Ward v. Hatch

Decision Date30 June 1844
Citation26 N.C. 282,4 Ired. 282
PartiesJOHN J. WARD, TO THE USE OF JOHN BURKE v. HENRY H. HATCH.
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

As the law will not permit the plaintiff to be a witness for himself, neither will it permit him to make his own acts and declarations, done or spoken in the absence of the defendant, evidence for himself to impeach his adversary's witnesses, or for any other purpose tending to support his own side of the issue.

Appeal from the Superior Court of Law of Chatham County at Spring Term 1844, his Honor Judge DICK presiding.

This was an action of debt upon a bond, dated the 10th of Feb. 1837. Plea, Payment. The defendant, in support of his plea, called one Wesley Hanks, who deposed, that, sometime after the date of the bond, to wit, on the 4th of December, 1837, he assisted in making a settlement between Ward and Hatch, which he understood to be of all their mutual dealings and accounts--that, among other matters included therein, was a sum of $1285, charged in the said settlement and account, being the price of a negro man Jerry, purchased by them jointly, and which negro had been kept by the defendant Hatch, and, the balance being ascertained, it was paid or settled; and the bond now sued on was not produced nor mentioned by either of the parties. The defendant alleged that the said bond had been given to the plaintiff for the one half of the price of the said negro Jerry; and, for the purpose of proving this, he called a witness, named Mainor, who deposed, that in February last in Alabama, he, at the request of the defendant (who was then in that State, where Ward and the witness had been residing for several years) went to Ward and asked him for information as to this bond--that Ward then told him, that the bond was given for the half of the negro Jerry, that he had left the bond with Mrs. Joseph Burke to keep for him until he should call for it, that he owed Burke nothing, and that the whole was a sham. The plaintiff then examined as a witness another person, who had aided in making the settlement above-mentioned between Ward and Hatch, and who deposed, that he understood that settlement to relate only to their open accounts, and not to any of their bonds or liquidated demands on each other. The defendant then called Mrs. Joseph Burke, and, after she was sworn, declined to examine her. Upon which the plaintiff, for the purpose of discrediting the witness Mainor, proposed to prove by Mrs. Burke, that...

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1 cases
  • Bullinger v. Marshall
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • January 31, 1874
    ...was only his own declaration, and as to what the third person said, it was not on oath. Murphy v. McNeil, Dev. & Bat. 244; see also Ward v. Hatch, 4 Ired. 282; White v. Greer, 5 Jones 47. This is an action founded on an implied contract. See Black. Com. book 3d, 165. And an implied contract......

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