§ 1602 - When one party is dead or insane
§ 1602. When one party is dead or insane
A party shall not be allowed to testify in his own favor where the other party to the contract or cause of action in issue and on trial is dead or shown to the court to be insane, except as follows:
(1) To meet or explain the testimony of living witnesses produced against him;
(2) To meet the testimony of such deceased or insane party upon a question upon which his testimony has been taken in writing or by a stenographer in open court to be used in such action and is admitted as evidence therein;
(3) In any action in which the estate of such deceased or insane party or his grantee or assignee is a party, entries in a cash or account book showing the receipt or payment of money in due course of business, made by such party prior to his death or insanity and before any controversy arose respecting the transaction to which such entries relate, may be admitted in evidence as tending to show the facts therein recited to be true. The adverse party in such action may meet the evidence of such entries by any proper evidence;
(4) In addition to the right to testify, as provided in the foregoing exceptions, the living party may be a witness in his own favor, so far as to prove in whose handwriting his entries are and when they were made and no further, in actions founded on book account and when the matter in issue and on trial is proper matter of book account.
(5) In any action founded on tort, provided, however, that in tort actions by or against representatives of deceased persons, memoranda and declarations of the deceased, relevant to the matter in issue, may be received as evidence, and provided further, that this provision shall not be construed as permitting testimony as to conversations with the deceased other than to meet or explain the memoranda or declarations of the deceased. (Amended 1961, No. 166, § 1.)