Selby ex rel. Williams v. Clayton

Martin,.!.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

In this case, an action of assumpsit was instituted in Anne Arundel county court, by John S. Selby and John M. Errickson, for the use of John W. Williams, to recover the value of certain goods sold and delivered by Selby and Errickson to the appellee.

The defendant pleaded non assumpsit, limitations, and set-off. Issues were joined by the plaintiffs upon the first two pleas, and the statute of limitations pleaded to the defendant’s set-off, in which the defendant joined issue.

At the trial of the- cause, John S. Selby, one of the legal plaintiffs, was offered as a witness to maintain the issues on the part of the plaintiffs, who, it was alleged, subsequent to the accruing of the account upon which the suit was brought, and of the assignment to John W. Williams, had obtained a final discharge as an insolvent debtor.

The defendant objected to the competency of this witness, on the ground of his being a party to the record. This objection the court sustained.

A release was then tendered from Selby to his trustee, of all His interest in his estate, as an insolvent debtor, and, in this condition of the case, the counsel for the plaintiffs again intro*243duced Selby, and prayed the court to receive him as a competent witness.

Upon this prayer the court was divided in opinion, and the witness rejected. And whether the court was right in thus ruling the proposed witness to be incompetent, is the only question raised for our examination by this bill of exceptions.

This question is free from all difficulty. In the case of Lizardi against Cohen, 3 Gill Rep., 431, the Court of Appeals held:

“That, as a general rule, a party to the record is not. a competent witness, for he is generally either interested in the object of .the suit, or responsible for costs.”

They said: —

“The form in which this rule of exclusion has been stated by the courts, presupposes that it is subject to exceptions, and when it appears that the party proposed to be examined, is not responsible for the costs of the suit and has no interest, in the subject of dispute, and is willing to be sworn, he is not within the operation of the general rule.”

What then was the predicament of the person proposed to be introduced as a witness in this cause?

Me was one of the legal plaintiffs upon the record, and, as such, unquestionably responsible for the costs of the suit.

The court, therefore, was correct in holding, that Selby was an incompetent witness. Not upon the mere objection that he was a party to the record, but that being one of the legal plaintiffs on the record, he was, under the circumstances of the case before them, liable for the costs, on the event of a recovery by the defendant, and disqualified from testifying, upon the ground of interest.

The counsel for the appellant is in error, in supposing that the legal plaintiffs on the record were absolved from all responsibility for the costs of the suit, by the provisions of the 10th section of the act of Assembly of 1801, ch. T4.

The security provided by that act, is cumulative in its character.

When the judgment is rendered for the defendant, the costs are always adjudged against the legal plaintiff or plaintiffs upon *244the record, and the successful party has the right either to proceed against the legal plaintiff for bis costs, or against the cestui que use, in the mode prescribed by the 10th section of the act of 1801, ch. 74.

For these reasons, we think the ruling of the court below, with respect to the incompetency of this witness, was correct, and the judgment is affirmed.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.