Barker v. Ayers

5 Md. 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 5 Md. 202 (Barker v. Ayers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Ayers, 5 Md. 202 (Md. 1853).

Opinion

Eccleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

The question arising on the first bill of exceptions is, whether John Barker, one of the defendants, could be examined as a witness at the instance of the other defendant, for the purpose of proving there was no partnership between them, so far as related to the claim in controversy, and that he, John Barker, alone was responsible?

When this offer was first made to examine the party as a witness, no judgment had been confessed by him, but the issue then being tried before the jury was upon the joint plea [206]*206of non assumpsit, the nar having charged the defendants as partners, and jointly liable for the claim of the plaintiffs.

The bill of exceptions states the offer as intended, “to prove by the defendant, John Barker, who was willing to be examined in that behalf, that the said William was not a partner with him in the Curtis Creek business; that the goods now sued for were furnished to the witness on his individual credit and for his individual business, and that the witness did not resist the right of the plaintiffs to recover against him.”

The record did not set out the plea, but this defect has been cured by an agreement stating it to have been a joint plea of non assumpsit.

Under such a declaration and plea, the plaintiffs could not recover without establishing the joint liability of the defendants. The most conclusive proof, or unqualified admission, of the liability of one defendant, could not entitle the plaintiffs to a verdict and judgment against him alone. 1 Chitty on Pl., 44. Tuttle vs. Cooper, 10 Pick., 281. As the testimony, if believed by the jury, must have released the witness from responsibility, his interest rendered him incompetent.

In the further progress of the cause, the record shows that John Barker withdrew his plea, and then a judgment by confession was entered against him for “$1200, damages in nar- and costs, to be released on payment of $552 71, with interest from 11th day of June 1852, and costs.” The sum mentioned in the release being the full amount of the plaintiffs’ claim.

Subsequent to the entry of this judgment, John was again' called by William to testify in his behalf, but being objected to on the ground of incompetency, the court again sustained the objection, and this decision constitutes the basis of the second bill of exceptions.

Whether the plaintiffs could or could not have successfully objected to the entry of this judgment, and insisted upon a' judgment against both defendants, or else that the case should' [207]*207have proceeded against both until the verdict, is not now a question before us. A release upon a judgment by confession, necessarily coming from the plaintiff, manifests clearly his consent to the judgment.

In the subsequent proceedings John Barker could have no interest whatever, inducing him to prove that William was not answerable for the claim. The interest was in the opposite direction. The judgment fixed John’s responsibility for the full amount. He would not be bound even for any further accumulation of costs, in the controversy between the plaintiffs and William. If then a verdict against William could not increase the amount of John’s liability, what possible interest, in legal contemplation, could he have in so testifying as to produce a different verdict? It will readily appear how his interest might disqualify him from being a witness for the plaintiffs to prove the partnership, because in the event of a judgment against the other party, if the plaintiffs should compel that party to pay one half of the claim, the witness would be relieved to that extent.

But it has been said, so inflexible is the rule which requires there should be either a joint verdict and judgment, or no judgment, under such a nar as the present, charging the defendants as partners, that notwithstanding the judgment by confession, if a verdict had been rendered in favor of the other defendant, John Barker might have reversed the judgment against him, upon appeal. And if so, he was interested in establishing the fact that there was no partnership. This; however is not our view of the subject. In Morgan vs. Briscoe and Clarke, 4 Md. Rep., 271, the court decided, that where-a judgment lias been confessed, and, of course, where there is no motion in arrest of judgment, since the act of 1825, ch. 117, there can be no reversal, although there may be no declaration. That statute was certainly designed to prevent any mere technical errors in the proceedings from being taken advantage of in the appellate tribunal, which may not appear to have been relied.upon below. And the supposed state of -facts,, which it is-said would authorize a reversal, do not pre[208]*208sent very strong equitable grounds for inducing the court so to construe the act as to permit a reversal under such circumstances. The circumstances being; a nar against two defendants charging a joint liability, a joint plea filed, but subsequently withdrawn by one, who then confesses judgment for the claim, is examined, with his consent, by the other, and proves himself solely responsible, -which testimony induces the jury to find a verdict in favor of the other defendant; and then, upon appeal, the defendant in the confessed judgment asks to have it reversed, because the joint claim was not established by a joint judgment.

From the remarks of Mr. Greenleaf,, in sec. 356 in the 1st Vol. of his work on Evidence, and from the language of the court, in Talmage vs. Burlingame, 9 Barr., 21, and in Albers vs. Wilkinson, 6 G. & J., 358, it has been supposed that a judgment by default'against one defendant, will not authorize his examination as a witness in favor of the other, because he is still to be considered incompetent on the ground of interest. And this has been urged as sustaining the refusal to admit the testimony in the present instance. But there is a material distinction between a judgment by default, and a judgment like the one before us. The former only decides or settles the liability of the party without ascertaining the extent of it, in a case like the present. And we think that, ■without deciding whether a judgment by default would have authorized the admission of the testimony, there is a difference between the two judgments, quite sufficient to justify us in holding the one by confession, as fully removing the objection to the competency of the witness, even if that by default might not have a similar effect.

In Preble County Bank, vs. Russell, 1 McCook’s Ohio State Rep., 313, a judgment by confession was held so effectual in removing the disability of a co-defendant as a witness, that his testimony in behalf of the other defendant was admitted. There the judgment was before the jury had been sworn and-here it was after. But ,we do not perceive how this difference can render testimony inadmissible in this, which was [209]*209rrot so In that case. Many authorities on the subject are there referred to. And the court come to the conclusion, that according to the later English decisions, the ground of excluding a party as a witness arises alone from his interest in the •event. In 1 Greenlf. on Ev., sec.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Md. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-ayers-md-1853.