, .,r,. „ On the trial of this cause in the Court of Common Pleas, a bill of exceptions was taken by the defendant to the admission of the deposition of Samuel Dryden, jun., son of Samuel Dryden, the testator, for the benefit of whose estate this action is prosecuted. The exceptions to'this deposition were of various kinds; some formal; but one, on the ground of interest. The first objection is, that the witness was a party to the suit. The writ was issued against him as well as Purviance, but he never was summoned, and the action, according to our practice,was carried on against Purviance alone. In fact, then, the witness was not a party to the suit, and therefore there is no force in this objection. But, second, it is objected, that this deposition was taken under a commission, in which the action was entitled, “ Samuel Dryden “ against Samuel Dryden, jun. and Samuel Purviance,” which is a different action from that which was tried. This exception is purely technical; it ought not to prevail, because the defendant so far j oined in the commission as to file interrogatories, on which the witness was examined. The Court of Common Pleas, on application to them, would have amended this defect in the title of the commission. It was merely a clerical error, and may be considered by this Court, as if had been amended. The third objection is, that in the plaintiff’s statement, filed under our act of assembly, he describes his cause of action as founded on the assumption of the defendants, Samuel Dryden, jun. and Samuel Purviance. This exception, if good, would have operated rather in arrest of judgment than against the deposition; but there is nothing in it. The statement was introduced by an act of assembly, and stands in the place of a declaration, but is not restricted to any particular form. Its object is, to inform the defendant of the nature of the plaintiff’s demand. Now this statement conveyed to the defendant the nature of the plaintiff’s demand, with great truth and precision. It told him, that “ the demand “ was founded on a joint assumption of the defendant and “ another person,” who not being summoned on the process issued against both, the action was necessarily prosecuted against the defendant alone.' It was impossible to give a better description.
I agree that a partner receiving money on behalf of the firm, is a competent witness to prove that fact, the partnership being proved by other evidence; for he thereby gives an action against himself to his partner, in which it would be incumbent on him to prove the money, so received, was carried into the partnership stock. But beyond this his evidence is not competent. Indeed, in a case strictly analogous, the witness is entirely excluded. On an indictment against a township for not repairing a highway, a parishioner is not a competent witness for the prosecution, even to prove the road to be a common highway, though it may be said, that to such an extent he charges himself, and his testimony is against his own interest. The answer is, that on the trial of the indictment his evidence has not that tendency; for without the proof of that fact the indictment cannot be sustained, and the witness, by giving such evidence, is supporting a prosecution which, if it succeed, would
If any part of this deposition was not competent evidence, it was error to let it go to the jury. To have stricken out the objectionable matter would not, under the circumstances of this case, have made the rest evidence, as all the witness said at the time of deposing, must be taken together on a question of his liability to the defendant. Being himself a defendant on the record, he could not be compelled to give evidence ; he was a volunteer. Either to the plaintiff or defendant he is liable, in the first instance, for the whole sum. borrowed. If he choose to swear he borrowed it on the credit of the partnership without saying more, he will be permitted to do so j but he ought not to be permitted to discharge by his own evidence, his responsibility to the plaintiff, without at the same time acknowledging his accountability to the defendant for the same amount. On this ground alone, I think the judgment ought to be reversed, and I con* cur with the Chief Justice, that the other exceptions have not been sustained.
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.