Marshall v. Campbell

212 S.W. 723, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 733
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1919
DocketNo. 9025.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 723 (Marshall v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Campbell, 212 S.W. 723, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 733 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This is a proceeding to contest the will of Electa Ann Peers, instituted by Fannie Marshall, for herself and as guardian of the person and estate of Flora Peers, a person of unsound mind, originally in the county court of Tarrant county, Tex. The two contestants were daughters of the deceased, and the proponent or defendant was also a daughter of the deceased and a half-sister of the plaintiffs. The instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of the deceased was admitted to probate by the county court, and by the terms of the will all the property of the deceased, with some insignificant exceptions, was left to the defendant. From an adverse judgment in the eounty court the defendant appealed to the district court of Tarrant county, and after a trial upon special issues, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, the plaintiffs have appealed.

[1] Assignments 1, 2, and 3 complain of certain testimony in the nature of denials of defendant of acts of unkindness, violence, or cruelty by her to deceased. Plaintiff had introduced the testimony of Mrs. Emma Fitzgerald, otherwise known as Madam Wan-dera, who testified that Mrs. Peers, the deceased, had told her that—

“I am afraid to-night to turn my back to, the door. I am afraid Belle will come in here and mash my brains out at any time. We have had several fights together. She has accused me of doing things and called me names.”

She further, testified that Mrs. Peers had told her that Mrs. Campbell had pulled her hair and had given her a good beating. There was other testimony of the same character, detailing alleged statements of the deceased as to the actions and conduct of •the defendant towards her mother. Mrs. Campbell was asked if she ever struck her mother, to which she replied: “I never did; absolutely, no.” She was also asked if she ever pinched her mother, or pulled her hair, or bit her, to which she replied: “No; I have combed her hair, I guess, a hundred times; but I never willingly or maliciously pulled a strand of it.” She was also asked: “Did you ever lay a finger on her in violence in any way?” To this she replied: “Never; absolutely never; my hands always adminisr tered to her in absolute love; nothing else.” These questions and answers thereto were objected to by plaintiffs on the ground that they were inadmissible and incompetent, under article 3690 of the Revised Civil Statutes, being testimony relating to transactions between the defendant and the decedent. The rule seems to he, under this and similar statutes, that where one party introduces the statements of the deceased as to transactions between the other party and the deceased the testimony of the other party is admissible to contradict or explain the particular transactions concerning which the purported statements of the deceased had reference. In O’Neill v. Brown, 61 Tex. 34, where the evidence of the deceased plaintiff on the former trial was admitted, it was held that the reason of the statute, which excludes one party from testifying in regard to transactions with another party who is dead, ceasing, the adverse party, also, was a competent witness. In Runnels v. Belden, 51 Tex. 48, it was held that where the plaintiff’s depositions had been taken, and he had died, the suit being prosecuted to trial by the executor, it was error to exclude the testimony of a defendant on the trial touching the acts and declarations of the testator, about which the testator, the original plaintiff, had testified in his lifetime by depositions read in evidence. In this case Chief Justice Moore said:

*725 “Tn such case, if the executor insists on putting the deposition of his testator in evidence, it does not violate, but accords with, the reason and spirit of the law, and its proper construction, to permit the other party to the suit to also give his version of the matters between himself and the deceased referred to in such deposition; and this seems to be the interpré--tation given elsewhere to similar statutes. Mumm v. Owens, 2 Dill. [XT. S. Cir. Ct.] 475 [Fed. Oas. No. 9,919]; Monroe v. Napier, 52 Ga. 385.”

In Galvin v. Knights of Father Mathew, 169 Mo. App. 496, 155 S. W. 45, it was held, in construing a statute similar to ours, that where one of the original parties to the contract or cause of action in issue and on trial is dead, and the other party thereto, under the statute, may not testify to transactions with the decedent, the objection to such testimony is waived where the other party introduces a letter written by the deceased concerning the same matter. See, also, Hurley v. Lockett, 72 Tex. 262, 12 S. W. 212. “The object and spirit of the statute is to place parties upon an equality, so that one shall not be permitted to testify to transactions cognizant to both, when the other can no longer be heard.” But where the testimony of the deceased party has been preserved, and through it he may be heard, the disqualifying rule does not obtain. Coughlin v. Haeussler, 50 Mo. 126. In Jones, Blue Book on Evidence, vol. 4, § 781, pp. 734, 735, it is said:

“The very object of excluding the evidence concerning statements made by a man since deceased was to prevent garbled or untruthful versions of interviews with him being given by a party interested in establishing them to the detriment of the estate, when there was no opportunity of rebutting them by reason of the seal set on the lips of the decedent. To allow such evidence would be productive of that inequality which the law abhors. As we have just shown, that inequality may nevertheless be removed by the representative using the adversary as a witness. But there are other ways. The privilege of objecting to the competency of the adverse party is also deemed to be waived, if the representative introduces testimony as to the transaction or communication in question. This may be done by introducing the deposition of the deceased or incompetent person. This renders the adverse party competent to testify fully as to those transactions dealt with in the deposition, but he cannot go into other communications or transactions.”

In section 782, p. 752, Id., it is said:

“The principle is that the living party shall not be heard to give his version of a transaction about which death has sealed the lips of the other; but, when the testimony of the deceased party is made available in the controversy, it would shock justice to deny the right of the living party to be heard as to the matters covered by the testimony. Hence objections to the competency of the adverse party may be waived if the testimony of the deceased or incompetent person which has been preserved in the bill of exceptions is introduced, or if such testimony, taken at a former trial or hearing of the action, is presented by the representative.”

We conclude that, inasmuch as the plaintiffs introduced in evidence the purported statements of the deceased as to certain alleged transactions between her and the defendant, the defendant, as a witness, was competent to testify as to those particular transactions. Appellee cites such cases as Adam v. Sanger, 77 S. W. 954, Potter v. Wheat, 53 Tex. 401, and Williams v. Neill, 152 S. W. 693, as sustaining the proposition that the evidence objected to does not come within the rule that a mere denial on defendant’s part that certain transactions referred to in the statements of the deceased introduced occurred is not inhibited by article 3690 of the Revised Oivil Statutes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 723, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-campbell-texapp-1919.