Bigelow v. Ames
Bigelow v. Ames
Opinion of the Court
jBy the Court.
This action is brought against William L. Ames as administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Oliver Ames, deceased. The defendant offered to show that administration of the decedent’s estate had been had in Massachusetts, where said decedent resided at the time of his death, and that by the statute of limitations of said state, plaintiff’s action, which was upon contract, was barfed. The exception created by sec. 16, ch. 66, Gen. St., having no application in this instance, the evidence was rightly excluded under the general rule, that the time of the limitation of actions upon contract depends on the law of the place where the action is brought, the lex fori. Fletcher vs. Spaulding, 9 Minn. 64; Angell on Limitations (5th Ed.) § 65 ; Wharton’s Conflict of Laws, § § 535, 543, and cases cited.
The principal question in the case arises upon the following state of facts. It appeared “that all the- transactions alleged in the complaint were had and performed on the p&rt of the deceased by and through an agent, William L. Ames,” the defendant, who was at the time of the trial in, and a resident of
The plaintiffs criticism upon the time and form of defendant’s objection is perhaps just, but we will assume in defendant’s favor, and in accordance Avith his construction, that his objection was so taken as fairly to raise the question whether plaintiffs testimony was properly admitted under the circumstances above stated.
Sec. 8, ch. 73, Gen. St., reads in this Avise, “when one, or in case of a joint, or joint and several contract, all of the origi- . nal parties on the same side to a contract or cause of action in issue and on trial, are dead, or shown to the court to. be insane, the other party or parties shall not be admitted to testify as to such contract in his or their own favor, unless such transaction Avas had and performed,-on behalf of the party or parties so deceased or insane, by an agent whose testimony is received, ” &g. ■ The question is what is meant by the words “is received"?” The defendant contends that they mean “received in fact,” that is to say, that in this case, to make 'the plaintiffs testimony competent, the testimony of the agent, William L. Ames, must actually have been received upon the trial.
The plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that the words “ is received ” mean not “ is received in fact,” but is “ received by law,” or, in other words, is receivable under the law of evidence.
His line of argument is, that as the words “ is received ” are susceptible of either of the above interpretations, the statute not in terms expressly indicating Avhich is correct,
The construction contended for by the plaintiff is certainly most in harmony with the general spirit and policy of our law of evidence, by which persons are made competent witnesses regardless of their interest in the controversy, it being for the tribunal which is to pass upon their testimony to determine how far such interest affects their credibility.
It is a construction in accordance with the established rule by which statutes are to be so construed as to suppress the
The only other point made in this case by appellant is that' the referee’s finding of an item of $75 in favor of the plaintiff is not justified by the evidence. As the case comes here upon a bill of exceptions in which it expressly appears that only a part of the testimony received by the referee is reported, this point cannot be’considered.
Order denying new trial affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.