Patrick v. English
Patrick v. English
Opinion of the Court
. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action is upon a note alleged to have been made to Patrick by Mrs. Fanny C. Wallace, and alleged to have been indorsed by Mobley before it came into the hands of Patrick. Mrs. Wallace is now dead, and so is Mobley, who was her son. But Mobley was sued before his death, and answered, denying his own liability to pay, and that of his intestate, Wallace, as well. English is administrator cum testamento annex0 of the will of Mobley. Mobley became bankrupt in his - lifetime, and thereby this note was barred payment. This action is on the new promise to pay, alleged to have been made after bankruptcy. The Court below, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant offering *269 no testimony, directed a verdict' for the plaintiff, 'and that is the appellant’s real offense.
- ' The excéptions are seven in number, but they make only four practical issues of law, to wit: (1) Was it competent ;for the plaintiff to testify that when the note was delivered 'todiirn by John G. Mobley it had the name of John G. Mobley indorsed on.the back of it? (2) Was'it competent for the plaintiff to testify that Mobley made to him all the payments indorsed on the back of the note save the last, and to testify what was the medium of the last payment? (3) Was the testimony tending to show Mobley made a new promise of such character as to require its submission to a jury? (4) Was the testimony tending to prove the signature of Mrs. Wallace of such a character as to require its submission to a jury?
Upon the issues marked 3 and 4, we have concluded they ought to have been submitted to a jury.
*270
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial is ordered.
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- 1. Witnesses—Competency—Transactions With Decedent—Statute. —Under Code Civ. Proc., sec. 438, limiting the right of a living party to testify about a transaction between himself and another, since deceased, plaintiff, in an action on a note, was incompetent to testify that an indorser, since deceased, made payments and promises to him, and in what the last payment consisted. 2. Witnesses—Competency—Acts of Decedent.—In an action upon a note indorsed by defendant’s intestate, if was competent for plaintiff to testify that, when he got possession of the note, it had the intestate’s name on the back of it, and that intestate did not put his name on the hack after plaintiff got it. 3. Trial—Question for Jury—Credibility op Witnesses.—The force of the testimony of witnesses is for the jury.