Baylees v. Reed
Baylees v. Reed
Opinion of the Court
By this action plaintiff seeks to recover $2,354.92 from the defendants, executors of the estate of Edwin Ferris, deceased, for work, labor, and services performed and supplies furnished to said Ferris, at his special instance.
The answer of defendants to plaintiff’s third amended complaint, after admitting formal parts only, denied each and every material allegation thereof, and set up an alleged agreement under and by virtue of which plaintiff performed the work and furnished the materials, etc., for which he now seeks pay, asserting that said decedent, Ferris, had paid plaintiff in full for all said service. We think it unnecessary to recite in detail the terms of this alleged agreement. The case was tried by the court without a jury. Findings were expressly waived. Judgment went for plaintiff in the sum of $102.92. There was no motion for a new trial. The appeal is from the judgment, by the so-called “alternative method.”
We have read the entire record, consisting, as it does, of the clerk’s transcript and reporter’s transcript, also appellant’s opening brief and respondents’ answering brief, from which it appears that both parties hereto seek a reversal of the judgment.
Appellant in his brief says: “Under section 4% of the constitution of the state of California, and when it appears from the whole of the record in a case on appeal that substantial justice should be done, the appellant asks this appellate court, without having to undergo the expense and necessity of another trial herein, that this court find for plaintiff the amount which is justly due him in this case.”
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Much as we might desire to comply with the foregoing interesting request, the answer is that the court is without jurisdiction to grant it. (Sec. 4, art. YI, Const.)
That the earnings of the wife in such a case as this are community property is too well settled to require the citation of authorities. Such being the case, we think that where a husband is suing for services rendered by his wife, his claim is not derived from her, since he is entitled to the value of her services by virtue of his marital rights, and she, therefore, is a competent witness for him. (40 Cyc. 2295; Porter v. Dunn, 131 N. Y. 314, [30 N. E. 122]; Hopkins v. Clark, 90 Hun, 4, [35 N. Y. Supp. 360]; Hiskett v. Bozarth, 75 Neb. 70, [105 N. W. 990]; Parker v. Wells, *142 68 Neb. 647, [94 N. W. 717]; Miller v. Miller, 7 Ariz. 316, [64 Pac. 415]; Cullen v. Bisbee, 168 Cal. 695, [144 Pac. 968].) Nor do we think that it is intended by this section to extend the disqualification to any except parties or assignors of parties. (Todd v. Martin, 4 Cal. Unrep. 805, [37 Pac. 872].)
If it be contended in this case that should plaintiff recover, the wife would by that fact be interested in the result because of the fruits of such recovery being community property, the answer, as we see it, is that in legal contemplation she would not be invested with any legal interest therein. In the case of Lucas v. McDonald, 126 Iowa, 678, [102 N. W. 532], the supreme court of Iowa held that while the statute provided that “no party to an action, or the wife of such party, shall be examined as a witness in regard to any personal transaction between such witness and a person since deceased, as against the administrator of such decease*! person,” still, it not appearing that the wife had any part therein, in such a case she was a competent witness. Such cases as we have found holding to the contrary are predicated upon statutes differing in various respects from ours.
For these reasons we think the ruling referred to was prejudicial.
Judgment reversed.
Finlayson, P. J., and Sloane, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.