In Re Keough

85 N.E.2d 550, 151 Ohio St. 307, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 307, 39 Ohio Op. 141, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 428
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1949
Docket31617
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 85 N.E.2d 550 (In Re Keough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Keough, 85 N.E.2d 550, 151 Ohio St. 307, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 307, 39 Ohio Op. 141, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 428 (Ohio 1949).

Opinion

Stewart, J.

Was Gebauer entitled to the records •demanded or to have the information therein made available to him?

Again the question is before us whether a person •subpoenaed to give testimony in a deposition before a notary public may refuse to answer questions on the ground that the information sought is incompetent, immaterial, irrelevant or privileged.

In the case of In re Hyde, 149 Ohio St., 407, 79 N. E. (2d), 224, we reviewed the decisions of this court with reference to questions similar to those involved here and showed how, like Banquo’s ghost, they had been periodically rising during the past 55 years. We stated in the Hyde case as follows:

“It will be noted that in all the cases hereinbefore mentioned, while they diametrically differ in their •conclusions as to the right of a witness in a deposition to refuse to answer questions because of their irrelevancy, incompetency and immateriality, there is a uniformity of opinion that the Avitness may refuse to answer upon the ground that the information sought to be elicited is privileged and may have that question tested in habeas corpus proceedings.”

This court unanimously agreed upon the syllabus in the Hyde case, which reads as follows:

“1. Reports and records concerning an accident in which a public transportation vehicle is involved, which ¡reports and records, according to the custom of the company owning such vehicle, are turned over to and remain in the possession of the company’s legal department, are privileged communications and their *311 production cannot be enforced in the taking of depositions in an action predicated on such accident. (Paragraph three of the syllabus of Ex Parte Schoepf, 74 Ohio St., 1, approved and followed.)
“2. The names and addresses of the operators and the times of operation of public transportation vehicles of a company, as well as the times of their operation in reference to an accident involving one of such vehicles, which information, for general purposes, is a matter of record with the company, are not privileged and are relevant and competent as evidence in an action predicated on such accident claimed to have been caused by the negligence of the operator of such a vehicle. Such information may be elicited through a subpoena issued by a notary public, to one having control of the records of the transportation company, for the taking of his deposition in such action.”

It was claimed by Gebauer that streetcar No. 329' was the one involved in the accident on November 21, 1946, in which he was involved.

Under the holding and logic of the Hyde case, Gebauer was entitled to the information as to the car-barn in which such ear was kept on the date of the accident, as well as the information from the trip sheets-showing the operation of such car on such date and the names of the operators and their times of operation of the car, all as required by the subpoena. Gebauer was entitled to elicit that information only from the records kept for general purposes by the city and not from any records which were prepared for use in connection with the defense of Gebauer’s action. Gebauer was not entitled to the names or reports of any witnesses to his accident, which the city had secured,, or to any records of information of any kind which were made or came into existence as the result of or concerning the accident. Such records were privileged in the hands of the city.

*312 The last pronouncement of this court with reference to the right of a witness, when his deposition is being-taken, to refuse to answer a question upon the ground that it is irrelevant, incompetent or immaterial was in the case of In re Martin, Jr., 141 Ohio St., 87, 47 N. E. (2d), 388. Paragraph four of the syllabus of that case reads:

“A witness who is not a party has no legal right, upon the taking of his deposition, to refuse to answer .any question, upon the advice of his attorney, merely because the attorney believes that the testimony sought is irrelevant, incompetent or immaterial. (Paragraph four of the syllabus in Ex Parte Schoepf, 74 Ohio St., 1, and In re Martin, Jr., 139 Ohio St., 609, overruled.) ”

The petitioner in the present case attempts to make .a distinction, as to the holding in the Martin case, between a witness who is orally asked a question and the petitioner who was called as a party and ordered to produce a document. He refers us to Section 11551, ■General Code, providing- that the court in which an action is pending may order parties to produce books .and writings in their possession which contain evidence pertinent to the issue, in cases and under circumstances where they might theretofore have been compelled to produce them by the ordinary rules of chan•cery. Petitioner then strenuously argues to the effect that the information required by the subpoena in the present case is not pertinent to the issues in the Geibauer case; that the petitioner whose deposition was being taken as a party in the Gebauer case was in a different situation than a witness being.asked a question in a deposition; and that petitioner had a right to refuse to produce or make available the records described in the subpoena.

Petitioner maintains that there is a real and valid distinction between a subpoena ad testificandum and a ¡subpoena duces tecum, but we need not pass upon the *313 question involved in his thesis for the reason that we hold, on authority of the Hyde case, that the information required in the subpoena involved here is pertinent in the Gebauer case.

The identity of the operators of a transportation-vehicle involved in an accident is relevant in an action-concerning such accident by one who claims to have-been hurt therein. The kind of person an operator is, with reference to' his competency or lack thereof or training or lack thereof, bears directly upon the question of the due care of a transportation company with reference to the operators to whom it entrusts its-vehicles.

We are not holding that an accident record of such an operator would shed any light upon his competency or incompetency, because that would require a collateral investigation as to the cause of other accidents not concerned with the one on trial.

Assuredly it would be pertinent to a plaintiff’s case,, in the trial of a negligence action as the result of an-accident in which a public transportation vehicle was concerned, to have information as to what vehicle was involved, as to its schedules on the day of the accident and as to its route. All these matters have a direct bearing upon the question of the operating speed.

Since petitioner’s whole argument with reference to Section 11551, General Code, is bottomed upon a-question of relevancy, Gebauer was entitled under that section to the information he seeks in the subpoena-with which the present case is conceimed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.E.2d 550, 151 Ohio St. 307, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 307, 39 Ohio Op. 141, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-keough-ohio-1949.