Lewis v. Foster

621 S.W.2d 400, 24 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 559, 1981 Tex. LEXIS 355
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1981
DocketC-12
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 621 S.W.2d 400 (Lewis v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Foster, 621 S.W.2d 400, 24 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 559, 1981 Tex. LEXIS 355 (Tex. 1981).

Opinion

SPEARS, Justice.

This suit was brought by Petitioner Wayne Lewis to recover damages resulting from the breach of Mrs. Foster’s oral agreement to furnish water for cattle which Lewis pastured on leased land adjoining decedent’s ranch. The principal issue is whether Lewis’s testimony concerning the alleged agreement was admissible in the face of the Dead Man’s Statute, article 3716. 1

The trial court admitted Lewis’s testimony over objection in a jury trial, and based on a jury verdict favorable to Lewis, rendered judgment for Lewis against Ben Roshton, Independent Executor of the Estate of Mrs. J. B. Foster, for $31,041.40 plus attorneys’ fees. The court of civil appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case to the trial court, holding that Lewis’s testimony was inadmissible. 607 S.W.2d 608. We reverse the judgment of the court of civil appeals and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Prior to her death, Mrs. Foster owned a large ranch in Culberson County. Wayne Lewis was employed by her to run the ranch which he did for several years until July 1976. In April 1975, while still in Mrs. Foster’s employ, Lewis entered into a written three-year lease for nine sections of land adjoining the Foster ranch that belonged to her nephew, Van Williamson. The lease was negotiated between Lewis and Mrs. Foster, whose authority to act for Van Williamson is not disputed. Lewis testified that concomitantly with the lease, he and Mrs. Foster orally agreed that he would receive water for the stock on the lease from Mrs. Foster’s well on an adjoining tract during the three-year lease period if he complied with certain requirements. First, he was to repair the pipeline from the well to the Van Williamson tract. Second, he was to move his cattle to the leased property from Mrs. Foster’s land, where he was allowed to keep them as a part of his compensation from his job as foreman. In late December 1976, after Lewis had left his job on the Foster ranch, Mrs. Foster notified Lewis through her attorney that effective March 1, 1977 she would “require all the water the land can produce for her own ranching purposes and will no longer provide free water to the land you have leased.” One of Lewis’s witnesses testified that Mrs. Foster told him she was going to cut off Lewis’s water if Ramon, a ranch hand of Mrs. Foster’s, was picked up by the U. S. Border Patrol one more time. Well, he was, and she did! Mrs. Foster, however, denied the threat, and Lewis denied reporting Ramon.

After receiving the notice from Mrs. Foster’s lawyer, Lewis filed suit to enjoin the threatened water cut-off. At a hearing on the injunction on May 20, 1977, Mrs. Foster testified at length concerning the negotiations for the lease, the absence of any oral agreement about water, her employee Ramon, the water available on the ranch in the different pastures and the reason she needed all the water for her own ranching purposes. She testified that in late summer of 1976 she sold her New Mexico ranch and moved all the cattle, about 400 head, to her ranch in Culberson County. Placing the additional cattle on her ranch required that she would need all the water available even though there had been no shortage of water before. In her testimony, she discussed the negotiations with Lewis for the lease, claimed she had authority to act for her nephew, and denied emphatically any agreement to furnish water to Lewis beyond the time when she would need it her *402 self. Since Mrs. Foster was known to be seriously ill at the time of the hearing, the attorneys for both Lewis and Mrs. Foster entered into a written stipulation in the trial court, approved by the trial judge, that Mrs. Foster’s testimony in the hearing “can and will be used in future proceedings in lieu of her deposition.” After the hearing the court denied the injunction sought by Lewis.

Mrs. Foster died in August of 1978, and her executor was substituted as a party. At the September 4,1979 trial on the merits for damages Lewis introduced most of his cross-examination of Mrs. Foster at the pri- or hearing without objection by the executor. Then the executor offered other portions of the cross-examination and all of his direct examination of Mrs. Foster. Then Lewis’s attorney called Lewis to the stand to testify concerning the same transactions covered by Mrs. Foster’s prior testimony. The executor objected to any testimony by Lewis about transactions or conversations with the then deceased Mrs. Foster on the grounds that it would violate the Dead Man’s Statute. The trial court overruled the objection and permitted Lewis to testify about the transactions to which Mrs. Foster previously testified, and Lewis was fully cross-examined. The question before us is whether allowing Lewis to testify was error.

At common law, parties to a lawsuit and persons pecuniarily interested in the outcome of the suit were disqualified from testifying regardless of the ability or the availability of the opposing party to tell his side of the story. See Ray, Texas Law of Evidence sec. 321-2 (Texas Practice 1980); 2 Wigmore, Evidence sec. 575 (Chadbourn Revision 1979). The theory behind this exclusion was that the best method for securing the truth was to exclude from consideration the testimony of certain types of witnesses who had a motive to lie. Id. This disqualification rule was thought to be harsh, however, since it often created injustice and ignored the probability that the jurors could arrive at the truth by considering the witness’s interest in the outcome of the suit. Ray, supra, at sec. 337. Thus, in 1843, England abrogated all forms of disqualification because of interest. Texas, too, renounced the general disqualification of interested witnesses by statute. 1871 Gen. Laws, ch. 105, sec. 1 at 108; 6 H. Gammel, Laws of Texas 1010 (1898). 2 However, section 2 of that act carried forth a vestige of the old common law rule as it promulgated what is commonly referred to as the Dead Man’s Statute, now article 3716.

The purpose of the Dead Man’s Statute is threefold: (1) to put the parties on an equal footing at trial, (2) to prevent one, to the detriment of the other, from taking advantage of the fact that the lips of the deceased have been sealed, and (3) to render incompetent testimony as to conversations and transactions with a deceased in a suit in which the deceased might deny the conversations and transactions if he were alive. The test has been stated as: If the witness offered should testify falsely, could the deceased, if living, controvert it by his own personal knowledge? Dakoff v. National Bank of Commerce, 254 S.W.2d 550 (Tex.Civ.App.—Dallas 1952, writ ref’d).

The Dead Man’s Statute has been severely criticized by leading legal scholars in the field of evidence. See Ray, supra, sep. 321-2 (Texas Practice 1980); Wigmore, supra, sec. 478; McCormick, Evidence sec. 65 (2d ed. 1972); Morgan, Some Problems of Proof Under the Anglo-American System of Litigation, at 187 (1956); Cheek, “Testimony As to Transactions With Decedents,” 5 Tex.L.Rev. 149, 172 (1927). Writing of the anachronistic Dead Man’s Statute, Professor Ray states, “In seeking to avoid the possibility of injustice of one side, they work a certain

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Bluebook (online)
621 S.W.2d 400, 24 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 559, 1981 Tex. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-foster-tex-1981.