Faircloth v. Jordan

15 Ga. 511
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1854
DocketNo. 75
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 Ga. 511 (Faircloth v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faircloth v. Jordan, 15 Ga. 511 (Ga. 1854).

Opinion

By the Court.

Benning, J.,

delivering the opinion.

[1.] In this case, the order of the Court excepted to wasr “ that the plaintiffs do file, in the Clerk’s office of this Court, the original deed from- John Baugh to John Carmichael, under which they claim, subject to the inspection and control of defendant and his counsel, to be attached to interrogatories, for the purpose of enabling him to attack it for forgery, upon leaving a certified copy thereof, in the Clerk’s office, to be used as evidence in the cause, in the event that said original deed is lost, or not returned into Court”.

And the only ground of exception to the order was, that it required “an original deed, the property of plaintiff”, to be deposited in the Clerk’s office, “ in order that the same might be attached to interrogatories, and sent to a remote part of the State”.

[513]*513Was this a good ground of exception ? That is the only question.

The sixth section of the Judiciary Act of 1T99, gives power to the Superior and Inferior Courts to require, on ten days notice, “either party to produce books .and other writings, in his, her or their possession, power or custody, which shall contain evidence pertinent to the cause in question, under circumstances where either party might be compelled to produce the same, by the ordinary rules of proceeding in Equity”.

The power is given to Courts of Law, “ under circumstances where” it exists in Courts of Equity, “ by the ordinary rules of proceeding in Equity”.

The power, as it exists in the English Court of Equity, is thus stated by Adams, in his : “ A defendant is also bound, if reqi^^AJ^po'im ^^¡^m*to set forth a list of all documents in his ™ssession, fromwh||h discovery of the matters in question ca*|^Wotwh|l^^&l,if the possession of such documents, an® their charaetenf,,as|-iit subjects of discovery, can be shown fromtSel-^^l^ramm permit the plaintiff to inspect or copy themN5Ss4^J^*,!^

“ If he admits the possession of sucn documents, a motion is made, that he may produce them, that the plaintiff may have liberty to inspect and copy them, and that they may be produced before the examiner and at the hearing of the cause”. (Id. 13.)

“ Upon this application, an order will be made, that they shall be deposited with the Clerk of Records and Writs, or if a special reason be shown, e. g. their being in constant use in the defendant’s business, then in the defendant’s own office”. (Id. 350.)

This, doubtless, is a true, general statement of the power, as it exists in a Court of Equity, “ by the ordinary rules of proceeding in Equity”.

This power, then, as it exists in Equity, is broad enough to-justify an order requiring the document sought for, “ to be deposited with the Qlerh'of Records and Writs"; or in a spe[514]*514.cialcase, “in the defendant’s own office”—subject to the inspection of the plaintiff, and further requiring it to be produced “ before the examiner, and at the hearing of the cause”.

Now, when the document, under such an order, is produced before “the examiner”, an Opportunity is afforded to impeach it. The plaintiff may, on his part, produce before ‘the examiner, his witnesses for its impeachment, and have their depositions, to that effect, taken by the examiner, for he may compel his witnesses, no matter where they reside, to come before such examiner.

All this, the plaintiff can do in Equity, under the order to deposit the document, and to produce it before the examiner— that is to say, under an order which, at no time, puts the document in the possession or poiver of the party calling for it; but ever keeps it in the possession or power of the party called upon for it, or of' the Court itself.

It is true, that the Court of Equity, in which this power„thus exists, is the English Court of Chancery, of which an “ examiner” makes part, and that an examiner makes .no part of the Superior Courts of this State—in which Courts exist the powers of a Court of Equity. But, then, it is given to these Courts, themselves, to “ exercise the powers of a Court of Equity, to compel parties, in any cause, to. discover, on oath> all requisite points, necessary to the investigation of truth and justice” ; and it is made their duty to see to it, that “ the proceedings, in all such cases, shall be by bill,' and such other proceedings as are usual in such cases, until the setting down of the cause for trial”. (Cobb’s Dig. 1143.)

Under this grant of power, and this imposition of duty, the duties performed in the English Court of Chancery, by the examiner; are to be performed by the Superior Courts themselves, if, indeed, those duties have not been abolished by the Statute regulation, on the subject of evidence in Equity, viz: that which requires the evidence in Equity to be “oral”, or to be otherwise within the rules of the Common Law. (Act of 1797, and Cons. Jury Trial.)

The effect of our own legislation is such, that the command [515]*515to produce “ before the examiner”, must be left out of the order to produce, made by our Superior Courts, acting as Courts of Equity. That order must, in general, be confined to requiring a deposit of the document with the Clerk, subject to be inspected and copied, and a production of it on the trial.

1 Under such an order, the plaintiff in Equity can, in general, have, in our Superior Courts, all the benefit which is attainable in the English Court, from the order in the English form. He can see the document; can copy it; can show it to his witnesses ; can, on the trial, by an oral examination of these witnesses, attack it. He is not put to the trouble and expense of depositions, taken before an examiner.

The plaintiff can, in general, do this, but there are cases in which he cannot do it, viz : cases in which the witnesses reside out of the county in which the suit is depending; because, in such cases, he cannot compel the witnesses to come out of their counties to testify. (Cobb’s Dig. 1138-’9. 10 Equity Rule.) At least, Courts of Equity practically, do not exercise, if they retain the power, of compelling witnesses to appear out of their counties. It may, perhaps, be said, that the part of the Ju•dieiary Act which gives witnesses this exemption, is confined to Common Law Courts. The Equity rule would appear, however, to be intended to do for the Superior Court, as a Court of Equity, what'the Statute certainly does for it as a Court of Law.

In such cases as these, what is to be done ? Hoes the pow-■Cr in the Superior Courts fall short of them ? Is it beyond the power of those Courts, to submit a document, which they may rightfully get possession of, to the examination of a witness, because they have not power to bring the witness to the document ? Can they not carry the document to the witness ?

The power to compel discovery in the Superior Courts is, as we have seen, as broad as it, perhaps, can be. It is a power “to compel parties, in any cause, to discover, on oath, all requisite points, necessary to the investigation of truth and justice”.

Now, the power to compel a discovery, as it exists in the [516]

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ga. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faircloth-v-jordan-ga-1854.