Cocker v. Cocker

10 N.W.2d 734, 215 Minn. 565, 1943 Minn. LEXIS 559
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 23, 1943
DocketNo. 33,432.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 734 (Cocker v. Cocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cocker v. Cocker, 10 N.W.2d 734, 215 Minn. 565, 1943 Minn. LEXIS 559 (Mich. 1943).

Opinion

*566 Loring, Justice.

This was a suit to cancel and have declared void a deed from plaintiff to her three sons, Archie, Neil, and Walter Cocker. The deed purported to convey certain lots in the city of St. Charles in Winona county and a tract of land in Fillmore county. It was alleged that the deed had been executed by the plaintiff December 11, 1980, and by her placed in her safety deposit box in the Citizens State Bank of St. Charles, but that without her authority or consent the defendants Archie and Neil, one or both, had possessed themselves of the keys to the box at a time when she was ill in the fall of 1940, had wrongfully taken the deed from the box, and on October 23, 1940, had had it recorded in Fillmore and Winona counties. In her suit the plaintiff also asked that she be adjudged the owner in fee simple of all the real estate described in the deed. The answer of Archie and Neil set up that the' deed had been taken from the box with plaintiff’s consent and by her authority and so recorded. The trial court found that plaintiff never delivered the deed but that it was taken from the safety deposit box without her permission or consent and thereafter recorded; that she never received any consideration for the deed; that she had never promised or agreed to convey the real estate described therein or any part thereof to the defendants or any of them; and that she was under no obligation, legal or equitable, to do so. The court concluded that plaintiff was entitled to judgment that the deed is null and void; that defendants surrender it to the clerk of court for cancellation; and that an appropriate memorandum of invalidity be noted on the margin of the records of such deed in Fillmore and Winona counties.

The case comes here upon a bill of exceptions, which presents but the single question whether the testimony of the defendant Edna M. Cocker, wife of the defendant Archie, as to a statement of Will Cocker, her father-in-law, since deceased, was properly excluded. The defendants Archie and Neil offered to prove by her that—

“in the months immediately preceding the death of Will Cocker, he called his family together, at which time there was present Edna *567 Cocker, said sons of the decedent, the plaintiff, Katherine Cocker, and that he stated that he had made an agreement with his wife whereby he was- — he had made a deed of his real estate to her so that she might have the same — -the income from the same for life and an opportunity to use the same for life, upon her express promise and agreement to execute a deed in favor of his three children and to deliver the same prior to her death and upon the condition that the children each agree with him that they would not mortgage or encumber their respective share [s] of the farm.
“This offer is made on the theory that the witness, Edna M. Cocker, is not an actual party to this action; that no cause of action is alleged against her, no affirmative relief is asked as against her; that she has not answered in said action; that she has no interest in the outcome of the action, and that being named as a party defendant without pleading a cause of action against her does not — cannot make her a party to the action so as to bar her testimony.
“The Court: It appears that she is the wife of the defendant Archie Cocker, and as such has an inchoate interest in the real estate in question and is therefore a proper party to the issue. She is named as a party defendant in the action, apparently for no other purpose than to exclude her inchoate interest.
“The offer is refused.”

As early as 1852 the territorial legislature had become convinced that the common-law rule totally disqualifying parties and persons interested in the event of an action was too harsh, unjust, and unreasonable. Under the statute in force prior to 1861 (Pub. St. 1819-1858, c. 81, § 51), neither parties to actions nor persons interested in the event thereof were restricted in any manner from testifying in such actions. Evidently the experiment of abolishing in ioto the common-law rule did not work out satisfactorily. Probably the legislature in its wisdom considered the temptation to perjury too great when the opposite party to the transaction was dead. So by L. 1861, c. 36, it was provided that where one of the original parties to a contract or cause of action was dead or shown *568 to be insane the other should not be admitted to testify in his own favor. To this extent the policy of the law returned to the common-law restriction against parties testifying in their own behalf. This statute was again amended and appears in the Revision of 1866 as G. S. 1866, c. 73, § 8. This amendment added an exception to the rule to provide that when all the original parties on the same side of a contract or cause of action were dead or insane the other party or parties should not be admitted to testify in their own favor, except where the transaction on the other side was had by an agent whose testimony was received. Again, by L. 1877, c. 40, G. S. 1866, c. 73, § 8, was amended (G. S. 1878, c. 73, § 8) to provide:

“It shall not be competent for any party to an action, or interested in the event thereof, to give evidence therein of or concerning any conversation with, or admission of, a deceased or insane party or person, relative to any matter at issue between the parties.”

This provision contained the meat of the present statute, Minn. St. 1941, § 595.04 (Mason St. 1927, § 9817). Chadwick v. Cornish, 26 Minn. 28, 31, 1 N. W. 55, gives a full statutory history of the rule here under consideration.

In our early cases this court was inclined to limit the exclusion provided by the statute to the strict construction placed upon the common-law rule by the courts which had recognized its harshness; and, as to witnesses whose testimony was sought to be excluded on the ground of interest, it was stated that that interest in the event of the action must be—

“some legal, certain, and immediate interest, either in the event of the cause itself, or in the record, as an instrument of evidence for or against him in some other action. The interest must be pecuniary, certain, direct, and immediate, and not an uncertain, contingent, remote, or a merely possible interest.”

Perine v. Grand Lodge, 48 Minn. 82, 90, 50 N. W. 1022, 1024. That much cited case, however, involved a situation where the witness under consideration was not shown to have any interest whatever in the event of the action.

*569 In Towle v. Sherer, 70 Minn. 312, 73 N. W. 180, the distinction between a party and a witness who was not a party bnt interested in the event of the action was made, and the Perine case and Madson v. Madson, 69 Minn. 37, 71 N. W. 824, were commented upon. In the Madson case it was held that a wife who was not a party could testify to a conversation with a deceased person relative to the issue to which her husband was a party. In the Towle case it was held that the wife of the defendant had an interest in the issues sufficient to make her a proper party to the action and thus render incompetent her testimony as to conversations with a deceased person relative to the issues.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W.2d 734, 215 Minn. 565, 1943 Minn. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cocker-v-cocker-minn-1943.