Glenny v. Stedwell

51 How. Pr. 329
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 How. Pr. 329 (Glenny v. Stedwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenny v. Stedwell, 51 How. Pr. 329 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Folger, J.

— This case calls for a declaration of the meaning of chapter 6 of part 2 of the Code of Procedure, entitled “ Examination of Parties.” There has been conflict of opinion thereon in the courts which have been called upon to put it into practical operation, as is shown by the diverse decisions rendered, and by the several rules of practice which have been framed and promulgated.

Looking at the practice for which this chapter is a substitute, and giving to the different sections of it the construction that they seem to demand, we have come to the conclusion that a plaintiff in an action pending may examine the adverse party, on oath, before the service on him of a complaint, and for the purpose of obtaining the facts on which to frame a complaint.

As a general rule, a court of equity has jurisdiction to entertain a bill for the discovery of facts which may aid in the prosecution or defense of an action in another court, and [330]*330which may enable the plaintiff to ascertain who will be proper parties to that action (Moolady agt. Morton, 1 Ber. Ch., 469 ; S. C., 2 Dickens, 652). The bill maybe filed when the plaintiff has become actually involved in the litigation, or when he is only liable to be so, and whether he has or has not yet commenced his action (Adam’s Eq., pp. [19] 86, 87; 2 Story Eq. Juris., secs. 1483, 1495; City of London agt. Levy, 8 Ves. Pr., 404). This jurisdiction was conferred upon the supreme court by the constitution of 1846 (art. 6, sec. 3).

The commissioners who reported the Code of Procedure, and the legislature which enacted it, found the supreme court in possession of this j urisdietion. It is not to be supposed that so great a change was intended to be made as to abolish this power, and to take away this right and means of relief to suitors, unless there is found clear indication of it in the report of the commissioners, or an unmistakable intention in the terms of the enactment. It is suggested that it is a power liable to abuse in the use it may be put to in the harassing of antagonists by inquisitorial inquiry. It is not a sound argument which reasons against the existence of a power from the possibility of the abuse of it; and it is not to be denied that the prudent and legitimate use of it will not, of necessity, be found vexatious, and that it has heretofore proved of benefit to honest suitors, and a great aid to justice. If the power which the court of chancery had under the former practice was exercised without vexation to defendants, why may not the same power be benignly exerted by the courts at this day ? It is for the judges now, by rules of practice and by rulings at the examination, to keep plaintiffs within proper bounds, and to ward off from the defendant all inquiry which is vain or curious.

We find that, in reporting the provisions of the Code for the examination of parties to actions which prohibit the bringing of a bill of discovery in one action in aid of another action, the commissioners meant them to be a means of accomplishing substantially the same ends which were attained in a [331]*331court of equity in the exercise of its jurisdiction to compel discovery (commissioners’ first report, p. 244), nor do the sections reported and adopted prohibit the essential relief before attained. They interdict the mode of relief, as well might be, after the distinctions.were removed between a court of law and one of equity, and the commingling in one of the powers and jurisdiction of the two kinds of courts. They might then well provide that in the same action, with whatever subject-matters it dealt, discovery should be afforded and relief granted. ■ It was a rule in equity, that a bill for discovery would not be entertained, when the bill asked also for relief which a court of law alone could give. But when equity jurisdiction no longer stood alone, but was committed with that at law to the same court, this rule had lost the reason for it, and the mode of procedure could be adapted to the change. Section 389 of the Code, the first section of the chapter, does not prohibit the obtaining discovery, but declares that it can be sought only in the mode specified in that chapter. In the same action in which the relief is sought must the discovery be sought also; and this seems to he the only substantial restriction put upon the breadth of the former practice. The action for relief must be commenced and discovery must be sought in that action, and from a party thereto, in the manner provided in succeeding sections of the chapter. Section 390 makes it lawful to examine as a witness a party to an action, whether that action be equitable in its nature, or be one at law. So did the Laws of 1847 (Laws of 1847, chap. 426, second vol., 630). It needed an affirmative enactment to make it so. The whole scope and purpose of that section is to make lawful such an examination; and it declares first the legality of it, and then the means of bringing the party to the book; then the rules under which the examination shall be had; and then, with a limitation of the generality with which it commences, states the three modes in which the examination shall be had: First, at the trial; second, conditionally; third, by commission. The act of [332]*3321847, before mentioned, had provided for these three ways, and also for a fourth, to wit, for the perpetuation of his testimony in accordance with the Revised Statutes (2 R. S., p. 398, sec. 33). All that section 390 effects is, that a party to an action may be called and examined as a witness in some of the same circumstances as a person not a party to the suit or proceeding. It is at once perceived that if a suitor is debarred, by section 389, from seeking discovery, save in the action in which he seeks relief, and if the discovery he may have in his action for relief is only at the time and in the mode prescribed by section 390, the rights and benefit he would have had by the former bill of discovery in a court of equity were materially abridged. For he could not search the mind and memory of his adversary by commission (2 R. S.,p. 393, sec. 12), or at the trial, only after an issue of fact had been joined in the action, and conditionally (id., p. 391, sec. 1), only when he was about to depart the state, or was sick or infirm. The statute for the perpetuation of testimony (id., p. 495, sec. 43) enables a person who is a party to a suit pending, or who expects to be a party in a suit about to be commenced, to take testimony conditionally and to perpetuate it; and there is no restriction as to the time during the pendency of the action when this may be done, save perhaps by implication, that it shall' be before a trial. But all these provisions look not to the same end as sometimes did a bill of discovery. The statutes look to the obtaining and preserving depositions as testimony, to be used as testimony, and that upon the trial by either party who chooses so to do. The bill for discovery, as we have seen, had much wider range than that, and enabled a suitor to procure the precise information, if it lay in the mind of his adversary, on which he might frame his pleadings in an action for relief; might select the persons whom he should make defendants, and procure the knowledge of facts which would qualify him to come to trial well prepared. If it be said that the statute fo.r the perpetuation of testimony, without expressing this as one [333]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 How. Pr. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenny-v-stedwell-ny-1874.