Chamberlin v. Madden
Chamberlin v. Madden
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
John Davenport was offered as a witness by the defendant, and was rejected. He was a creditor of S. C. Thomas, now deceased, and also held an assignment made by Thomas, in his life time, of notes and accounts, which arose from dealings in the mercantile establishment, wherein, as the plaintiffs allege, the defendant Madden was a partner of Thomas. The assignment was made to pay Thomas’s separate debts to Davenport and some other persons.
In the case of Haseltine & Walton vs. B. F. Madden, survivor, just decided, we have held that a creditor of Thomas was a competent witness against Madden. Such a creditor was also competent for Madden, for it is wholly uncertain whether the recovery against Madden, as a partner, would ultimately benefit the representative of Thomas; and in either alternative, whether the creditor would not still receive payment.
It is supposed, however, that the assignment distinguishes Davenport from an ordinary creditor, and makes him incompetent to testify in Madden’s behalf. He has, it is said, an interest to disprove the partnership, because, if that be established, the effects assigned to him will be subjected to the partnership debts, and thus his separate debt be defeated.
The motion is therefore reluctantly granted.
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.