Carney v. Gleissner
Decision Date | 20 November 1883 |
Citation | 58 Wis. 674,17 N.W. 398 |
Parties | CARNEY v. GLEISSNER. |
Court | Wisconsin Supreme Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Appeal from circuit court, Waukesha county.B. F. Carney and A. Cook, for respondent, Timothy Carney.
Vernon Tichenor and D. H. Sumner, for appellant, J. A. Gleissner.
This is an action of replevin for certain personal property which the defendant claimed in his defense to hold as the bailee or custodian thereof from Elizabeth H. Carney, the wife of the plaintiff, who was the owner thereof as her separate property under the statute. On the trial in the circuit court the said Elizabeth was allowed to testify, against the objection of the plaintiff, on behalf of the said defendant and against the plaintiff, her said husband, and the defendant obtained a verdict. On motion of the plaintiff the learned judge set aside said verdict, and granted a new trial in the action on the ground that he had erred in allowing the said Elizabeth to be a witness in the case, and to testify against her said husband.
We think the second thought of the learned judge on the question was correct. The statute has made no such innovation upon the common-law disability and incompetency of husband and wife to testify for or against each other as to allow them to be witnesses in such cases, even in respect to the separate property of the wife, except in one case, viz., when they are parties to the suit. Hackett v. Bonnell, 16 Wis. 471. The courts ex necessitate have made two other exceptions only: First, when either one is charged with personal violence upon the other, Mills v. U. S. 1 Pin. 73, (and)second, when one has acted as the agent of the other within the scope of such employment. Birdsall v. Dunn, 16 Wis. 235. In all other cases the rule has been held by this court to be uniform in excluding them as witnesses for or against each other, as will appear by the cases cited in the brief of the learned counsel of the respondent, and many others. This court is not disposed to go further than the statute and necessity require in exposing the sacred private confidences, disrupting the tie, and breaking up the relations of husband and wife, and introducing strife, malevolence, and discord into the married life. In this case the wife is neither a party nor interested. Her rights are not affected by the result of this suit. She may, notwithstanding, reclaim her property if she owns it, even against her husband. But it is sufficient that the decisions of this...
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