The controlling question of fact litigated on the trial was: Did the plaintiff pledge the goods in controversy to the defendants, to secure payment of the balance of the judgment which remained unpaid after application of the pfo-ceeds of the execution sale? The only witnesses called by defendants, whose testimony tended to prove the affirmative of this question, were lawyers. These were Messrs. Williams, Dey, Friend and Ryan. The first was one of the attorneys of record in the case, but (as was stated in "argument and not *649denied) bis testimony was deemed • material to his clients, and the defense of the action on the trial was entrusted to another member of the bar, not theretofore concerned in the. case. Messrs. Dey and Friend were clerks in the office of defendants’ attorney during the transactions out of which the action arose, but were not attorneys in the case. Mr. Eyan was the attorney of Matzek, the partner of the plaintiff, retained to secure his exemptions out of the same stock of goods. Such being the profession of the witnesses, and their relations to the case, we are required to determine whether the com-ments on their testimony, which the learned circuit judge addressed to the jury, were justifiable and proper.
Eegarded in the mildest and most innocent aspect which the language employed will permit, the comments of the judge are a discourse on professional ethics a breach of which may or may not involve moral turpitude, and may or may not affect the credibility of the witness. As a general rule, no doubt, attorneys should not be witnesses for their clients. The sentiment of the profession is opposed .to it, and for very satisfactory reasons; yet cases may arise, and in practice often do arise, in which there would be a failure of justice should the attorney withhold his testimony. . In such a case it would be a vicious professional sentiment which would deprive the client of the benefit of his attorney’s testimony. The attorney must decide for himself whether he ought to become a witness. If he resolves the question in the affirmative, a nice sense of professional propriety will no doubt prompt him to do as Mr. "Williams did in the present case; that is, surrender tire management of the case to others. Of course, an attorney should not accept a retainer if he knows in advance that he will be a material witness for the party seeking to employ him. But a breach of professional ethics in this respect does not necessarily involve moral turpitude or affect the credibility of the attorney who thus becomes a witness for his client. In such case, as in all other cases, the jury may consider the re*650lations of the witness to the parties in determining the weight which should be given to the testimony. The court may properly so instruct the jury in any case, but the jury should not be instructed that the fact that an attorney testifies as a witness for his client necessarily impairs the credibility of the witness.
We do not say that the judge intended to instruct the jury that the credibility of Mr. Williams was necessarily impaired because he was an attorney of record in the case; yet we think the jury may have so understood him from the general tenor of his remarks on the subject. Considering the remarks of the judge as they affected or may have affected the testimony of the witnesses for the defendants other than Mr. Williams, they are still more objectionable. These witnesses were not attorneys in the case, and one of them, Mr. Ryan, had been retained by Mr. Matzek to secure his exemptions out of the stock in trade of Connolly & Matzek. ELis retainer, therefore, was hostile to the defendants, who had seized such stock. Yet the judge placed all of these witnesses on the same footing with Mr. Williams, and instructed the jury in the most general terms that “ the courts have always deprecated the fact of attorneys being witnesses in a case;” that it is regarded as unprofessional; and that if they do become witnesses they put themselves in the position of parties. Now, it may be that the court intended in the remarks two qualifications, neither of which is expressed, to wit: (1) That the case mentioned is one in which the witness is an attorney; and (2) that the witness is called to the stand by his client. But the jury might well have understood the remarks to apply without qualification to all lawyers alike, as the language imports. The jury would be the more likely to so understand the charge from the fact that the judge mentions the circumstance that “three of four attorneys have been witnesses in this case,” and does not discriminate between Mr. Williams and the others in his strictures upon them.
*651The effect of the charge was, wé -think, or at least might have been, to discredit and impeach witnesses' merely because they were lawyers. The remark addressed to the jury, “I do not know that any court has ever decided that a lawyer cannot tell the truth,” when considered in the light of the whole tenor and spirit of the judge’s discourse on the subject, would naturally tend to discredit the witnesses because of their profession. It seems scarcely necessary to say that any party to an action is entitled to the testimony of any person who is cognizant of facts material to his case, and when the party procures the testimony of a witness, such witness should not be discredited merely because he is engaged in some particular avocation, if it be a lawful one. Whether the witness be a mechanic, a merchant, a farmer, a lawyer or a clergyman, unless his credibility be impeached by some of the methods sanctioned by law, he is to be believed. The remarks of the judge, with proper qualifications and limitations, might very properly (if occasion called for them) have been addressed to the bar of his circuit, and, no doubt, would have been kindly received. But in this case they were addressed to the jury, and were not properly qualified and limited. Their direct tendency was to impeach all of the defendants’ witnesses for a cause not recognized by law as ground for discrediting a witness. In this respect, therefore, the charge was erroneous, and it is manifest that the error may have prejudiced the defendants.
2. The instruction that, “if there has not been a fair, square, deliberate waiver, understanding fully the pledging in the law of this property, then the plaintiff can recover,” is also objectionable. If the plaintiff pledged the goods in controversy to the defendants as security for the sum which might remain unpaid on their judgment after applying the proceeds of the execution sale, he was not entitled to recover. That is the issue. Tet, under the instruction, the jury may have found that the plaintiff did so pledge the goods, but, because he dealt *652at a disadvantage in that the defendants were his creditors and £ad seized the whole stock, and he could not get his exemptions out' of it without a lawsuit, they may also have found that he did not pledge the goods fairly, squarely or delib-eratekj. Or they may have found “a fair, square, deliberate . waiver,” but that the- plaintiff did not fully understand the law of pledge. The plaintiff was competent to make the alleged contract, was not under any duress, and is presumed to know the law applicable to his contract. The only question is, Did he pledge the goods to the defendants, as claimed by them? If he did not, he should recover; if he did, he has no cause of action.
Other questions were discussed by counsel, but it is not found necessary to determine them.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.