Knick v. Knick

75 Va. 12, 1880 Va. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 75 Va. 12 (Knick v. Knick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knick v. Knick, 75 Va. 12, 1880 Va. LEXIS 2 (Va. 1880).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The circuit court, in deciding that the land in controversy in this cause is the property of the appellee Samuel Knick, and ordering the same to be conveyed to him on the payment of the balance of purchase money which appears to be owing, on exceptions filed, excluded from consideration the depositions of four witnesses, children and heirs at law of Polly Knick, deceased. This appears on the face of the decree appealed from.

If these depositions can be read, they show very satisfactorily, in connection with the other evidence in the cause, that the appellee has no valid claim upon the land, nor any interest in it except as one of the heirs of his mother, the said Polly Knick. It is true, he was the nominal purchaser of the land, but the evidence, in our opinion, shows that he purchased it for his mother—as a home for her and her numerous family of children; and she resided upon it from the date of the purchase in 1846 till her death a few years ago. Payments towards the purchase were made from time to time partly by the application of her share of the Talley estate, partly by other means acquired by her, and partly by contributions from her children. ¥e think it very probable from the evidence, that a considerable portion of the money paid was furnished by the appellee, and this gave him possibly a lien on the land for his advances, or, it may be, a resulting use in it to the extent of the money advanced. And the same may be said of the contributions of the other children made after attaining majority; but they assert no claim on that account. They only claim title by descent as heirs of their mother. And we are of opinion, [16]*16without going into a discussion of the evidence, that all claim of the appellee, whether as purchaser, creditor or otherwise than as one of the heirs of said decedent, was extinguished by the written agreement of July 19, 1861, and the subsequent payment by his mother of the bond given to him under that agreement. The evidence would seem to leave no reasonable doubt as to these matters.

But the evidence from which the foregoing conclusions have been drawn includes the rejected depositions, which are perhaps necessary to warrant those conclusions.

It is important therefore to determine whether there was error in excluding the depositions. Two exceptions were filed. The first (in the language of the exception), “ on the ground that said deponents are incompetent to testify in this cause. They are all parties in interest and to the record. The transaction, which is the subject of the controversy, was had with Mrs. Polly Knick, who is now dead. This exceptant cannot testify as against said decedent, and the law expressly inhibits the admission of these parties as witnesses against a party whose lips as a witness are sealed by the law.”

It was upon this exception (without considering the other), that the circuit court rejected the depositions.

The deponents are children and heirs at law of Polly Knick, and they were certainly interested in the result of the suit and in the cause as parties to the record (Stein v. Bowman, 13 Peters, 205, 219), and, for these reasons, at common law they were certainly incompetent to testify on behalf of themselves and the other heirs associated with them in the suit. But all disqualification for these causes merely have been removed by our statute. A witness is no longer disqualified either by interest in the result of, or by being a party to any action, suit, or other proceeding of a civil nature, at law or in equity, before any court, or before [17]*17a justice of the peace, commissioner or other person having authority hy law, or hy consent of parties to hear evidence. Such is the effect of the general provision, standing alone. Section 21 of chapter 174, Code of 1873. That section, however, is qualified in its application to certain witnesses by the next succeeding section (22), amended March 21, 1877, and again April 7, 1877 (Acts 1876-77, pp. 184,185, 265, 266), which provides, among other things, that “where one of the original parties to the contract or other transaction which is the subject of the investigation, is dead, or insane, or incompetent to testify hy reason of infancy, or any other legal cause, the other party shall not he admitted to testify in his own favor,” &c. The residue of the section need not he copied. The only design and effect of this provision is to except and withdraw from the operation of section 21 witnesses interested in or parties to suits or other proceedings therein mentioned, who are also in the category of original parties described in section 22. In other words, a person, though interested in or a party to a suit or other proceeding of a civil nature, is not for that cause alone incompetent to testify as a witness. To render such a person incompetent, he must also he “one of the original parties to the contract or other transaction which is the subject of investigation,” &c. So, conversely, though a person he one of such original parties, he is not for that cause merely incompetent to testify. To make him incompetent, he must also he interested in the result of the suit or as a party to the record; for, otherwise, he would he a competent witness at common law, and the object of the statute is to remove existing disqualification in most cases, not to create one in any case. See proviso to act approved April 2, 1877 (Acts of 1876-77, p. 266), also Borst v. Nalle and others, 28 Gratt. 423, 434; Reynold’s Ex’or v. Callaway’s Ex’or, 31 Gratt. 436, 439.

The question presented hy this exception is substantially [18]*18the same considered and decided by this court in Simmons v. Simmons’ Adm’r, at the late term at "Wytheville, not yet regularly reported but published in 4 Va. Law Journal, 616.

Distributees of an estate were examined as witnesses on behalf of the administrator in a suit against another distributee, and their competency was objected to here for the first time. They were not parties to the contract or transaction which was the subject of investigation, nor parties to the suit, but they were interested in the result. It was decided (though the objection was untenable also because not made in court below), that they were competent witnesses for the administrator; and in the opinion of the court, it is said, “ that disqualification on account of interest is removed by the statute, and if the interested witness was not a party to the contract or other transaction which is the subject of investigation, his interest merely does not disqualify him, though one of the original parties to the contract or transaction, the subject of investigation, be dead, insane, or incompetent to testify by reason of infancy or other legal cause, and for that reason the other party is rendered incompetent to testify.” And it is further said, “ that the correctness of this construction of the statute, if not directly and expressly determined in any previous case, is a necessary deduction from the construction given to the same statute in the numerous decisions of this court heretofore made, many of which are reported.” Martz’s Ex’or v. Martz’s Heirs, 25 Gratt. 361, is specially referred to “ as very nearly, if not quite, a case in point.”

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Bluebook (online)
75 Va. 12, 1880 Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knick-v-knick-va-1880.