Walker v. Steele

Berkshire, J.

— The appellant, who was the plaintiff in the court below, instituted this action to set aside the transfer of a certain note and mortgage, and to recover the same as a part of the assets of the said estate.

The appellees John Steele and Franklin Steele, filed an answer, which they styled a disclaimer ,• Samuel Steele, Jr., who is an infant, and Franklin Steele, in his capacity as guardian of the said Samuel Steele, Jr., answered by a general denial.

There was a jury trial, and a verdict returned for the appellees.

*438The appellant filed a motion for a new trial, which the court overruled, and he excepted to the ruling of the court, and thereupon the court rendered judgment for the appellees.

The errors assigned are as follows:

1st. The circuit court erred in refusing to strike out the disclaimer of John Steele and Franklin Steele from the pleadings, and in overruling the motion to allow a reply to be filed thereto by the appellant.

2d. The circuit court erred in overruling the motion of the appellant for a new trial.

The grounds of the motion to strike out the disclaimer do not appear in the bill of exceptions or elsewhere in the record, therefore if the motion had been one which the court could have properly entertained we can not say that the court erred in overruling it. If no reasons were assigned, or if reasons were given, if they were insufficient, then the court committed no error in overruling the motion.

Counsel for the appellant discuss at some length the action of the court in overruling the appellant's motion for leave to file a demurrer to the disclaimer, but the errors assigned are not broad enough to raise the question.

It is assigned as error that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the disclaimer, but the record shows that no such demurrer was filed, the court having refused to allow the appellant to file a demurrer.

Under our code.of practice, which abolishes all distinctions between law and equity, our mode of procedure is much simplified, and the rules of pleading and practice under the old system in actions at law and suits in equity are very much modified.

Our present system does not recognize any such pleading as a disclaimer except in actions for partition and to quiet title. See section 1072, R. S. 1881.

The paper filed by John and Franklin Steele, and styled a disclaimer,” was nothing more than an answer, confessing the cause of action, and did not require a reply, therefore *439even had it been proper practice to file a reply the appellant was not injured because of the action of the court in refusing to allow him to reply thereto. See McAdams v. Lotton, 118 Ind. 1, and authorities cited.

The eleventh reason assigned for a new trial is that the court erred in permitting the appellee John Steele to testify as. a witness over the objection of the appellant.

We do not think that the court erred in allowing the witness to testify. Section 498, R. S. 1881, reads as follows:

“ In suits or proceedings in which an executor or administrator is a party, involving matters which occurred during the lifetime of the decedent, where a judgment or allowance maybe made or rendered for or against the estate represented by such executor or administrator, any person who is a necessary party to the issue or record whose interest is adverse to such estate shall not be a competent witness as to such matters against such estate.”

Under this statutory provision two facts must co-exist to render a person incompetent to testify as a witness against the executor or administrator; he or she must be a necessary party to the issue or record, and his or her interest must he adverse to the estate.

In the case under consideration neither of these facts existed. The note and mortgage in question had been assigned by the decedent to Samuel Steele, Jr., and this was an action to set aside the transfer and have the note and mortgage declared to be assets belonging to the estate.

John Steele was claiming no interest in the note or mortgage, and, under the facts alleged in the complaint, he held no interest therein.

The whole controversy was one between Samuel Steele, Jr., his guardian, Franklin Steele, and the appellant; the matters involved could have been fully, completely and finally determined as well without as with John Steele as a party to the action.

It is true the complaint charged a fraud and a conspiracy, *440and charged John Steéle with being a party thereto, but only in case of a destruction of the note was a judgment asked against him, and during the progress of the case, and before he was sworn and testified as a witness the note and mortgage were produced and placed in the custody of the court.

It further appears in the record that the decedent died testate, and that the appellee John Steele was one of the residuary legatees; therefore if the transfer of the note and mortgage was upheld by the judgment of the court, his interest in the estate would be greatly reduced; his interest, therefore, was not adverse to the estate, but in accord with it. “ The term ‘ party,’ as used in this statute, must be held to mean a party to the issue, and not merely a party to the record. If merely a, party to the record, it must appear that he had some interest in the result of the suit in common with the party calling him.” Spencer v. Robbins, 106 Ind. 580. See Martin v. Martin, 118 Ind. 227; Starret v. Burkhalter, 86 Ind. 439; Upton v. Adams, 27 Ind. 432; Scherer v. Ingerman, 110 Ind. 428.

The seventh reason assigned for a new trial is the exclusion of the testimony of John C. S. Harrison, a witness offered by the appellant.

One of the paragraphs of the complaint charged that the endorsement on the note in controversy was a forgery. The witness was introduced as an expert, and the appellant offered to prove by him that the endorsement on the note was not in the same handwriting as the signature to what purported to be and was claimed to be the will of the testator.

It is well settled by our own decisions that testimony of this character is only competent where the comparison to be instituted is between the writing in question and another writing which is admitted to be in the hand of the person whose instrument the writing in question is claimed to be. Chance v. Indianapolis, etc., G. R. Co., 32 Ind. 472; Burdick v. Hunt, 43 Ind. 381; Huston v. Schindler, 46 Ind. 38.

The paper purporting to be the will of the testator was *441not admitted to be one that had been executed by him or to which he had placed his signature.

The twelfth and thirteenth causes for a new trial relate to the admission of certain testimony given by the witness Marion Steele.

The evidence related to a transaction between the appellee Franklin Steele and one ■ Ebenezer Steele, which resulted in a conveyance by Ebenezer to Franklin of 520 acres of land.

The objection is that this transaction took place in the absence of the testator, and that the estate was not, therefore, bound by the evidence. The testimony, as given, was not as to a conversation between these parties, but as to what was said and done as a transaction.

Prior to giving the testimony objected to, the said witness had testified, in substance, that some time in the month of December, 1881, a few months before his death his Uncle Samuel, the. decedent, had expressed a desire to talk with him in relation to his, said Samuel’s, property, and the disposition of the same ; and that he then had a conversation with him in regard to his business and the disposition of his property, in the course of which he, said Samuel, told him that he was thinking of fixing up his business affairs, and that he intended to distribute the remainder of his property during tha,t winter and the next spring; that he also stated in that conversation that' his (the witness’s) brother Frank (the appellee Franklin) held a mortgage on a part of his (the witness’s) Uncle Eb.’s land (“Uncle Eb.” being the brother of the decedent), and that he (Samuel) also held a mortgage on the same property; and that the same had been mortgaged to a life insurance company, and sold, and that Frank had taken in the certificate of sale to save himself; and that he also said in that conversation that Frank would have to foreclose his mortgage or get an amicable settlement out of “Uncle Eb.” some way.

The witness also testified that this mortgage held by *442Franklin was for $18,000, or more (this mortgage was given in evidence, see pp. 584-5); and that the mortgage held by Uncle Samuel (decedent) was the one securing the note in controversy. And he testified further that in the conversation Samuel (decedent) had said that the amount of these mortgages was in excess of the value of the land; that Frank would never be satisfied with less than the full amount of his mortgage, for the reason that a part of the money secured by it belonged to the heirs of the witness’s deceased brother, of whom he (Frank) was guardian; that it had been a question whether Ebenezer would convey the mortgaged premises without a suit first being commenced against him, and that he (Samuel) said that if Ebenezer would convey the property (mortgaged premises) to Frank, he (Samuel), in order to. help him out of his embarrassment, and save his house and lot in Indianapolis, and one other tract of land he owned, aside from that mortgaged, as aforesaid, which contained 160 acres, upon which there was a lien of about $1,000 and if Frank would accept a deed for the 520 acres which was covered by said mortgages, in satisfaction of his mortgage, and assume the other of said mortgages thereon, would give two bills and the note in controversy (which was secured by the mortgage he held on said land) to Frank’s boy (the appellee Samuel, Jr.), which would be a fair equivalent of his (Frank’s) claim over the value of the land. He also further testified that in that conversation said Samuel (decedent) requested him (the witness) to get Ebenezer to make the conveyance, and asked him (witness) to see Ebenezer (who was then in the west) as soon as he returned to his home in Indianapolis, and ascertain if he (witness) could get him (Ebenezer) to settle, as he (Samuel) desired to avoid litigation.

This testimony rendered that objected to material. It is well settled, as counsel for the appellant contend, that a party can not prove his own declaration, made in the absence of his adversary, to sustain his cause of action or defence, but the rule does not extend to transactions.

*443Where an act is competent, so, also, are the declarations of the persons engaged in its performance and constituting a part of the thing done.” Pennsylvania Co. v. Weddle, 100 Ind. 138; Creighton v. Hoppis, 99 Ind. 369; Baker v. Gausin, 76 Ind. 317.

We come next to the eighth, ninth and tenth causes assigned for a new trial, all of which relate to the competency of Mrs. Martha M. Steele as a witness for the appellees. She was the wife of Franklin Steele, who, as guardian of Samuel Steele, Jr., was a party to the action, and interested in the subject-matter thereof. His answer was a general denial; his interest was adverse to that of the estate represented by the appellant. It was the same as that of his ward; it was in behalf of his ward. He and his ward answered separately, but the answer by the ward was only a general denial; his defence was necessarily the same as that of the ward ; whatever would bar the action as to one of them would defeat it as to the other. Their interests are one and the same — to secure and save to the ward, Samuel Steele, Jr., the note and the mortgage given to secure it.

It is conceded that the witness was not competent to give testimony for her husband. When this is admitted there is no further room for controversy.

The contention is that though incompetent to testify for her husband, she was a competent witness for his co-appellee, though her testimony might incidentally affect his rights.

But the premises being false, the conclusion is necessarily wrong; the testimony of the witness did not, and could not, in the very nature of things, affect the issues as to Franklin Steele incidentally. Her testimony came with the same directness and force in Franklin Steele’s behalf as it did in behalf of the appellee Samuel.

If the witness had been the wife of the appellee Samuel Steele, instead of his mother, and called as a witness for the appellee Franklin Steele, and had given the same testimony, there would be as much reason in the contention that it only *444incidentally affected the rights of the appellee Samuel, as there is in the present contention.

Filed Oct. 9, 1889.

In the case of Sutherland v. Hankins, 56 Ind. 343, cited by .counsel for the appellees, the rights of the parties were different; and where the testimony of a witness might directly affect the rights of one party, and only incidentally those of another.

The case of Lynam v. Buckner, 60 Ind. 402, cited by counsel for appellant, is much in point, and decisive of the question under consideration ; but, without authority, it would seem that there ought to be no difference of opinion in- the construction to be given to the statute, section 501, R. S. 1881: “When the husband or wife is a party, and nota competent witness in his or her own behalf, the other shall also be excluded.” Counsel for the appellees seem to have regarded the appellee Franklin Steele as incompetent, as they did not offer him as a witness; he would have been competent to testify for his co-appellee, if counsel’s contention is correct.

The witness was not competent, and the court erred in allowing her to testify, over the appellant’s objection.

The point is made by counsel for the appellee that the evidence is not in the record. The bill of exceptions is in due form, and shows that it contains all of the evidence given in the cause, and is properly signed by the judge who presided at the trial, and was filed within the proper time.

The certificate of the clerk, to which our attention is called, can not control the record. There is nothing in the record, or bill of exceptions, going to indicate that there was a short-hand reporter connected with the case in any way.

We have considered all the questions discussed by counsel, and in the order as presented in the argument.

Because of the error committed in allowing the witness, Martha M. Steele, to testify, the judgment must be reversed.

Judgment reversed, with costs.