
    
      Smith v. Walker.
    
    The plaintiff claimed title under a patent granted to Walker, and in order to prove a corner tree, introduced evidence On the trial of this ejectment, of the declarations of John Walker the younger, now dead, as to what he heard his father, the patentee, say, respecting the corner. The assertions af Walker, the patentee, were made when he was owner of the land, and at a time when no dispute existed, or was expected, concerning the title. The evidence was received in the Superior Court, arid the plaintiff obtained a verdict. The cause came up on a motion for a new trial.
   Hall, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We do not mean, in the smallest degree, to alter the rule of law, which, when questions of boundary are before the Court, permits evidence to be given of common rumor and report, or what deceased disinterested persons have been heard to say, &c. Necessity, in that case, as well as in many others, requires that such evidence should be received ; nor would it be proper to say, that evidence should not be given of any act done by the owner of the land — but, to permit his declarations to be given in evidence, would be impugning the maxim of law, which declares, “ that no person shall be a witness in his own cause.”

If the person, whose declarations are now sought to be given in evidence, was alive, and pad been present in Court, having the same interest in the lands as when those declarations were made, no person would have thought of using him as a witness. And would it be proper to take the declarations of a person, as evidence, whose testimony, as a witness to the same point would be properly rejected ?

Although, for want of better testimony, declarations of deceased persons are to be received as evidence, the law never intended to qualify persons to make them, whose testimony on the score of interest, would, on ordinary occasions, be rejected.  