Courtnay v. Knox

48 N.W. 763, 31 Neb. 652, 1891 Neb. LEXIS 108
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 N.W. 763 (Courtnay v. Knox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Courtnay v. Knox, 48 N.W. 763, 31 Neb. 652, 1891 Neb. LEXIS 108 (Neb. 1891).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

This cause is on error from the district court of the county of Lancaster.

The plaintiff below alleged that the defendant was indebted to him in the sum of $10 with interest from February 15, 1887, for money had and received at that date, for which he asks judgment.

The defendant answered, as a plea to the jurisdiction of the court, that on February 15, 1887, he was a duly commissioned and qualified notary public within and for Custer county in this state; that on said date depositions were being taken before him, in his official capacity, at Broken Bow, in Custer county, in an action pending in the district court of Lancaster county, wherein C. J. Elliott et al. were plaintiffs and I). G. Courtnay et al. were defendants, pursuant to notice theretofore served, and pursuant to the ap[654]*654pearance of the parties by their attorneys, and while thus taking the evidence the plaintiff, Courtnay, repeatedly indulged in vulgar and profane language in the presence of this defendant while officially engaged as aforesaid, and in the presence of a lady witness, then present to give testimony.

Whereupon defendant imposed upon the plaintiff a fine of $10 for contempt, and required him then and there to pay it, which he paid under protest, and thereafter demanded its repayment. And defendant then and there inserted in the body of the deposition the following:

“And now at 11 o’clock P. M., this 15th day of February, 1887, while proceeding in taking the testimony, D. G. Courtnay uttered oaths and words in my presence as to justify me in fining him for contempt, and thereupon I assess him therein a fine of $10 for contempt. It is hereby considered and adjudged by me that the state of Nebraska recover from D. G. Courtnay the sum of $10, together with costs herein, taxed at-, and that he stand committed until the fine and costs are paid, and then said D. G. Courtnay comes and pays the sum of $10, his fine assessed against him.”

Defendant alleges that, sitting officially as a notary public, he had the power to take and maintain the necessary order for the proper taking of testimony, and to that end had the power to impose fine for contempt on the plaintiff if he refused to maintain order or to conduct himself in a respectful manner.

Defendant further alleges that the money was paid by the plaintiff voluntarily, without being deprived of his liberty or in the custody of an officer, and solely upon the demand of defendant, with the declaration that if the fine was not paid he would be given in charge to the sheriff. To the answer the plaintiff demurred, which was overruled, and the plaintiff electing to stand on his demurrer, judgment was for the defendant for $29.55 costs; to [655]*655which the plaintiff excepted and assigned the following errors:

1. The court erred in overruling the demurrer.

2. The judgment is contrary to law.

It will not be seriously contended that a notary public in this state has any other or greater authority than that conferred by secs. 6 and 7 of chap. 61, p. 597, of Comp. Stats, of 1889.

Sec. 6 relates to his powers, duties, and certificates, the administering of oaths in all cases, taking depositions, acknowledgments,’ and proofs of the execution of deeds, mortgages, powers of attorney, and other instruments in writing to be used or recorded in this state, to demand acceptance or payment of any foreign, inland, or domestic bill of exchange, promissory note, or other obligation in writing, and to protest the same for non-acceptance or non-payment, and give notice to indorsers, makers, drawers, or acceptors of such demand or non-acceptance, or non-payment; “and to exercise and perform such other powers and duties, as by the law of nations, and according to commercial usage, or by the laws of the United States, or of any other state or territory of the United States, or of any other government or country, may be exercised and performed by notaries public, and over his signature and official seal certify the performance of such duties so exercised and performed under the provisions of this act, which certificate shall be received in all courts of this state, as presumptive evidence of the facts therein certified to; and on due proof of the loss of such original certificate, the record thereof, so kept by such notary public as is by this act prescribed, shall be received by all courts in this state as presumptive evidence of the facts therein recorded ; Provided, That any person interested in the subject-matter of such certificate or record of such certificate, may, by other evidence, contradict the matters and things set forth in such certificates, or in the record thereof.”

[656]*656In the 7th sec., relating to depositions and contempts he “is empowered to issue summonses and command the presence before him of witnesses, and to punish witnesses for neglect or refusal to obey such summons, or for refusal to testify when present, by commitment to the jail of the county for contempt; and all sheriffs and constables in his state are hereby required to serve and return all process issued by notaries public in the taking of testimony of witnesses by commission or deposition.” Limiting this authority, sec. 1 of art. 6 of the constitution of this slate provides that “The judicial power of this state shall be vested in a supreme court, district courts, county courts, justices of the peace, police magistrates, and such other courts inferior to the district courts as may be created by law for cities and incorporated towns.”

A notary public can have, therefore, no judicial power, and has only that ministerial authority conferred on his office by the statutes quoted. His authority to punish for contempts is strictly limited to the commitment to the county jail of absent witnesses subpoenaed to testify, or of those present refusing to answer; and to the needful exercise of this authority, all sheriffs and constables are required to serve his process. But there is no authority conferred to impose a fine for any contempt or for a misdemeanor. If it be insisted, as in the defendant's answer, that the power to punish by fine or imprisonment for con-tempts, in facie curias, is inherent in the authority of taking and certifying juridical evidence, it is answered that this common law power has hitherto been confined to courts of record, or to magistrates having precisely defined judicial powers.

A careful writer of the New York bar, on Civil and Criminal Contempts, as late as 1884, laid it down that a “notary public has no power, either by common law or by statute, when taking depositions, to punish the witness as for contempt, for contumacious refusal to answer proper [657]*657questions; and where the witness is committed to jail for such refusal, an action for false imprisonment will lie against the notary and the person committed will be dis-discharged on habeas corpus.” (Rapalje, sec. 7.) But this rule has been changed by our statute, as shown.

In the case of Dogge v. State, 21 Neb., 272, the questions involved and presented to the court were:

1. Whether the adverse party to a suit can, in this state, be compelled to testify.

2. Has a notary public, in this state, power to commit, for contempt, a witness who refuses to give his deposition ?'

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Related

In re Hammond
120 N.W. 203 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1909)
In re Butler
107 N.W. 572 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.W. 763, 31 Neb. 652, 1891 Neb. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtnay-v-knox-neb-1891.