Eisenlord v. . Clum

27 N.E. 1024, 126 N.Y. 552, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 446, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1663
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 1024 (Eisenlord v. . Clum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenlord v. . Clum, 27 N.E. 1024, 126 N.Y. 552, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 446, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1663 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

*555 Peckham, J.

The plaintiff brings this action of ejectment, as the son and sole heir at law of one Peter 0. Eisenlord, who. died in Montgomery county on the 30th day of June, 1885, seized in fee simple and possessed of the premises described in the complaint.

The defendants other than Chun are respectively the brothers, sisters or neices of the deceased Eisenlord, and claim that-they are his sole heirs at law, and the defendant Clum is in possession of the premises described in the complaint and claims under the other defendants as tenant.

The plaintiff is the son of one Margaret Pipe, and the question in issue depends upon whether she was married to the deceased Eisenlord prior to this son’s birth. The plaintiff endeavored to prove an actual marriage between the deceased and his mother prior to his birth on the 2'ist of October, 1857, and for that purpose called, among others, his mother, then married to one Austin. The plaintiff offered to prove by her various conversations between the' witness and the deceased upon the subject of their getting married, and also offered to prove by her the performance of the marriage ceremony between them by a justice of the peace in Montgomery county, at a time anterior to the plaintiff’s birth.

All the evidence was objected to by defendants’ counsel and was excluded by the court on the ground that the witness was interested and came within the provisions of section 829 of the Code, because if she established the fact that she was married to the deceased, she would then be entitled to dower in this real estate.

The witness was not a party to the action, and hence could not be excluded as having any interest on that ground. ¡Nor was she a person from through or under, whom the plaintiff derived any title or interest by assignment or otherwise. His title or interest, if any, came through Eisenlord and that, of course, depended upon the question whether the plaintiff was-Ms legitimate son.

The only other ground of exclusion contemplated by the statute refers to a person “ interested in the event ” of the action.

*556 Prior to the adoption of the Code the law excluded interested witnesses from testifying. What amounted to such an interest as would exclude a witness was a question which was frequently presented, and in almost every conceivable phase, and the courts had finally settled down to a general rule on the subject, which had long prevailed before the legislature altered it.

At common law, as the rule became developed by successive decisions, the interested witness was excluded only when he had what- was termed a legal interest in the event of the action. A direct and certain interest in the event of the cause or an interest in the record for the purpose of evidence, became necessary in order to exclude. (Starkie on Ev. marg. pgng. 23, 24, 9th ed. 1849.)

The inclinati on of the courts was towards a holding that the fact of interest should go to the credit rather than to the competency of the witness, and hence they said that the party alleging incompetency must show it beyond doubt. The English legislature interfered with the rule as to the record, and provided that it should not be evidence in another action for or against the witness who testified. (3 and 4 Will. IV. ch. 42, § 26.) Then under the suggestion of Lord Denman, another act was passed limiting very greatly the cases in which a person should be excluded by reason of interest. (6 and 1 Vic. ch. 85.)

In this state the question arose at an early date, and in one of the pioneer cases, Van Nuys v. Terhune (3 Johns. Cas. 82), the rule as above stated was declared as the law. It was therein explained that a witness was not interested in the event of the •cause unless he would gain or lose by the event, and he was not interested by the record unless the verdict could be given in evidence for or against him in some other proceeding. In a note to this case it is stated that the rule was formerly that :an interest in the question put to the witness excluded him, but it was admitted that such rule had been explained away .and limited, so that the one announced in the case was the true rule. This case was decided in 1802.

In Jackson ex dem. v. Bard (4 Johns. 230), it was held that the widow of one Dickenson, who was the mediate 'grantor *557 under whom the defendant claimed the land in question, was a competent witness, although it was argued she might claim dower in case the deed had not been executed. The Supreme Court held the decision correct, and said she was not an interested witness, because the verdict in the cause could never he given in evidence in an action of dower brought by her.

Then in Jackson ex dem. v. Van Dusen (5 Johns. 144), which was an action of ejectment, it was distinctly held that the widow of a person deceased was a competent witness in an action brought by "the heir to recover the possession of lands claimed under her husband, though she would be entitled to dower in such lands. Vait Mess, J., delivered the opinion of the court, and said the witness had no other interest in the case than that which grew out of her right of dower in the premises, and as to that the verdict in the cause would he no evidence in a suit to be brought by her for the recovery of her dower.

In Jackson ex dem. v. Nelson (6 Cow. 248), it was held that in an action of e jectment against a devisee, a co-devisee and tenant in common with the defendant, not in actual possession, might be a witness for defendant because the effect of a recovery by the plaintiff would not be to turn him out of any possession, nor could the verdict be evidence for or against him in any other suit.

Again in Jackson ex dem. v. Brooks (8 Wend. 426, 431), an action of "ejectment, it was held that a tenant by the curtesy was a competent witness for the plaintiff, who was the heir at law. The court said the witness could not use the verdict if the plaintiff recovered, as evidence in his favor in any suit he might bring to enforce his title as tenant by the curtesy, and hence he had but an interest he question and not in the event of the suit. (See also Peake on Ev. Norriss’ notes, 209, Pt. 1, ch. 3, § 3; 1 Greenl. on Ev. § 386, et seq.) The interest must be certain, direct, not contingent or remote, or a mere possible benefit.

Under the rule of the common law on the subject of interest it is plain that the mother in this case would have been a com *558 petent witness. She had no interest in the event of the suit, as that expression has been defined by the courts, and the judgment would not have been any evidence for or against her in any action she might bring. I think the expression “interest in the event,” as used in our statute, was never intended to enlarge the class to be excluded under it beyond that which the common law excluded in using the same language.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 1024, 126 N.Y. 552, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 446, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenlord-v-clum-ny-1891.