’ Webster defines ‘transaction’ as follows: ‘(1) The doing or performing of any business; management of any affairs; performance. "(2) That which is done; an affair; as the transaction of the exchange.’ It is defined in Anderson’s Dictionary of Law to be ‘Whatever may be done by one person which affects another’s rights, and out of which a cause of action may arise.’ The doing or performing of the business shown by the testimony quoted was by Garwood with the deceased, and was clearly such transaction as the witness was inhibited from testifying to under the statute, under which it has been held a physician ivas incompetent to prove his own services as such to the deceased against the. representative. — Abbott’s Trial Ev. (2d Ed.) 23. If, however, the performance of the services had been proved aliunde, when so proved, it seems, plaintiff could have testified as to the value. — Morrisette v. Wood, 123 Ala. 384, 26 South. 307, 82 Am. St. Rep. 127.”
The supreme court of New York, in the case of Ross v. Ross, 6 Hun. 182, which has been approvingly cited several times by said court, in passing upon the evidence of the plaintiff, who was a physician, and son of the deceased, and who was asked in the court below “whether he treated his father professionally within the next six years preceding his death,” said: “But it is very clear that the inquiry made related to a personal transaction *362between the witness and. the deceased testator, upon which he was not competent to give evidence, according to the section of the code just referred to. If the evidence could have been taken, the direct tendency of it would have been to prove that he performed service about his father’s person, from which the law might imply a promise on the part of the latter to pay, while, if he were living, his own evidence might disprove both of such facts. The policy of section 399 is to prevent the estates of deceased persons from being rendered liable by evidence of that description, proceeding from the surviving party to such transaction. Where that has been had personally with the deceased, the liability of the estate on account of it, if established at all, must be shown by the evidence of persons who are not parties asserting and endeavoring to sustain the claim made. The rule is a very salutary and proper one, and it has been rigidly adhered to in the administration of the laws, and under it the question was properly overruled.”
The case of Morrissett v. Wood, 123 Ala. 384, 26 South 307, 82 Am. St. Rep. 127, is no authority to sustain the ' evidence of the plaintiff in the case at bar. That case simply holds that Wood was not incompetent to testify that deceased had a certain disease and the cause of his death, but nowhere decides that Wood could have testified that he visited and treated him and said case is the case referred to in the Texas case, supra. Nor does the case of Wood v. Brewer, 73 Ala. 259, support the admission of plaintiff’s evidence in the case at bar, and is differentiated therefrom by the discussion of Stone, C. J., in the case of Miller v. Cannon, 84 Ala. 59,4 South. 204. Counsel for appellee places great confidence in the case of Borum v. Bell, 132 Ala. 85, 31 South. 454, as an authority in support of the admissibility of this evidence. In that case the witness simply testified that “her grandparent® came to her house, and stayed there continuously until July, 1897.” There was nothing in the evidence to show a transaction from which the law would imply a charge upon the estate of the grandparents. There was nothing to show that they were there as boarders, and it might be .inferred that they were invited guests'.
In the case at bar the'evidence of plaintiff as to the *363number of professional visits made by him and what he did for the deceased was a transaction that would fasten a liability upon the estate of the decedent and comes within the exception.
It is true that there is much evidence tending to establish plaintiff’s claim, independent of his own, and showing that he had treated deceased faithfully and skillfully for a number of months; but we cannot hold that it affirmatively appears that the admission of his evidence was error without injury. His ivas the only evidence fixing the number of visits, and while the evidence of other witnesses as to the value of services was partially based on facts independent of plaintiff’s testimony, yet the number of visits were considered in estimating the value of plaintiff’s services, which was not known to the witness whose evidence was partially hypothesized upon the number of visits testified to by the plaintiff. The trial court erred in not sustaining the defendant’s objections to questions to the plaintiff as to visits to deceased, what he did for him, and how he relieved his suffering.
The fact that the bill of exceptions does not contain all the evidence is no reason for not reversing' a cause upon the improper admissibility of the evidence. The case of Sanders v. Steen, 128 Ala. 633, 29 South. 586, and cases there cited, has reference to the giving of the affirmative charge, and has no application to this case.
• The defendant failed ro establish a predicate for the evidence of Drs. Duggar and Kimbrough as to the value of medical .services in Selma, as each of them admitted they did not know the customary charges in Selma and Dallas countv. — Jonas v. King, 81 Ala. 285, 1 South. 591.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Haralson, Dowdell, and Denson, JJ., concur.