By the Court.
Lumpkin, J.delivering the opinion.
[1.] Is an administrator a competent witness to prove the failure of consideration of a draft drawn by his intestate, he having no personal interest in the case, and the estate in his hands being sufficient to pay the debt and cost, if recovered ?
It is fully settled, that an interest in the event of the suit, however small, will render a witness incompetent. And that where a party to an action has no interest in the question in dispute, but is suing as a mere trustee for another person, he will, nevertheless, in general, be incompetent on the ground of liability to costs. (See 1 Phil. on Ev. 46, 47, and notes.)
A prochein ami or guardian suing for an infant, is incompetent on this ground. Nor is it any sufficient reply that the estate is liable over to reimburse the trustee, provided he is individually liable for cost in the first instance. (Id.)
Upon these plain elementary principles of evidence, the witness should have been excluded.
[2.] But the ground is taken in the bill of exceptions, that Ur. Shannon having been a competent witness for Mays at the time the suit was brought, he could not, by administering on the estate of Mays, deprive it of the benefit of his testimony.
The case of Barlow vs. Vowell, (Skinner 586,) was sup*568posed to have decided that where a person, makes himself a party in interest, after a plaintiff or defendant has an interest in his testimony, he may not, by his own act, deprive either party ©f thg benefit of. his evidence. But although the decision of Lord No,it in that case may have been right, no such, broad proposition is deducible from it as that first, stated and which isf claimed here. '
The incompetenoy of a witness on account of interest must, depend upon the nature of the interest, and not upon the-time when it was acquired. The voire dire is, whether he is. interested at the time of his examination? If so, he is incompetent, and it is no answer to the question to show that he has become interested only since the commencement of' the action, or since the time of his becoming acquainted with, the fact which he is called to prove. (1 Phil, on Ev. 150, 151.) The case of Barlow vs. Vowell was determined on. the* ground of fraud.