Patton v. Wilson

70 Tenn. 101
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 Tenn. 101 (Patton v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton v. Wilson, 70 Tenn. 101 (Tenn. 1878).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[102]*102Robert "Wilson, administrator de bonis non of tbe estate of John B. Patton, deceased, brought his action at law against James Patton for the recovery of $550.42, with interest from the 6th of January, 1869. The defense relied on was payment. The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff below, and the defendant appealed in error. There is evidence to sustain the verdict, and the only error which can be relied on for reversal is in the admission of the testimony of Lavinia Patton, the widow of the plaintiff’s intestate.

The defendant had borrowed from the intestate the amount of money sued for, but claimed that he had repaid it on the 6th of January, 1869, out of money that day received from one McCandless, for land sold to him by’ intestate, defendant, and W. L>. Patton, all brothers. W. D. Patton was introduced as a witness, and proved that he was present when the McCandless money was divided between his brothers, the share of the defendant being $2700, and the share of the intestate $1950. He further deposed that, after the division, defendant asked intestate for the note which he held as evidence of' defendant’s indebtedness, adding that he wished to pay it. The intestate replied that the note was at home, and he would get it and hand it to defendant. That thereupon, the defendant counted out from his share of the McCandless money the sum due, and paid it to the intestate. It is proved by another witness that a few days afterward, the intestate not being able to find the note, had executed a [103]*103receipt to tbe defendant, to be held until the note could be found.

These facts are not denied by the plaintiff, but the theory upon which the action was brought is, that the money was returned by the intestate to the defendant, and the receipt surrendered. There is no direct evidence of these facts, if facts they be, but they are sought to be established by circumstances and the admissions of the defendant.

One of the circumstances most relied on was the possession by the intestate before, and at his death, of the receipt. Another circumstance, which rested alone on the testimony of the intestate’s widow, was the amount of money carried home by the intestate on the 6th January, 1869.

The testimony of the widow, so far as it is necessary to be stated, all of which was admitted over the objections of the defendant, except one clause ruled out on objection, was as follows:

“ She was the wife of John B. Patton, deceased. She always kept charge in his lifetime of his valuable papers, and also kept his money. After his death she found the receipt among his valuable papers. She knew the receipt by its color, blue, and saw it among his papers before his death, and knew it by its color, and the way it was folded.” Then follows the clause, the objection to which was sustained: (“She said her husband told her, on the 6th of January, 1869, when he came home, that the money he handed her was the McCandless money.”) Witness continued, objection being taken, but overruled: She said the money was [104]*104in two rolls, that sbe counted the money, and found that there was in all $1950.”

The bill of exceptions is so worded that it is not certain that all of this testimony was objected to. But so much of it as related to the receipt, and the last clause in relation to the money, were certainly objected to, and the objection overruled by the court. The possession of the receipt by the intestate at the time of his death, and the fact that the intestate, on the 6th of January, 1869, carried home only $1950 of the McCandless money, were important circumstances to rebut the defense of payment. The question is therefore directly raised, whether in a suit brought by a personal representative for the recovery of a debt due to his intestate, the widow of the intestate is a competent witness for her husband’s estate, to prove facts which came to her knowledge by means of the marital relation.

By the common law, parties were, in general, excluded from being witnesses for themselves, and the rule was extended to husband and wife, neither of them being admissible as* a witness in a cause, civil or criminal, in which the other was a party. The exclusion of husband and wife was founded partly on the identity of their legal rights and interests, and partly on principles of public policy which lie at the basis of civil society. Co. Litt., 6b; Barker v. Dixie Rep.Temp., Hardw., 264; Vowles v. Young, 13 Ves., 144. On the latter ground, whatever has come to the knowledge of either by reason of the confidence which the marital relation produces, cannot be given in testimony, [105]*105even though the other party be no longer living. Monroe v. Twistleton, Peak’s Ev., App. 91, confirmed in Aveson v. Lord Kincaid, 6 East, 192; Stein v. Bowman, 13 Pet., 223.

The rule of the common law was fully recognized and adopted by this court in Brewer v. Ferguson, 11 Hum., 565, where upon an issue of devisavit vel non over the husband’s will, the wife, although not interested in the result nor a party to the suit, was held incompetent to prove the “conduct and conversations” of the husband during the marital relation, tending to establish the alleged insanity of the husband. “ We are not disposed,” says Totten, 3., in delivering the opinion of the court, to follow the cases referred to by the counsel, in which the rule of the common law, founded in public interest and policy, has been relaxed or qualified, as where it may seem to the court that the fact proposed to be proved is not of a confidential nature; or where the marriage relation no longer exists, by reason of a divorce, or the death of one of the parties, and the witness is adduced to prove facts or admissions that occurred during the marriage.”

In Kimbrough v. Mitchell, 1 Head, 540, the husband had brought an action for damages for an assault and battery committed on him by the defendant, who was a brother of the wile. The wife, from whom the husband had obtained a divorce after the assault and before the trial, was offered as a witness by the defendant, to prove how the difficulty occurred between the plaintiff and defendant, and the ill usage of the husband which led to it. The witness was held to [106]*106be incompetent. “The question/’ says McKinney, J., who delivers the opinion of the court, “ is too plain to require either argument or authority. The former husband is a party to the suit. His interest is directly involved. And the main objects proposed in the examination of the former wife, are to show the abuse inflicted on her by her husband during the existence of the marital relation, and to justify or at least to palliate ' the battery committed upon him by the defendant in consequence .of the alleged wrongs done her. If this were allowable there would be no stopping place, and in all eases, whether affecting the property, reputation, or even life of her former husband, she might be made a witness.”

These rulings were followed in Booker v. McAuley, 4 Heisk., 424.

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210 S.W.2d 332 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1948)

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70 Tenn. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-wilson-tenn-1878.