Reid v. Geoghehan

Pettit, President.

Tins was an action of assumpsit brought to December term 1833. The first count of the declaration stated the defendant to be the acceptor of a bill of exchange, dated Dublin, January 13th, 1826, at thirty-one days, for 36 pounds, drawn on defendant by Thomas Morrison, payable to his own order, and indorsed by him and by Anthony Geoghehan. The second count stated the defendant to be the drawer of a promissory note, dated Dublin, December 23d, 1825, at two months, for 27 pounds 13 shillings and 10 pence, in favour of Thomas Morrison, and by him indorsed.

The cause was tried before me on the defendant’s plea of non as-sumpsit, and non assumpsit infra sex annos, and the plaintiffs’ replication of assumpsit infra sex annos, and that the plaintiffs when said bill and note were drawn, and when this action accrued, &c. were beyond seas, &c. The pleadings were informal, but no suggestion on that head was made at the time of the trial. A verdict was rendered in favour of the plaintiffs. The case is now before the court, upon a rule obtained by the defendant to show cause why a new trial should not be granted, on certain points reserved.

1. The only witness offered on the part of the plaintiff to prove the handwriting of the defendant was Thomas Morrison. His testimony was objected to by the defendants’ counsel on the ground of interest. It was however received by the court, the point being reserved.

As drawer of the bill, and indorser of the note, he stood in the same relation to the defendant. If he was a witness in the one character, he was so in the other.

The general rules upon the subject of the interest, which exclude a person from giving testimony, are well setled. The proper application of them is not however always free from difficulty. It is now firmly established that the interest which disqualifies must be some legal, certain and immediate interest in the result of the cause or in the record, as an instrument of evidence. 2 Stark, on Ev. 744. It is not enough that there is a possible or even a probable interest. If there is any thing contingent in regard to it, it will not operate to the rejection of the witness. He can be pronounced incompetent only when the legal consequence of the verdict must necessarily better his situation, by securing an advantage or repelling a loss. He must either absolutely gain or absolutely lose by the event.

How then stands the indorser of a promissory note in relation to a suit by the indorsee against the drawer1? By the verdict against. *206the drawer, the plaintiff is in no manner restrained as to bis proceeding against the indorser. His remedy is complete against each, until satisfaction be actually obtained from one. He may abandon it as to either, and avail himself of it as to the other at his discretion. He is at entire liberty, after obtaining the verdict, to pursue or not to pursue the drawer, according to bis own pleasure. The existing liability of the indorser is not necessarily decreased by the verdict against the drawer. However strong therefore may be the feeling of the indorser, founded upon a probability as to the plaintiff’s course after a verdict, yet while the plaintiff is not committed by the verdict as to either drawer or indorser, the interest of the indorser cannot be said to be immediately certain and absolute. The witness was therefore properly received, the matter suggested merely affecting his credibility, but not reaching his competency.

This disposition of the question renders it unnecessary to determine whether the plaintiff here, in support of the testimony, could or could not, under the facts of the case, have resorted to the principle recognised in Ludlow v. The Union Insurance Company, 2 Serg. & Rawle 119, that a witness protected from an action by the statute of limitation, is competent.

The doctrine now asserted, was enforced by lord Kenyon in Dickenson v. Prentice, 4 Esp. N. P. Rep. 32, and has been recognised as sound law by Chilly, in his Treatise on Bills 399; and Siarkie in his work on Evidence, 4th part, 299, and may be taken to be the settled rule of the English courts. A dictum of chief justice Parsons to the contrary, in Rice v. Stearns, 3 Mass. Rep. 225, and a short note of the point as ruled the oilier way in Herrick a. Whitney, 15 Johns. Rep. 240, are entitled to respectful consideration. But where the principle of the law is clear, a conflict of opinion need not be permitted to embarrass the question. It is thought, too, that the supreme court of our own slate adopted the reason of the rule, when in Enters v. Peres, 2 Rawle's Rep. 279, they held that in an action on a bond accompanied by a mortgage, a subsequent mortgagee was a competent witness for the defendant.

%. Another point reserved arises upon the construction of the statute of limitation.

Our statute was passed on the 27th of March 1713, Purd. Dig. 581. In the limiting clause in the 1st section, actions upon the case generally are expressly embraced, while in the saving clause in the 5th section, relative to persons beyond the sea, &c. no mention is *207made of actions upon the case, except actions upon the case for words. Hence it was argued upon the trial, that in an action upon the case in assumpsit, such as this, the plaintiff, who had been beyond the sea, was not entitled to the benefit of the saving clause. This objection to the plaintiff’s recovery was however overruled.

It is to be remarked that the two sections above referred to are exact transcripts of provisions in the statute of 21 Jac. 1, c. 16, passed about ninety years before the date of our law. Upon the construction of the British act, the very question was raised in the case of Chandler v. Vilett, 2 Saund. Rep. 120, 22 Car. 2, when the court of king’s bench decided, “ that the action on the case on assumpsit was within the equity of the saving clause of the act, though it be not expressed ; for the intention of the statute was not to preserve a trivial action on the case for slanderous words, and not to save an action for a real duty.” Six years afterwards the same point was formally submitted to the notice of the court of common pleas in Crozier v. Tomlinson, 2 Mod. Rep. 71, when a similar judgment was pronounced, the court saying that “ when the scope of an act appears to be in a general sense, the law looks to the moaning, and it is to be extended to particular cases within Use same reason.” The construction thus authoritatively given to the statute of James, remains undisturbed in the English courts to the present time. Both of the cases above mentioned were ruled more than twenty years before the legislature of Pennsylvania adopted the act which is in force with us. It is to be assumed then, that in using the precise language of the British parliament, they also adopted the construction which had been solemnly given by well known adjudications of the proper courts. So uniform has been the understanding of the profession in Pennsylvania upon this subject, that in a period of more than a hundred years, it nowhere appears that the construction of the act has ever been brought into question in the supreme court. Where our own is in the same words as the English law, a fixed and received construction of the British statute is, upon a familiar and sound principle, made a part of our own statute law.

Rule discharged.