Hayes v. Snader

182 Iowa 443
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 11, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 Iowa 443 (Hayes v. Snader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Snader, 182 Iowa 443 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

1. Witnesses : competency: transaction with deceased: proper and improper tests. I. Complaint is made because plaintiff was permitted to testify he had seen deceased when the latter appeared to be sick, what the sickness was, how long it lasted, how often this occurred, and that he had seen deceased when the latter was not ill. The specific complaint is that this testimony tended either to build up or else fortify a contract by implication; that it was essential evidence on the question of what amount was due on plaintiff’s claim; that, under Bartholomew v. Adams, 143 Iowa 354, at 359, what this amount is must be clearly proved, and not left to mere conjecture; that, without the alleged objectionable evidence, there would not have been the definite showing that is necessary on this point, and it is said that the attorneys for the appellee recognize this to be so by the fact that they put in this testimony. It is argued that objections to same should have been sustained, because, on the authority of Sheldon v. Thornburg, 153 Iowa 622, 626, and 40 Cyc. 2314, its reception violated Code Section 4604. In the definition found in the Sheldon case, one statement is that the statute covers “anything said or done between the witness and deceased.” But saying that a man is sick, that witness noticed how long the illness continued, that he saw what the other did Avliile sick, is not a statement of anything said or done “between” the Avitness and deceased, but is a narration of Avhat the appearance of deceased Avas, and what he alone did. Neither is it Avithin that other statement in that definition, “any act or communication in Avhich both had any part.” True, this definition says further, “and of Avhich both had knoAvledge, and concerning Avhich the deceased, if living, could speak in corroboration or denial of the statements of the living witness.” If this be construed to mean that the plaintiff may speak to no matter of Avhich both he and decedent had knoAAdedge, and which decedent, if living, might deny, then the [445]*445statute enacts an titter absurdity. It has never been held, under statutes like our own, that the plaintiff is an incompetent witness, and always been held that there are some things concerning' Avhich he may speak. But this would not be so if these words in the aforesaid definition are to be given the effect for which appellant contends. There is no statement the witness might make which the decedent might not have denied were he living. And surely it is not the test that the Avitness speaks to something which was in the knowledge of both the decedent and himself. This would exclude his testimony that he was acquainted with the decedent, or that he Avas at his house on a stated day. The fair meaning of the definition as a whole is that the witness may not speak to something of which both had knowledge, and which decedent might deny if he were living, if the things spoken to be something said or done between him and deceased. The text of 40 Cyc. 2314 has the broad language that'“personal transactions” include “every means by which one person can derive any impression or information from the conduct or language of another.” While some such rule as that prevails on what is covered by the privilege in communicating with a physician, we shall presently attempt to show that this is not the rule in this jurisdiction when dealing with Section 4604. This court is certainly not committed to the doctrine that this statute excludes the Aise of “every means by Avhich one person can derive any impression or information from the conduct or language of another.” One means of deriving such impression or information from the conduct or language of another is to hear what he says to a third person. But Ave have held that such testimony is not excluded by this statute. Campbell v. Collins, 133 Iowa 152; In re Estate of Goldthorp, 94 Iowa 336, — in which last case we expressly rule also that it is permitted to receive testimony describing the condition óf a testator though that testimony is based on observation, excluding only that which [446]*446is based both upon such observation and statements made by the decedent to the witness. To a certainty, testifying to facts upon which an inference in favor of the claimant may arise, is based on the fact that some means has been employed whereby the witness has derived some impression or information from the conduct or. language of the decedent. But that this is so does not shut out testimony upon which such inference can be built. Campbell v. Collins, 133 Iowa 152, 156, Yoder v. Engelbert, 155 Iowa 515.

As a summary, appellant contends that the test of whether a transaction may be testified to is: (1) Would the case fail without such testimony? (2) Is it matter that could be denied by deceased if living? These can scarcely be the touchstone. We have already indicated that, if the possibility of denial were the deceased living is to control, the statute amounts to prohibiting'the plaintiff from testifying at all; and that we will not so construe. We are of opinion that no more is it the test whether the case would fail without the alleged objectionable testimony. For, so far from its being true that such testimony is prohibited because it is vital, we have reversed because the exclusion shut out testimony that was vital. See Campbell v. Collins, 133 Iowa 152, 156.

In the opinion of the appellant, it seems to be a controlling factor that the plaintiff is relying upon an implied contract. While that is his reliance, we are unable to say that more follows than that he may not support it by testimony which would be incompetent if addressed to the proof of an express agreement. But that the testimony must submit to this test does not in the least tend to show that it would be incompetent in either case. What if it does tend to prove an implied contract? Surely, it is not objectionable that testimony addressed to proving a contract is relevant. Such testimony becomes incompetent only if the proof is of a forbidden character. Had a stranger to the suit given the [447]*447testimony here objected to, it would not be contended that it should have been excluded because it tended to prove that to which it was addressed. The vital thing is, what is the nature of the proof, not what does it tend to establish. The sole question here is whether what was objected to spoke to a “personal transaction or communication between such witness and the decedent.” If it did not do that, it is wholly immaterial who gave the testimony, or what it tended to establish.

II. The question before us is still narrower than that. We are told that Holcomb v. Holcomb, 95 N. Y. 316, Wilber v. Gillespie, 127 App. Div. 604 (112 N. Y. Supp. 20), and Van Wagenen v. Bonnot, 74 N. J. Eq. 843 (70 Atl. 143), decide that the testimony admitted here should have been excluded as prohibited by a statute like ours. For the sake of argument, we will assume that this is so. But if it is the settled rule in this jurisdiction that this testimony was admissible, we are not controlled by decisions to the contrary in other jurisdictions; and the question presented is foreclosed on this appeal, unless we are minded to overrule our own decisions.

The appellant contends, first, that our own decisions are with him, and second, that they are against him, and should be overruled. We will dispose of the first contention first. In its support, we are cited to certain of our decisions, and we now proceed to their analysis.

Whatever is said in Pede v. McKean,

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182 Iowa 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-snader-iowa-1918.