Opinion
August Term, 1855.
The wife of one named as an executor in a will, is not a competent witness to prove the same, although her husband has entered a renunciation of the office of executor in open Court, and has made a release of his interest under the will.
CAVEAT to the probate of a will, tried before SAUNDERS, Judge, at the Fall Term, 1854, of Mecklenburg Superior Court.
Barringer, for propounder.
Osborne, Wilson and Lowrie, for the caveators.
The only question in this case was upon the competency of Isabella Hunter, as a witness to establish the will, her husband, John Hunter, being named one of the executors. It was shown to the Court, that the said John Hunter had formally renounced the office in the County Court and had the renunciation entered of record, a copy of which was produced, and that he had released all benefit under the will. The witness was thereupon admitted. To which ruling of the Court the caveators excepted.
Verdict for the propounder. Judgment and appeal.
The question presented in this case arises on the probate of a paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of David Calloway. The attesting witnesses are John Kirk and Isabella Hunter. By the script, the plaintiff and John Hunter are appointed executors. One of the attesting witnesses, Isabella Hunter, is, and was at the time of her attestation, the wife of the executor, John Hunter. John Hunter, before his wife was called on to prove the will, came into Court where the will was offered for probate, and resigned his right to qualify as such executor, and also executed a release, releasing all his interest under the will. Thereupon, Isabella Hunter was admitted by the Court as a witness to the will.
The sole question presented to us, is as to her competency to testify. It is well settled law, that an attesting witness to a will, must be competent at the time of attestation, and that and no subsequent release, where the objection is one of interest, can restore his competency. The leading case in this State is that of Allison v. Allison, 4 Hawks 141. This was followed by the case of Tucker v. Tucker, 5 Ire. 161, in which the case of Allison is cited and approved. And in Morton and Ingram, 11 Ire. 368. Both those cases are referred to as correctly decided, and in each it is decided, that the right to commissions which an executor under our Statute has, is such an interest as disqualifies a witness, and that a release does not remove the disqualification.
At the time, then, when Mrs. Hunter attested the script, she was disqualified by reason of the interest which her husband then had in the commissions secured to him as an executor. A wife cannot be a witness for or against her husband. Starkie, 4th part of his Treatise on Evidence, 709, lays it down as an invariable rule, that neither is a witness for the other who is interested in the result, and that where the husband is disqualified by his interest, the wife is also incompetent. In this case, Mrs. Hunter was disqualified as a witness to the script at the time she attested it, as her husband, John Hunter, was interested, and no subsequent act of his could remove the disqualification.
Our attention has been directed by the defendants' counsel to the case of Daniel and Proctor, 1 Dev. 428. That case has been substantially overruled, if not directly, by the cases, herein before cited. How far the wife could be a competent witness to a will, where the husband is appointed an executor and afterwards renounces and releases, came directly before the Court. The case of Proctor places her incompetency upon an additional ground, to wit, public policy. We do not, however, concur in the reasoning upon which the Court there arrive at their conclusion. We hold that the wife had an interest in that case, which disqualified her as an attesting witness to the will. If a man in sued for a tract of land to which he derives title under a will, can the wife be a competent witness to establish the will, because the land belonged to him and not to her? Surely not. She has an interest, through her husband, in the land — such a one as precludes her from giving evidence as a witness.
PER CURIAM. His Honor erred in admitting her testimony, and there must be a venire de novo.