Lawrence v. Vila

20 Wis. 381
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 20 Wis. 381 (Lawrence v. Vila) 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
Lawrence v. Vila, 20 Wis. 381 (Wis. 1866).

Opinion

Dixon, C. J.

This cause was before us at the January term, 1864, upon the appeal of Mrs. Boys, plaintiff, executrix, &c., from a judgment of compulsory nonsuit. 18 Wis., 169. We then held that the suit was by Mrs. Boys in her capacity of executrix, and that it was properly so brought. We are still of the same opinion. Upon a cause of action which arose in the lifetime of the testator, or intestate and upon which he had a complete right of action, the executor or administrator must sue in his representative capacity; but upon a cause of action accruing to the executor or administrator after the death of the testator or intestate, the executor or administrator may sue either in his own name, or as executor or administrator. It was so decided by this court in Knox v. Bigelow, 15 Wis., 428; and authorities to the same effect are very numerous and very uniform. Mowry v. Adams, 14 Mass., 327, and cases cited; 16 [386]*386Mass., 71; 1 Pet, 692; 1 Blackf., 176; 3 id., 253; 9 Wend., 486; 2 Hill, 210; 4 id., 57; 4 Cow., 87; 5 id., 268; 3 Barb. Ch., 71; 2 N. H., 481. It was held upon tbe former appeal tbat tbis is a case of tbe latter bind; tbat tbe cause of action accrued to Mrs. Roys by virtue of tbe transfer from Mr. Pin-ney ; and tbat sbe took title, and could sue upon tbe cbose in action transferred, in ber capacity of executrix.

Tbe suit being brought by Mrs. Roys as executrix, tbe first question is, was tbe defendant properly excluded from giving evidence as a witness in Ms own bebalf? Tbis depends upon tbe construction to be given to section 51, cbap. 137, R. S. Tbe reading of tbe first clause of tbe section might, at first blush, seem to include every action in which an administrator or legal representative sues or defends in a representative capacity. An attentive consideration of tbe language of tbat clause, and of tbe object of tbe legislature as manifested by tbe whole section, convinces us tbat such was not tbe intention. Tbe jourpose, and the' only purpose, of judicial investigation in regard to the’ construction of doubtful provisions of statute law, is to ascertain tbe intention of tbe legislature which enacted tbe statute; and when tbat is done, tbe intention is not to be defeated either by a too narrow or too liberal application of tbe words employed. Words susceptible of different applications are to be' limited or extended so as to subserve tbe object wMcb tbe legislature bad in view. Tbe object of tbe legislature is plain enough. It was to prohibit a living party from testifying in bebalf of himself, when, by reason of death, tbe other party to tbe transaction, having bad tbe same knowledge or means of knowledge, cannot be present in court to confront Mm or make bis statement of tbe transaction. We are of opinion tbat tbe words “wben tbe opposite party sues or defends as administrator or legal representative of any deceased person,” are not inaptly cbosen to express this object, and tbat they are to be appbed to cases of a strictly representative character; tbat is to cases where tbe admistrator or other legal representative stands in [387]*387the place of a deceased person, and sues or defends upon a cause of action or matter of defense which accrued to the deceased in his lifetime, and upon which the deceased, if still living, might himself sue or defend. In cases like the present, where an executor or administrator sues upon a contract entered into by himself, or a chose in action purchased by him, he does not, in strictness, represent his testator or intestate. He sues upon his own contract, and may, if he chooses, at the trial or elsewhere in the course of the proceeding, entirely ignore his representative character, and recover as upon a demand due to him in his own right, as the authorities above cited folly show.

Again, we think the defendant ought to have been admitted for another reason. The plaintiff sued both as executrix and as-signee. The cause of action accrued to her solely by virtue of the assignment. In such case, there being distinct provisions of the statute regulating each, and not in harmony with one another, we think the competency of the opposite party to be a witness must be tested by looking to the origin of the cause of action and of the plaintiff’s right to sue. If the cause of action comes from an original assignor who is still living, and the plaintiff’s right to sue by virtue of the assignment alone, then, for the purpose of this question, it is to be regarded as a suit by an assignee. Any other construction would lead to very harsh consequences, and which were never intended. The original assignor might, as happened in this case, be admitted to testify, when the opposite party to the transaction about which he testifies would be absolutely excluded. It needs no argument to show that this would be an entire departure from the intention of the legislature as evidenced by all its actions upon this subject.

This far we have discussed the question of the competency of the defendant to be sworn and examined as a witness, but the extent of such examination has not been considered. It follows that his right to be sworn and examined is the same as [388]*388it would have been if the action bad been brought by Mr. Pin-ney as the survivor of the firm of Roys & Pinney. In such case he might have been examined as to the conversation between himself and Mr. Pinney, and to which Mr. Pinney testified. He might also have been examined as to any material transaction between himself and Mr. Pinney, either where Mr. Pinney was acting for himself individually or as a member of the firm of Roys & Pinney. He might perhaps have been examined even as to transactions between himself and Mr. Roys, where Mr. Pinney was actually present and had the same knowledge or means of knowledge as Mr. Roys. But as to anything which occurred between him and Mr. Roys, in the absence of Mr. Pinney, or of which Mr. Pinney had no personal knowledge, the defendant clearly could not have been examined. He would have been prohibited under the third clause of the section above referred to, which forbids the examination of a party to a civil action “ in relation to any matter in controversy arising out of any transaction managed or conducted by an agent of the opposite party, * * unless such agent is still living.” In partnership affairs each partner is, as to the business which he transacts for the firm of which he is a member, the agent of such firm. Mr. Roys, the deceased, was the agent of the firm of Roys & Pinney.

The other questions presented by the case were not considered by the court in consultation, and consequently not decided, except that we were all of opinion that a matter pleaded as a counter-claim may be sustained as a set-off, if established by proper evidence at the trial. The facts constituting the set-off being stated in the answer, the demand of the defendant for ■ judgment as upon a counter-claim may be rejected, or the court may order an amendment.

I have, however, devoted considerable time to the examination of these questions, and will, before dismissing the case, state my views so far I have come to any definite conclusions. In the first place, I think there can be no pretense for saying [389]*389that the first and third numbered subdivisions of the answer, called “ counter-claims,” can be sustained as such at all. They both relate to transactions growing out of the unsettled affairs of the old firm of Vilas, Roys & Pinney.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Wis. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-vila-wis-1866.