Bird v. Halsy

87 F. 671, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2731
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia
DecidedMarch 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 87 F. 671 (Bird v. Halsy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. Halsy, 87 F. 671, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2731 (circtwdva 1898).

Opinion

PAUL, District Judge.

The defendant moves to suppress certain depositions taken by the plaintiff in this case on the following grounds:

“Because the witnesses respectively refused to answer material questions propounded by the defendant on cross-examination [the questions being designated by their serial numbers, 28 in all], and all other questions which the witness [Frederick Victor Chalmers] refused to answer.” “And all of said depositions taken in England are moved to be suppressed for the further reason that the exhibits which are alleged to have been filed -with the questions and answers were not returned by the officer taking said depositions along with said depositions, and that certain papers sent by said officer under a separate cover, [673]*673and in a different way, are not properly certified; and, even if they were, they would have to he returned attached to the depositions as a part thereof. No exhibit was returned with the same.” “There is no return of what purports to he Exhibit No. 1. The other exhibits referred to in said depositions purport to be numbered from 2 to 10, inclusive.”

The depositions which the court is asked to suppress were taken on belnilf of the plaintiffs in London, England, on the 9th, 10th, and lith days of August, .1897, and were sent by registered mail to the clerk of this court on the 37th day of August, 1897. They were opened by agreement of counsel prior to the commencement of the regular term of this court in September, 1897. At that term of the court the plaintiff, whose home is in England, was present, and pressing for a trial; but the case was continued on motion of the defendant. There was an adjourned term of this court held in December, 1897. On the first day of the present term the plaintiff moved the court to fix a day of the present term of the court for the trial of the case. Thereupon the defendant interposed this motion to suppress the depositions. The court will consider first that branch of the motion to suppress which is based on the fact that “the exhibits which were alleged to have been filed with the questions and answers were not returned by the officer taking the depositions along with said depositions, and that certain papers sent by said officer under a separate cover and in a different way are not properly certified; and, even if they were, they would have to be returned attached to the depositions as a part thereof. No exhibit was returned with the same.” The depositions proper were forwarded in one package, and the exhibits referred to in the depositions, and by designa tions therein made part thereof, mailed to the clerk in a separate package. The maimer of identifying the exhibits in the depositions in a few cases will serve to show how? all of them are identified: In the examination of Frederick Victor Chalmers, a witness on the part of the plaintiff, at question 26. page 8, of the depositions, it is noted by the officer taking the depositions: “* ':i The paper referred to in question No. 25 was at the same time marked by the commissioner ‘Mr. Frederick Victor Chalmers’ evidence No. 2, and signed by the commissioner, and dated 9/8/97.’” On examining the exhibits, I find that the paper referred to in question No. 25 as Exhibit No. 2 is marked “Mr. Frederick Victor Chalmers’ evidence No.'2. J. Wesney Ward. 9/8/97.” In the examination of George Alfred Wills, another witness for the plaintiff, following question 126, on page 25, it is noted by the commissioner as follows: “Four letters were handed by Mr. Kirkpatrick to the witness, who read them. They are dated, respectively, 2d January, 1892, 24th January, 1893, 18th April, 1893, and 261 h April, 1893; and were then respectively marked by the commissioner ‘Mr. George Alfred Wills’ Evidence,’ and numbered respectively ‘No. 3,’ ‘No. 4,’ ‘No. 5,’ and ‘No. 6,’ and all of them' were signed by the commissioner, and dated 9.8.97.” On examining the exhibits, I find the four papers referred to, and I find them marked “No. 3,” “No. 4,” “No. 5,” and “No. 6,” each indorsed, “Mr. George Alfred Wills’ Evidence,” and signed “J. Wesney Ward. 9.8.97.” Accompanying the exhibits is a letter from the commissioner to the clerk, which is as follows:

[674]*674“Ward & Asplin, Begistered 37 Lime Street,
Solicitors. 10 Ends. London, 27 August, 1897.
E. O.
“Bird v. Halsy.
“Dear Sir: I have to-day sent to you, by registered post, as ‘commercial papers,’ the depositions taken by me in this suit. I now inclose herewith the ten documents put in as exhibits in evidence with such depositions, and shall be obliged by your acknowledging to me, in due course, the safe receipt of all these documents. Your acknowledgment by post card will be quire sufficient.
I am yours, faithfully, T. Wesney Ward.
“The Clerk, Circuit Court of the United States, Western District of Virginia, Lynchburg, Virginia, U. S. A.”

An examination of the depositions and of the exhibits leaves no doubt as to their identity and connection. ■ Fastening the exhibits to the depositions of which they are a part cannot more completely identify them with the depositions than these exhibits are by the description of them given by the commissioner in the examination of the witnesses, and indorsed by him on the exhibits themselves. The court can conceive no merit in attaching the exhibits to the depositions, other than that of safety in preserving the exhibit, and identifying it as part of the deposition. If this identification is made clear and unmistakable, as in this case, the exhibits cannot be deprived of their character as part of the deposition because they are, for convenience or any other reason, mailed to the clerk in a separate package. It is not pretended by counsel for the defendant in the argument of the motion to suppress these depositions that the exhibits sent in a separate package to the clerk, with the letter of the commissioner to the clerk, are not in fact the exhibits referred to in the examination of the witnesses, and made part of their depositions.

It is also objected by the defendant’s counsel that “there is no return of what purports to be Exhibit No. 1.” But the exhibit to the absence of which this objection is made has been produced by one of the counsel for the plaintiff, in whose hands it was for examination, and it is conceded that it came to the clerk in the same package with the other exhibits. I find it marked, “Mr. Frederick Victor Chalmers’ Evidence No. 1,” and signed “J. Wesney Ward. 9.8.97,” — just as it is designated in the depositions.

It is further objected by counsel for the plaintiff that the exhibits sent by the commissioner to the clerk are not properly certified. We have seen how the exhibits are described in the depositions, and how they are indorsed. An examination of the signature of the commissioner attached to the depositions and the indorsements of the exhibits shows that they were made by the same hand, and are the signatures of the same person. The court knows of no formal certificate necessary to be attached to an exhibit in order to make it a part of the deposition in which reference is made to it. These exhibits are so described in the depositions, and are so marked by the commissioner as such exhibits that the description and marks unmistakably establish their identity. And this is sufficient. That the whole of a deposition may be suppressed on the ground that a witness Has refused to answer a material question is well established. In Sturm v.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F. 671, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-halsy-circtwdva-1898.