Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Oliver

28 S.E. 594, 95 Va. 445, 1897 Va. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 16, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 594 (Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Oliver) 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
Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Oliver, 28 S.E. 594, 95 Va. 445, 1897 Va. LEXIS 54 (Va. 1897).

Opinion

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first assignment of error in this case is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the declaration.

The alleged ground of objection to the declaration is that it does not state “ when, where, or how” the contract sued on was made. The objection is not well founded. The declaration sets out the contract; states when and where it was made; and alleges all the circumstances necessary to support the action with sufficient fullness, clearness, and precision to apprise the defendant company of the grounds of the plaintiff’s claim, and to enable it to plead to the action. The object of a declaration is to set forth the facts which constitute the cause of action so that they may be understood by the party who is to answer them, by the jury who are to ascertain the truth of the allegations, and by thé court which is to give judgment. The declaration in this case complies with these requirements. The demurrer was properly overruled.

[447]*447The next assignment of error relates to the action of the court in excluding the witness, Martin S. Stringfellow, from testifying in regard to the contract on which the action was founded. He was introduced as a witness by the defendant company, and after it had proved by him that he, as its soliciting agent, took the application of Charles E. Oliver for the contract of insurance for the benefit of the plaintiff, its counsel propounded to the witness the following question: “ At the time of taking the said application did Mr. Oliver pay you any money, or did you furnish him a binding receipt?” To this question, the counsel for the plaintiff objected, and also objected to the further testimony of the witness “upon any matter relating to- his dealing with Mr. Oliver, or any of Mr. Oliver’s statements to him which concerned said application, or the contract of insurance alleged to have been made by the defendant in accordance therewith.” The court sustained the objection, and refused to allow the witness to answer the question, or to-testify in regard to the said matters, upon the ground that the witness was one of the original parties to the contract or transaction under investigation, and Oliver, the other party, being dead, the witness was thereby rendered incompetent, under the second division of section 3346 of the Code, to testify in regard to the contract or transaction. To this ruling of the court, the defendant excepted and filed its bill of exception.

Incompetency of a witness to testify because of interest, subject to a few qualifications, was long since removed in this State by statute. One of the qualifications of the right to testify is that “ where one of the original parties to the contract or other transaction, which is the subject of the investigation, is incapable of testifying by reason of death, insanity, infamy, or other legal cause, the other party to such contract or transaction shall not be admitted to testify in his own favor, or in favor of any other person whose interest is adverse to that of the party so incapable of testifying, unless he be first called to testify in behalf of such last mentioned party * * * * [448]*448It was under this qualification of the right to testify that the court excluded the witness.

The contract for insurance made by Oliver with the defendant company was the foundation of the suit, and the subject of the investigation. The original parties to the contract were Oliver and the Company. They were the contracting parties, and not Oliver and the witness, Stringfellow, who was simply the agent of the Company, and in no legal sense one of the “original parties” to the contract. And, unless he was one of the original parties to the contract which constituted the cause of action and was the subject of the investigation, he was not incompetent to testify. The test of competency of a party under the statute is not the fad to which such party is called to' testify, but the contract or other transaction, which is-the subject of investigation. Martz v. Martz, 25 Gratt. 364-65; Huffman v. Walker, 26 Gratt. 314; Grigsby v. Simpson, 28 Gratt. 348; Grandstaff v. Ridgeley, 30 Gratt. 18; Simmons v. Simmons, 33 Gratt. 461; Hughes v. Harvey, 75 Va. 207; Wager v. Barbour, 84 Va. 419; and Hall v. Rixey, Id. 790.

In Kelly v. Board of Public Works, 75 Va. 263, it was decided that the plaintiff was competent to testify, although two of the members of the Board at the time the transaction, which was the subject of the suit, took place, had since died. “The members of the Board,” said Judge Anderson in that case, “who are dead, were not parties to the suit, had no interest in it,' and although they may have been agents of the defendant corporation in its transactions with the plaintiff, if the defendant were a natural person, and the transaction which was the subject matter of the suit had been between his agents and the plaintiff, and in the absence of the defendant, who had no personal knowledge of what transpired, the death of his agents, the defendant living, could not render the plaintiff incompetent to testify in his behalf. Ueither could the death of the agents of the defendant corporation render the plaintiff incompetent to testify.”

Under the principle of this decision, construing the second [449]*449division of sec. 3346, the death of the agent of one of the original parties to the contract or transaction, with whom the contract or transaction, which is the subject of the investigation, was in part made or had by the other party thereto, would not render such other party incapable of testifying, unless the contract or transaction were personally and solely made or had with such agent as specified in sec. 3348.

A corporation must of necessity contract through its agents, and is incapable of testifying except through the mouth of its agents. Its incapacity to testify does not, however, operate to exclude the testimony of a party with whom it has made a contract or had a transaction, which is the subject of a suit between them, because it is not incapacitated to testify by reason of death, insanity, infamy, or other legal cause, the causes specified by the statute, whose existence shall disqualify the other party as a witness in his own favor, unless he be first called to> testify in favor of the party who is incapable of testifying by reason of some one of the causes so specified. But even if the defendant company in the ease at bar were a natural person, and. the application for insurance had been procured from Oliver by Stringfellow as the agent of such person, the death of String-fellow would not render Oliver incapable of testifying, unless-the contract for insurance was personally and solely made with Stringfellow, nor conversely would the death of Oliver render Stringfellow incapable of testifying, for Stringfellow would not be one of the original parties to the contract for insurance within the meaning of the statute. Agents are not within the exceptions to competency created by the statute of persons generally to be witnesses. There is no disqualification, express or implied, in the statute of a'mere agent in any case. The implication from it is just the reverse.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 594, 95 Va. 445, 1897 Va. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-life-insurance-co-of-new-york-v-oliver-va-1897.