Moore v. Palmer

44 P. 142, 14 Wash. 134, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 324
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1896
DocketNo. 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 P. 142 (Moore v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Palmer, 44 P. 142, 14 Wash. 134, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 324 (Wash. 1896).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gordon, J.

Respondents Palmer and Pontius are executors of the estate of J. Gardner Kenyon, who died on December 22,1892. This action was brought by the appellant to recover of respondents as such executors upon a promissory note which the complaint alleges was executed by the said J. Gardner Kenyon in his lifetime, in the sum of $20,000.00, bearing date [135]*135December 23, 1889, payable four years thereafter together with interest at ten per cent, per annum. The respondents answered, denying the making of the note, alleging it to be a forgery, and further alleging that if the signature to the note was the signature of Kenyon, the same had been procured by some trick or device and without knowledge on his part as to its character. There was a verdict for the respondents, and from the judgment entered thereon the case is here on appeal.

1. It appears that after issue was joined the respondents filed with the court certain interrogatories to be propounded to the appellant for the discovery of facts alleged to be material to the defense of the action, that thereafter the appellant moved the court to strike the interrogatories from the files for various reasons, which motion was denied by the court. Subsequently, the appellant made full answer to the interrogatories so propounded. It is urged in this court that the refusal to strike was error, but we think otherwise, and it would he harmless, if error at all.

2. At the trial the appellant offered said interrogatories and answers as evidence in his own behalf, and they were excluded upon the objection of respondents. This is also assigned as error. The purpose of the statute was to enable the party to obtain from his opponent a disclosure “ of facts and documents material to the support or defense of the action” (§1661, Code Proc.), and when the answers are so made and returned they do not constitute a part of the pleadings, neither do they become evidence for the party so answering, unless they are offered by the adverse party, who is also permitted by statute to rebut them by adverse testimony. Section 1664, Code Proc. In framing the answers to interrogatories under the statute, [136]*136the party so interrogated is entitled to the advantage and assistance of counsel, and is allowed twenty days in which to make such answers. The statute does not in the case of a deposition permit the same to be read at the trial if the witness is present and can take the stand, and so in this case we think that, if the matters embraced in the interrogatories were relevant and material to the issue, the appellant should have taken the stand as a witness and given his testimony before the jury. But it is urged that such a course would have been farcical, inasmuch as by §1646 of the statute (Code of Procedure), a party in interest or to the record shall not be admitted to testify in his own behalf as to any transaction had by him or any statement made to him by a deceased person, and counsel insists that the “ executors bad not the right, even had they so desired, to waive this statutory provision.” We find it difficult to reconcile these contentions of counsel. In the first place it is insisted that the interrogatories and answers became testimony, and in the next breath it is urged that it would have been useless to have called appellant as witness, because under § 1646, supra, in an action or proceeding against an executor, a party in interest or to the record is not permitted to testify, etc., and that this provision is mandatory and cannot be waived. It would seem that this latter contention, if upheld, would exclude these answers as testimony, if they related to “any transaction had by him with, or any statement made to him by, such deceased.” Nothing contained in §1646 prevented his being examined at the trial as an ordinary witness upon all matters excepting transactions and statements had with the deceased, and if the .matters embraced within the answers related to subjects concerning which the law, from considerations [137]*137of public policy, would have prevented the appellant from testifying at the trial, it would seem to require no argument to demonstrate that like consideration demanded that the answers should be excluded. These respondents, as executors, were entitled to possess themselves of every means to enable them and their counsel to intelligently conduct the defense of the action, and it would seem unwise to hold that they might not take 0these answers for their guidance except at the peril of the answers becoming evidence. None of the cases cited by the appellant are authority for such answers being received as evidence under the circumstances of this case. Rice v. Motley, 24 Hun, 144, presented a very different state of facts. In that case “ Each party procured the examination of his adversary before the trial. Before the trial Motley died, and the action was continued in the name of his executors. At the trial Thomas W. Rice was living and was a witness in his own behalf. He could not then testify to any personal transaction with Motley under §889 of the Code of Civil Procedure. He then offered in evidence his own examination taken at the instance of Motley, and when both were living, and this was rejected,” and the court held that the rule was error, saying that the “reason of the rule excluding such testimony is wanting. When the deposition was taken, Motley was alive to cross-examine and to give testimony in his own behalf in opposition tc that of the plaintiff.” We think that the ruling complained of was right, and what was said by this court in Denny v. Sayward, 10 Wash. 422 (39 Pac. 119), is inapplicable to the present case.

3. On the trial the court admitted as standards for comparison certain bank checks and other writings containing the signatures of Kenyon, the genuineness [138]*138of which signatures is in nowise disputed or denied by the appellant, and experts were called and permitted to institute comparisons between such genuine signatures and the signature to the note in question. The appellant insists that this was error, contending for the rule that no writing can be used as a standard of comparison in the case unless it has been previously admitted for some other purpose, and in support of this rule many cases are cited by the learned counsel: But policy and necessity have led to the modification of this rule so that today, in a great many of the states of this country and by act of Parliament in England, it is in substance provided that

“Upon the question as to the genuineness of a signature, the genuine signature of the same person to a paper not otherwise competent evidence in the case, is admissible to enable the court and jury by a comparison of the hands, to determine the question.” Moody v. Rowell, 17 Pick. 490 (28 Am. Dec. 317); Woodman v. Dana, 52 Me. 9; State v. Hastings, 53 N. H. 452; Tyler v. Todd, 36 Conn. 218; Calkins v. State, 14 Ohio St. 222; Bragg v. Colwell 19 Ohio St. 407; Holmberg v. Johnson, 45 Kan. 19 (25 Pac. 575); Morrison v. Porter, 35 Minn. 425 (59 Am. Rep. 331, 29 N. W. 54); Farmers’ Bank of Lancaster v. Whitehill, 10 Serg. & R. 110; Eborn v. Zimpelman, 47 Tex. 503 (26 Am. Rep. 315; Phillips v. State, 6 Tex. App. 364.

and such we think is the trend of modern authority.

Chief Justice Shaw in delivering the opinion in Moody v. Rowell, supra, says:

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Bluebook (online)
44 P. 142, 14 Wash. 134, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-palmer-wash-1896.