In re Companhia de Navegacao Lloyd Brasileiro

7 F.2d 235, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1216, 1925 A.M.C. 1167
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 22, 1925
DocketNo. 17429
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 235 (In re Companhia de Navegacao Lloyd Brasileiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Companhia de Navegacao Lloyd Brasileiro, 7 F.2d 235, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1216, 1925 A.M.C. 1167 (E.D. La. 1925).

Opinion

BEATTIE, District Judge.

The numerous claimants have joined in a motion for a dedimus potestatem to take the testimony of eight witnesses in Vera Cruz, Mexico, by written interrogatories attached to the motion and such cross-interrogatories as may be propounded by the other parties to this cause.

The Companhia de Navegaeao Lloyd Brasiloiro, petitioner, has filed exceptions and objections to the granting of the above-mentioned motion of the claimants, find prays for the denial of claimants’ motion, and, in the alternative, prays for leave to be represented at the examination of the witnesses by counsel, who shall be permitted to conduct such oral cross-examination as shall appear to him fit and proper. Petitioner further prays .for a delay of 45 days to examine the interrogatories proposed by the claimants to be propounded to- said witnesses.

The first exception of the petitioner is that claimants’ motion for the dedimus potestatem bears in its caption the wrong title of the suit. By error, the motion does bear the title of the original suit of the claimants against the steamship Pelotas, with which this suit is concerned, but the motion bears the proper docket number of this court, and the error in the title is a mere clerical error, which may be corrected. This error is immaterial, and the clerk of this court is hereby authorized to change the title of the motion to conform to the facts.

The other objections of the petitioner to the allowance of claimants’ motion for a dedimus potestatem consist substantially of the objection that, owing to the amount involved and the technical questions presented, it would be difficult, if not impossible, to properly examine the witnesses and elicit from them the full facts, and to test their credibility, by written interrogatories.

The question before me for decision, in this ease is therefore whether the petitioner is entitled to cross-examine orally witnesses of the claimants, for the examination of whom claimants have asked for a dedimus potestatem under U. S. R. S. 866 (Comp. St. § 1477), and rule 61 of this court.

I do not think that the fact that this courts through Judges Dawkins and Poster, have in this ease heretofore authorized letters roga[236]*236tory to be issued on tbe application of tbe petitioner to take tbe testimony of its own witnesses in Brazil by oral interrogatories, has any bearing on the question now before the court. That was a ease where the petitioner waS asking for a particular method of examining its own witnesses, alleging, as a reason therefor, among other things, that the witnesses were hostile, and suggesting that because of this they might not be willing to testify under a dedimus potestatem, and that letters rogatory were necessary in order to invoke the power of the court in Brazil to enforce the attendance of the witnesses. I do not understand that under letters rogatory the examination of the witnesses is necessarily oral. It is claimed it may be oral or by interrogatories. As to whether witnesses may be examined orally under letters rogatory, it is not necessary for me to decide, for in this case the claimants have asked for #n examination of their own witnesses under a dedimus potestatem. The question, therefore, before me, is whether, when the claimants have asked for a dedimus potestatem to be executed under written interrogatories, the petitioner has a right to demand .the right to cross-examine the same witnesses orally, instead of by written cross-interrogatories. Ordinarily, it certainly would be the rule that the party, desiring to examine witnesses abroad, should have the right to select his own method under the statutes and the rules of court, and it would be unusual, to say the least, even if there were no rule to the contrary, to allow the adverse party to select another method of cross-examining these same witnesses.

Assuming the correctness of the decision in the case of The Titanic, 206 F. 500, that in New York, under the rule of the District Court there, a dedimus potestatem can be executed by the oral examination of witnesses if the facts justify same, this would not be authority for examining the witnesses orally under a dedimus potestatem issued by this court, when the rules of this' court differ from the rules of that court, and require a dedimus potestatem to be executed by written interrogatories. Without a change in or violation of the rule .of this court, a dedimus potestatem cannot be executed except by written interrogatories and cross-interrogatories. The case of The Titanic is authority for the ruling that the rules of the court issuing the commission control. It was because, in the ease of The Titanic, the rules in the New York court specifically provided for the execution of commissions in accordance with the law of the state of New York, and because, under the law of the state of New York, a commission might be executed on oral interrogatories, that the court in that ease decided that the dedimus potestatem could be executed by oral interrogatories.

On-page 503 of the Titanic Case the court said: “In this respect I do not think that Judge Brown’s language is to be taken as meaning that under the powers reserved by sections 913 and 918, together with the forty-sixth Supreme Court admiralty rule, this court has no power to change the method of executing commissions. It is a detail of practice which would normally be within the competence of rules of court.”

Again, on the same page, the court said: “The phrase ‘common usage’ ” (used in U. S. ft. S. 866, relative to dedimus potestatem) “seems to me to admit of changing practice as the new needs of the time require, and I can see no better method of establishing a new common usage than by rules of court.”

If this be good law, then this court must be controlled by its rule 61, which provides that “evidence taken under dedimus potestatem * * * shall be by written interrogatories propounded to the witnesses, filed in the clerk’s office, and * * he [the opposite party] is required to file cross-interrogatories, if any he has, within five days from a date to be specified in such notice.”

The only way in which the court could, in the case at bar, authorize a cross-examination by oral interrogatories, is by holding either that the claimants have no right to a dedimus potestatem, and must, at the behest of the petitioner, select another method of examining their own witnesses, or by holding that it will violate its own rule (No. 61) requiring a dedimus potestatem to be executed by written interrogatories and cross-interrogatories.

This court should be governed by, and should not violate one of, its own rules. The statutes authorize the issuance of a dedimus potestatem. The claimants have selected this method of examining their own witnesses. Unless this court has the power, and should exercise the power of selecting for the claimants the method by which they should examine their own witnesses, and of therefore saying* that they should not do so under a dedimus potestatem, the claimants have a right to adopt this method, and this method, under the rules of court, authorizes only written interrogatories and cross-interrogatories.

In petitioner’s original brief (page 55), filed last year before Judge Dawkins in con[237]

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Related

United States v. Warren
Third Circuit, 1999
The Pelotas
21 F.2d 236 (E.D. Louisiana, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 235, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1216, 1925 A.M.C. 1167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-companhia-de-navegacao-lloyd-brasileiro-laed-1925.