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1823.

MORGAN against PRYOR.

appellant parish, and it was received without further evidence, as coming from the proper custody.

Scarlett and F. Pollock, contrà. It is too late now to enquire into the principle upon which a bankrupt has been considered incompetent to support his commission. Whatever that principle may be, it is an invariable rule in practice, that a bankrupt cannot prove any fact necessary for that purpose. If the bankrupt in this case be held competent to prove the identity of the documents produced, he is in fact admitted as a witness to prove the whole bankruptcy; for through his testimony the proceedings were made evidence. Suppose a trader, during his absence from home, wrote a letter explaining the cause of it, why might he not, if admissible here, be admitted after bankruptcy to prove his hand-writing to that letter? Or if a petitioning creditor's debt depended on the bankrupt's signature to an account, or a bill of exchange, why might he not be called to prove it? But it is quite clear, that in those cases his evidence could not be received. The 49 G. 3. c. 121. s. 10. only meant that the facts set forth in the proceedings should be considered as proved by them. The proceedings themselves must still be identified, and the bankrupt was no more competent to do that than to prove the several facts detailed in them. But it has been urged that the solicitor to the commission was the person in whose custody the proceedings would properly be, and that they were made evidence by the mere production of them by him. He, however, being interested, was rejected on the voir dire; and therefore what he said was not evidence in the cause. He was not a witness in the

cause;

cause; and, consequently, there is nothing to shew that they came from the proper custody.

ABBOTT C. J. I am of opinion that this rule must be discharged. The motion was made on the ground that the bankrupt was improperly admitted at the trial as a witness to prove the identity of the proceedings under the commission against him. The bankrupt had obtained his certificate, and released the surplus of his estate; he therefore had not any immediate interest in the event of the suit, and for general purposes was a competent witness. But a rule has been long established, that a bankrupt cannot give evidence to prove any fact necessary to give validity to the commission. The 49 G. 3. c. 121. s. 10. has dispensed with certain proofs which the common law required, and has provided that the proceedings of the commissioners shall be received as evidence of the petitioning creditor's debt, of the trading, and bankruptcy, unless notice be given of an intention to dispute those matters. The bankrupt was not in this case called to prove any of those facts, but merely the signature of the commissioners. The validity of the commission does not depend upon that signature, but upon the facts contained in the depositions to which the signature is subscribed. To prove that signature he certainly was competent, for the signature was not necessary to support the validity of the commission.

BAYLEY J. I am of opinion that the bankrupt was a competent witness to prove that for which he was called, although incompetent to prove any fact necessary to support the commission. It has been said that it is VOL. II. C

too

1823.

MORGAN

against PRYOR.

1823.

MORGAN

against PRYOR.

too late now to enquire into the principle upon which a bankrupt has been held incompetent for that purpose. I think it is also too late to extend the rule beyond the letter of former decisions. It appears to me that the

rule was founded upon the principle of interest in the bankrupt. Before the 49 G. 3. c. 121. was passed, the assignees of a bankrupt were bound to produce witnesses to prove the trading, the petitioning creditor's debt, and the act of bankruptcy; and if they were unable to do that, it formed a ground upon which the Lord Chancellor might possibly supersede the commission. That would render the certificate inoperative; and therefore the bankrupt was considered interested in the support of the commission. But merely failing to prove the hand-writing of the commissioners, is not a ground upon which the Lord Chancellor would think of superseding a commission. The principle upon which the former decisions proceeded does not then apply to this case, and the bankrupt was properly received as a witness.

HOLROYD J. I think that if we held the bankrupt to be incompetent as a witness in this case, we should go a step further than any former decision. The general rule is, that a witness is competent unless interested in the event of the suit; and the criterion as to that is, whether the verdict can be given in evidence, either for or against him, in any other proceeding. Here the verdict would not be evidence, either for or against the bankrupt; he is not, therefore, within the general rule. But there are a few anomalous cases in which that criterion is not decisive as to the admissibility

of

of a witness; and accordingly it has been held, that in
an action by assignees, although the bankrupt may be a
witness for other purposes, yet he cannot prove the act
of bankruptcy, trading, or petitioning creditor's debt,
because those circumstances are necessary, not only to
the action, but to the commission itself. The case in
2 H. Bl. shews that the bankrupt was considered inter-
ested in proving each of those facts, lest proceedings
should be had to supersede the commission; and for
that reason he was considered as incompetent.
the bankrupt was not called to prove those facts them-
selves, but something which would have the effect of
letting in other evidence of those facts; and the failure
to prove that other matter, would not be likely to affect
the commission. For these reasons, I think, that in re-
jecting the bankrupt in this case, we should be going
beyond the old principle; and, consequently, that the
rule for a nonsuit must be discharged.

Here

BEST J. The principle upon which bankrupts have been considered incompetent to give evidence in support of the commission, may be collected from Flower v. Herbert. I cannot, indeed, agree with that principle, because I think that the Lord Chancellor would not supersede a commission in consequence of any thing that passed in this court, but would himself enquire into the matter. I should, nevertheless, feel bound by that authority, if this case were precisely similar. But it is not so; and for the reasons already given, I think we should go far beyond the old rule, were we to hold that the bankrupt was not competent to identify the proceedings, by proving the hand-writing of the commissioners.

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1823.

MORGAN

against PRYOR.

1823.

MORGAN

against PRYOR.

Being of opinion that the rule ought not to be extended, I agree in thinking that the plaintiff is entitled to retain the verdict.

Rule discharged.

Wednesday,
June 4th.

LATHAM and Others against RUTLEY and Others.

Declaration, ASSUMPSIT against the defendants, common car

hire and reward

defendants un

London and deliver them

riers between London and Dover. The declaration

dertook to carry stated that the plaintiffs, at the request of the defendgoods from ants, delivered to them a parcel of country bank notes safely at Dover. of great value, to wit, &c., to be carried from London to Dover, and there delivered; that the defendants in consideration thereof and for certain reward in that behalf, undertook to deliver them safely, but that through their

The contract

proved was, to
carry and de-
liver safely
(fire and rob-
bery excepted):
Held, that this

was a variance.

negligence the parcel was lost. Plea, general issue. At the trial before Abbott C. J. at the London sittings after Trinity term, 1822, it appeared that the plaintiffs were bankers at Dover, and were in the habit of sending Bank of England notes to their correspondents in London to take up their own notes and bills, and of receiving the latter in exchange by the waggon of the defendants. When parcels were delivered to be conveyed to London, the defendants gave a receipt to the plaintiffs, engaging to deliver them safely (fire and robbery excepted). No evidence was given of any special contract respecting the carriage of parcels from London to Dover. In May, 1820, the parcel in question was booked at the waggon-office in London, and was stolen from thence, the door being left open. It was objected for the defendants, that the contract for the carriage of

parcels

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