Bryant v. Watriss
Before: Field
Synopsis
Ik a suit against the maker of a note, or the acceptor of a hill, the indorser is a competent witness for either party.
Field, J. delivered the opinion of the Court Baldwin, J. concurring.
This is an action upon a promissory note, in which the maker [86]and indorsers are joined as defendants under the fifteenth section of the Practice Act; and the only question presented by the appeal is, whether the first indorser was a competent witness for the plaintiff. No service appears to have been made upon the indorsers, and'the judgment was taken only against the maker.
There is a want of consistency in the adjudged cases as to the competency of parties to bills and notes, as witnesses in suits between other parties to the same paper. In England the authorities favor the admission of parties, their competency being determined by the doctrine of equal liability. Thus, “in an action by indorsee against drawer or acceptor,” says Bay ley in his treatise on Bills and Notes, “an indorser is, in general, a competent witness either for plaintiff or defendant; for plaintiff, because, though the plaintiff's succeeding in the action may prevent him from calling for payment from the indorser, it is not certain that it will; and whatever part of the bill or note the indorser is compelled to pay, he may recover again from the drawer or acceptor; and he is competent for defendant, because if plaintiff fails against drawer or acceptor, he is driven either to sue the indorser or to abandon his claim.” The same doctrine which allows an indorser of a bill of exchange to be a witness against the acceptor admits the indorser of a promissory note as a witness against the maker. The acceptor of a bill and the maker of a note stand in the same relation to the indorser in respect to primary liability. There are decisions in the American Courts sustaining the opposite doctrine, though the cases are not uniform. Cowen & Hill, in their notes to Phillips, (Part 1, Note 99,) after citing a great number, observe that from them “ it appears that the Courts are not consistent in their decisions as to the competency of a party to a bill or note. As a general rule he is, in England, a competent witness, for be is equally liable, let the suit terminate as it will, and for nothing beyond the face of the paper; not for costs, unless the party for whom he is called become a party for his accommodation, or he has otherwise made himself liable by some special undertaking. The American cases mostly come short of that, especially as to the competency of a drawer or indorser, for a subsequent holder. We áre inclined to believe, however, that there is a tendency to [87]
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