Benedict v. Hecox

18 Wend. 258
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 Wend. 258 (Benedict v. Hecox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benedict v. Hecox, 18 Wend. 258 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1837).

Opinion

After advisement, the following opinions were delivered in reference to Foster’s competency as a witness:

By the Chancellor.

[493] I think that Foster was directly interested in the event of the suit, and was therefore an incompetent witness for the plaintiff. He had signed the note with the plaintiff and Ferine as joint sureties for Drake, and was therefore bound to contribute at least one third, and one half if Ferine was [260]*260insolvent, to repay to the complainant whatever money the latter had advanced out of his own funds to pay and take up the note; and the only right of action in this case is founded upon the supposition that the plaintiff had paid the note with his own funds, and not out of the estate of Drake, in his hands as administrator. If the plaintiff, therefore, succeeded in his suit against the surviving partners, he could not call upon the witness to contribute, without giving him the benefit of the judgment he had thus obtained, to enable him to-remunerate himself therefrom. The cases of joint trespassers or other wrongdoers, which were referred to upon the argument, are entirely different; for there, each is liable for the whole, and cannot compel the others to contribute. One is therefore a competent witness for the plaintiff against another, because a recovery without actual satisfaction does not discharge his own liability; and if the plaintiff afterwards recovers against him, and obtains satisfaction for the whole injury, he is not entitled to the benefit of the judgmént in- the first suit, to- make good, any part of the amount for which he has thus been made liable. (Geoghegan v. Reid, 2 Wheat. R. 152.) The rule in relation to the competency of the witnesses is thus correctly laid down by the late Chief Justice Ewing, in the case of Harwood v. Murphy, (4 Halst. R. 216 :) “The rule on this subject is clear and simple ; it is only in the application that difficulty interposes. If the person offered as a witness, stands entirely indifferent as to the event, so that his interest cannot be in any degree affected by it, he is admissible. When it is said that the-witness is admissible if equally interested, the same rule is stated, though in somewhat different terms : for he has then in truth no interest, inasmuch as being under equal responsibility, the event must be indifferent, or in other words, without interest to him. But where the responsibility will vary with the verdict, that is to say, where, if the verdict be for one party, the witness is exposed to certain responsibility, and if for the other party, he is liable to a different and lighter responsibility, then he does not stand indifferent, and ought not to be permitted to give evidence for the party whose success will leave him subject only to the lighter charge. If the liability of the witness remains the same, which ever Way the verdict may be, he is indifferent. If, in one event, his liability is diminished, he is not a competent witness for that party and to produce that event.” See also, Buckland v. Tankard, 5 T. R. 578.

[494] Neither did the possibility that the estate of Drake might prove sufficient to remunerate him, or that Hecox might not compel him to contribute as one of his co-sureties render the interest of Foster so remote and contingent, as to make him a competent witness for the plaintiff. In the ordinary case of special bail, the defendant may be and frequently is possessed of sufficient property, to remunerate the bail"for any sum he may eventually have to pay; and yet no one ever supposed that even positive proof of that fact would make the bail a competent witness for his principal to defeat the plaintiff’s action. In the case of Owen v. Mann, (2 Day’s R. 398,) a witness whose interest in the suit was equally balanced, if his remedy over against a responsible person in case the party calling him failed in the suit could "make it equal, was nevertheless held to be incompetent.

As the law presumes every man will claim what is legally and equitably due to him, until the contrary is shown by a release of his right, the fact that it is possible he may not call upon the witness to make contribution when he has the legal right to do so, does not make the interest of the witness in creating another fund to relieve himself from liability, either remote or contingent, so long as his • legal liability to contribute exists. To render him competent, on the ground that he has a remedy over, it should be distinctly shown that he has either a general »r specific lien upon a fund for his indemnity, which is fully adequate to remunerate him for any thing he may lose by- the failure in the suit of the party calling him as a witness. The exception to the decision of the circuit judge, in receiving Foster as a competent witness for the plaintiff, was therefore well taken.

[261]*261By Senator Maison.

[495] The important and indeed the controlling question in this cause is, whether Reuben H. Foster was or was not a competent witness for the plaintiff. If he is held to be incompetent, then must this judgment be reversed. The material facts in this case, in support of the plaintiff’s action, are proved by this witness; and the question is, whether Foster had not a direct interest in fixing the liability of the firm, which his testimony was intended in part to establish. As co-surety he undoubtedly would be liable to contribute the one third of the amount due on the note, in case the money could not be collected from the estate of John Drake, jun., the principal in the note.- Here, then, is the solvency of one man only, or of his estate, which is the only hope of Foster to be relieved from the necessity of contribution. By his testimony he is fixing the liability of four other persons as principals for the payment of his debt, thereby securing himself against loss, or at least removing farther from himself the probability of his ever being called upon to pay one cent. Is not this a direct interest ? Is it not a present, immediate, and controlling interest? If it is not, I am incapable of understanding what kind of interest it is, to influence the mind, sway the judgment, or to pervert the understanding of a witness, which will render him incompetent on the ground of interest. It is true, as has been urged, that whether the plaintiff succeed or not, in fixing the liability of this company, the legal liability of Foster to contribute one third, in case of the insolvency of the estate of Drake, is not at all impaired; yet it is to be remembered, that in case the plaintiff succeeds in obtaining a judgment against the members of this firm, whether that judgment be enforced or not by Hecox, Foster would have a right to claim that judgment, and to enforce its execution to the extent of the moneys which, as co-surety, he shall pay. He is then, by his testimony, creating a security which before he had not, to respond or answer to him for the moneys he may be compelled or may be liable to pay ; or in other words, he is procuring for himself an advantage which, by means of the judgment to be recovered, might result in a full, perfect, and unquestioned indemnification of himself.

[496] [497] But it is said that the interest of Foster is contingent—that it is contingent whether a recovery will be had, although he testify as a witness—it is contingent for that the plaintiff may never enforce the judgment against them—it is contingent, as it is not certain but that all of the defendants, against whom recovery is sought, may before execution issue become insolvent.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Wend. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benedict-v-hecox-nysupct-1837.