Keller Implement Co. v. Eiting

190 N.W.2d 508, 52 Wis. 2d 460, 1971 Wisc. LEXIS 1008
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1971
Docket150
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 N.W.2d 508 (Keller Implement Co. v. Eiting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller Implement Co. v. Eiting, 190 N.W.2d 508, 52 Wis. 2d 460, 1971 Wisc. LEXIS 1008 (Wis. 1971).

Opinion

Robert W. Hansen, J.

If the plaintiff-appellant is correct in claiming that the testimony of Reuben Keller *465 with regard to an alleged sale of the combine by Edward Eiting to Keller Implement Company was admissible, reversal and new trial are required. So that claim of error will be the first considered.

The testimony of Reuben Keller as to what took place when Edward Eiting brought the combine back to the Keller Implement Company was objected to, and held barred by sec. 885.16, Stats., commonly known as the dead man’s statute. This section provides in part:

“No party or person in his own behalf or interest, and no person from, through or under whom a party derives his interest or title, shall be examined as a witness in respect to any transaction or communication by him personally with a deceased or insane person in any civil action or proceeding, in which the opposite party derives his title or sustains his liability to the cause of action from, through or under such deceased or insane person, . . . unless such opposite party shall first, in his own behalf, introduce testimony of himself or some other person concerning such transaction or communication, and then only in respect to such transaction or communication of which testimony is so given or in respect to matters to which such testimony relates. . . .”

Liability as cosigner.

Plaintiff objects to the exclusion of testimony on the ground that Charlotte Eiting is being sued, not only as special administratrix of the estate of her husband, but also as a cosigner of the note. Since her liability as cosigner did not come “through or under” the deceased, the dead man’s statute, it is contended, is not available to her and the trial court erred in applying it on behalf of defendant, sued as a cosigner of the note.

Defendant answers that, even if she derives her liability directly from the note as a cosigner, Edward Eiting was acting as her agent in. the alleged sale of the combine. The fact of agency, if established, would make Reuben Keller incompetent to testify under sec. 885.17, Stats., which bars testimony relating to a transaction *466 with a deceased agent just as sec. 885.16 bars testimony relating to a transaction or communication relating to a party through whom an interest or liability derives. This argument fails for lack of proof. No evidence establishing the fact of agency in the sale or return of the combine was introduced. Also, Edward Eiting was the sole purchaser named in the conditional sales contract for purchase of the combine. It could be sold by Edward Eiting as sole purchaser without the consent, express or implied, of anyone else.

Defendant denies that she is liable as a cosigner, claiming a lack of consideration for her cosigning because, she asserts, the note was made to pay a past-due open account of her husband, Edward Eiting, not the account or an obligation that she owed. This argument fails. The general rule is that payment of the debt of a maker of a note is consideration for the obligation of a comaker. 1 Wisconsin is in accord, at the very least, in a husband-wife situation. Where the maker of a note asserted as a defense that a part of the debt covered by the note was a debt of his wife’s, this court said: “. . . if Pagel gave his note in order to close his wife’s account, he is bound as though he gave the note only for his own debt. ...” 2 Whatever the liability of the defendant as a cosigner, it derives from the fact of her cosigning, not from or through the deceased. Therefore, as to the case against Charlotte Eiting as cosigner, the testimony concerning what transpired at the returning of the combine to the implement dealer should not have been excluded. 3

*467 Waiver of statute.

As to the cause of action against Charlotte Eiting as special administratrix of the estate of Edward Eiting, it is clear that her liability, if liability there be, is sustained from and through the deceased. However, plaintiff claims that questions asked of Reuben Keller by defendant’s counsel opened the door to further questioning concerning the transaction between the witness and deceased. It is a well recognized exception to the dead man’s statute, set forth in the statute itself, 4 that, if counsel for the opposite party questions the witness as to any part of the transaction or communication with the deceased under circumstances where the witness would be incompetent to testify if proper objection were made, the statute is waived. 5

In approaching the question of whether there was here a waiver of the statute as to the cause of action against the special administratrix, the phrase in the statute “transaction or communication” with the deceased must be considered. Here we have a series of events, all involving the purchaser of a combine and the implement dealer who sold it to him. There is the conditional sales contract; the signing of the note, secured by a chattel mortgage; the cancellation of an open account indebtedness; the further extension of credit on open account; the return of the combine to the implement dealer by the purchaser; the claim of a purchase of the combine by the dealer, paying off the amount due on the conditional sales contract and application of the balance to reducing an open account *468 indebtedness. Are each of these entirely separate and distinct “transactions” between Edward Eiting and the Keller Implement Company. We would hold that, under the meaning of the word as used in sec. 885.16, Stats., this sometimes puzzling succession of events, all involving the one combine, constitute a continuing “transaction” as the word is used in the dead man’s statute. 6 So viewed, did the examination of Reuben Keller, the president of Keller Implement Company, by defendant’s counsel open the door to further interrogation as to what took place when the combine was returned to the company by the purchaser ?

The witness was asked by defendant’s counsel concerning specific dealings between Edward Eiting and the Keller company involving the combine purchased:

“Q. Now, on September 6, 1961, Mr. Eiting purchased a John Deere combine from Keller’s; did he not?
“A. Yes.”
66
“Q. ... He bought this on a conditional sales contract ; didn’t he ?
“A. Yes.”
66
“Q. All right, then, you Kellers went out there and got the machine; didn’t you ?
“A. The machine was brought to our property by Mr. Eiting, himself.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bell v. Neugart
2002 WI App 180 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2002)
Dorman v. Morris
519 N.W.2d 685 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1994)
Smith v. Silberman
557 So. 2d 78 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 N.W.2d 508, 52 Wis. 2d 460, 1971 Wisc. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-implement-co-v-eiting-wis-1971.