Lobdell's Administrator v. Fowler

Texas Supreme Court
Lobdell's Administrator v. Fowler, 33 Tex. 346 (Tex. 1870)
Walker

Lobdell's Administrator v. Fowler

Opinion of the Court

Walker, J.

We are of opinion the court erred in excluding the depositions of Lewis S. Lobdell and John L. Lobdell.

These witnesses were the sons of the original' defendant to this suit, and their depositions were taken during the life time of their father, John L. Lobdell, and at a time when they had no disqualifying interest in the event of the suit. Their father died before the trial, and the court excluded their testimony on the ground of present interest-

*350A question of some nicety arises upon this ruling of the court, growing out of our somewhat ambiguous statute. (Bee Paschal’s Digest, Art. 8733.) The statutes of Indiana and Massachusetts are both similar to our own, and the courts of those States have, nevertheless, uniformly held that depositions of witnesses, taken when the witness was competent to give evidence in the case, may be read in evidence on the trial of a cause, though the witness be rendered incompetent at the time of the trial.- (See also Greenleaf’s Evidence, vol. 1, $ 163, and authorities eited in the note 2, margin; Bell v. Miller, 12 Texas; Burleson v. Burleson, 28 Texas.)

This court has repeatedly held that executory contracts, made to be executed by payment in so-called Confederate money, cannot be enforced. And by the ordinance of 1866, a contract in writing which does not upon its face call for Confederate money, may be shown by aliunde evidence to have been entered into by the parties with the understanding that the consideration was Confederate money; and if such fact be established, the courts will not enforce the contract at the suit of either party.

Jt appearing to the satisfaction of the court that'the verdict of the jury and the judgment below ought to have been for the deiendant, and that there is error in the record, the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.

Reversed and dismissed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Lobdell's Administrator v. N. B. Fowler
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published
Syllabus
1. Depositions of the sons of the original defendant were taken on his behalf in a suit on his note. Afterward, but before trial of the cause, the original defendant died, and the sons, being heirs and distributees of his estate, thereby acquired in the result of the suit an interest which sub- ^ sisted at the time of the trial of the cause, to which their father’s administrator had become the party defendant. Held, that it was error to exclude the depositions on the ground of the interest of the witnesses at the time of the trial, they having been competent when their depositions were taken. 2. This court has repeatedly ruled, and now reiterates, that executory contracts, based on so-called Confederate money, will not he enforced; and that evidence* aliunde Í3 admissible to prove that such is the character of a written inslrument, though not expressed upon its face.