after stating t!ie above. The «¡uestion before ns and the only one we find it necessary to < «insider and decide, is this :
Can the living party, in an action brought by the personal representative of a deceased person to enforce a contract entered into between them, testify to conversations liad in the presence of the deceased with his agents or attorneys preliminary and conducive to the making of the contract, the agents or attorneys being still alive ?
The act improving the law of evidence confers a capacity, not possessed before, upon the parties to a suit, the right to testify on their own behalf; thus removing the disqualification of interest, bnt with the restriction that if it relates to a personal transaction or communication, and one of the parties be dead, and the action be by or against his personal representative, the other who survives shall not be permitted to testify. The enactment with its proviso, introducing a great change in the law of evidence, assumes that, when both arc alive and can give their respective versions of the matter, it may be safely left to the jury to hear each and weigh and pass upon the testimony. But where one is dead, and incapable of contradicting the other, the temptation to swerve from the truth and make false statements is too strong in the living to allow him to be hoard by the jury. In other words, the rule of disqualification, existing before, was not relaxed in such case, and where one of the. persons is silent in death, the lips of the cither are dosed by law.
The act makes no exception where others were present, but leaves these witnesses to be called by either, and their testimony to come before the jury and be considered by itself, its credit unaffected by ihe testimony of the interested party. In such *525caso the living party is not without the means of proving the transaction or communication, and the need of his evidence is less cogent and pressing. But whatever considerations may be urged for an interpretation that does not, under such circumstances, exclude the living witness and forbid his giving testimony, -it is the plain mandate of the act that it shall not be received, and we are not at liberty to interpolate in it exceptions not placed iherc by the legislature that made the enactment. The court must construe and enforce it according to its terms.
But admitting this to be so, the argument for the defendant is that the transaction or communication was not with the deceased, but with his counsel, who could correct any misrepresentations of what occurred, and the case is not embraced in the disabling-proviso.
This is a misconception of the nature and character of whut transpired on the occasion.
The attorneys were acting for him, in his presence and with his constant and direct sanction in what was said and done, conducive to the end of bringing about the execution of the deed conveying the defendant’s land to the deceased, and the entering into the contract now in suit. These were the means and agencies used to influence and bring about the result to which they were directed. The substance of the transaction was the making of these instruments, and this was personal to the deceased, who takes the full benefit of what was thus accomplished.
Without prolonging the discussion, we are content to refer to the case of Halyburton v. Dobson, 65 N. C., 88, the facts in which arc very similar, as a decisive and direct authority upon the point. It is unnecessary to recite them as they are set out iq the opinion, and we only add that the ruling of the court below was in favor of the reception of the evidence. This was reversed on appeal, and Reade, J., delivering the opinion, says: “His Honor held, properly, that the defendant could not testify as to what passed between himself and the testator, H'arshaw. But His Honor permitted him to testify as to what passed between *526said Harshaw and Pearson, both of whom were dead at the time of his examination. This was doubtless upon the idea that the defendant was not a party to the conversation, that is, it was not between himself and them. In that was His Honor’s error. The case states that the defendant and Harshaw, by agreement, went to Pearson to advise with him about the matter in dispute; that they were all together, but Harshaw' and Pearson carried on the conversation, and Pearson gave his advice and Harshaw acted upon it. It is striking in the dark (sticking in the bark was, we presume, intended) to say that this transaction was not between the defendant and Harshaw. It was a transaction between them, and the defendant ought not to have been allowed to speak of it.”
It is true that Pearson had also died, but no stress is laid on that circumstance in the opinion, and the testimony was not rendered incompetent by that event. A party may give evidence of a transaction between himself a ltd an agent of the deceased; nor will the agent’s death affect his competency, Morgan v. Bunting, 86 N. C., 66; Lockhart, v. Bell, Ib., 443—same case on rehearing at this term.
At the present, term we have decided that the statute does not forbid a living person to speak of a transaction between himself and others jointly interested, because of the death of one or more, as long as one survives to confront the witness. Peacock v. Stott, ante, 518.
Without examining the other exceptions, we affirm the ruling of His Honor in granting a new' trial for the error pointed out. This will be certified for further proceeding in the court below'.
No error. Affirmed.