Harper v. Corcoran

132 N.W. 106, 166 Mich. 474, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 543
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1911
DocketDocket No. 79
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 132 N.W. 106 (Harper v. Corcoran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. Corcoran, 132 N.W. 106, 166 Mich. 474, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 543 (Mich. 1911).

Opinion

McAlvay, J.

The complainant filed his bill as administrator against defendant for an accounting and an injunction restraining him from disposing of any property in his hands belonging to the estate of Catherine Corcoran, deceased. The theory of complainant was that defendant who had been married to deceased, and lived with her as her husband several years, had taken practically all of the property belonging to her, and refused to account for it to complainant. Deceased was an illiterate person, who could neither read nor write her name. She had some land, given to her by her uncle, which she sold for $1,712.50, September 17, 1901. Of this amount $112.50 was cash, $1,600 was represented by a certificate of deposit, dated September 17, 1901. This was surrendered, and a new certificate issued to deceased, and interest paid once or twice. On June 25, 1902, the certificate was surrendered and one issued to deceased for $850. The cashier testified that he presumed that the balance was paid in cash. The next year another certificate was issued to her for the same amount. It was renewed June 27, 1904. The history of this certificate until the last one [476]*476was issued April 20, 1910, for $700, does not appear. This last certificate reads:

“ The State Savings Bank. No. 4176 Certificate of deposit. Not subject to check. Owosso, Mich., Apr. 20,[1910. Kate Corcoran has deposited in this bank, seven hundred ($700.00) dollars payable to the order of herself or husband Dennis, or survivor, on the return of this certificate properly endorsed.
Signed, “M. Miner,
“A. Cashier.”

This certificate is in the possession of defendant and is claimed by him.

Kate Corcoran died July 10, 1910. It is not disputed that deceased received this money for the land she sold. The testimony on the part of complainant showed a statement made by defendant to the nephew of deceased to the effect that, of the money received from the sale, part was in the bank and part was invested in the place where he lived; that he stated to the brother of deceased that she put part of her money in with him to buy a home in Owosso, and she had $700 in the bank in her own name; that defendant at first stated that he did not know that deceased was worth a dollar or had a dollar; that he did not claim that any gift was made to him by deceased. This statement was made by defendant to witness in the presence of complainant’s solicitor who had gone with him to find out what had become of his sister’s money. The solicitor testified to the same facts. Complainant and the solicitor also went to defendant for the same purpose, and the substance of their testimony is to the same effect. They had learned from the bank that there was a certificate of deposit of $700 outstanding in the name of deceased.

Defendant was permitted, over the objection of complainant, to testify relative to matters equally within the knowledge of deceased, giving all the facts relative to the disposition of this money, claiming that when the land was sold she gave him $750 as his wages for taking care [477]*477of and working for her grantor, and that shortly before her death she gave him the certificate of deposit of $700. In his answer he denied that she was his lawful wife, and claimed that she had a husband living which was unknown to him before her death, and denied that he had ever received or used for his own purposes any money belonging to her.

The court granted a decree in favor of complainant, to the effect that defendant account for the $700 represented by the last certificate of deposit,, holding that he was not competent to testify as to matters equally within the knowledge of deceased, and, as to the other items, that the statute of limitations had run. Both parties have appealed.

Counsel for defendant insists that complainant had waived the inhibition of the statute by offering the testimony of witnesses, including himself, as to certain statements made by defendant relative to the estate of deceased. Reliance is placed upon Smith’s Appeal, 52 Mich. 419 (18 N. W. 195), and other decisions of this court which have followed that decision. The statements in the instant case shown to have been made by defendant were denials that he had received any of her estate, or knew that she had any property, and admissions that he had invested part of her money in the Owosso property, and that $700 was in the bank. If this case cannot be distinguished from the case relied upon, then defendant is entitled to a decree reversing the one appealed from, and to have the bill of complaint dismissed.

In Smith’s Appeal, supra, the court said:

“ Where a party whose testimony, if objected to, would be excluded under the provisions of the statute (2 How. Stat. § 7545) is giving testimony in a cause, and the opposite party calls out facts equally within the knowledge of the deceased, and afterwards seeks to prove the statements so made under oath in a controversy between the same parties, as admissions, he must be held to have waived the inhibition of the statute.”

[478]*478This was a case where the claimant testified before the commissioners on claims, and the objectionable testimony was brought out by cross-examination, and on the trial in the circuit court, the estate produced the commissioners as witnesses, who were permitted to testify to what the claimant “ swore to before the commissioners in response to questions put to her by them,” and in the circuit court she was cross-examined at length as to this testimony given by her before the commissioners, and defendant then read all this testimony in evidence, which related exclusively to matters equally within the knowledge of deceased party.

In Beardslee v. Reeves, 76 Mich. 661 (43 N. W. 677), the facts are of the same character as in Smith’s Appeal, supra. The court said:

“ It would seem that upon the inquisition in the probate court the disability of the defendant to testify under this statute was waived by the plaintiff. But whether it was so or not, if any part of such examination was used by the plaintiff in the circuit court, the defendant was entitled to the whole of his testimony given on such examination, or such parts thereof as he deemed material.”

In Lilley v. Insurance Co., 92 Mich. 153 (52 N.W. 631), the testimony of the assignee of deceased, taken in probate court relative to ownership of the life insurance policy, was introduced by the administrator in the circuit court. The court held that the estate waived the provisions of the statute as to matters inquired into in probate court.

In Re Estate of Dunlap, 94 Mich. 11 (53 N. W. 788), a widow, administratrix, was called as a witness by the heirs in probate court, and examined fully as to the circumstances of the claimed gift to her by her deceased husband of certain notes. She was also called by them as a witness in the circuit court and testified upon the same matters. The court held that the disability had been waived.

[479]*479In Michigan Sav. Bank v. Butler Estate, 98 Mich. 381 (57 N. W. 253), the court held that by cross-examining the witness the statute was waived.

The facts in Fox v. Barrett’s Estate, 117 Mich. 162 (75 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 106, 166 Mich. 474, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-corcoran-mich-1911.