Mahan v. United States

6 Ct. Cl. 331
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ct. Cl. 331 (Mahan v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahan v. United States, 6 Ct. Cl. 331 (cc 1870).

Opinion

Nott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Three has grown up in this court a u mischievous practice,” as it would have been termed by the earlier judges of the common law; and it consists in a party, after he has once taken the deposition of his witness, recalling him, and without leave of the court, or cause, or excuse shoAvn, reexamining the same [335]*335witness upon tbe same subject-matter. This practice lias been sometimes alluded to by the court, and with disapprobation; but as no objection has ever been raised by the opposite party, there has been nothing to call forth a direct decision. The present case, however, does require judicial notice, and for a reason that might have been apprehended — that the second deposition of a witness flatly contradicts the first.

At nisi prius the rule is well understood, and I apprehend is universally adhered to, that a party must exhaust his examination in chief before he dismisses his witness. It is within the discretion of the court to allow the witness to be recalled, or his examination,in chief resumed; but when one or the other is allowed, it is a privilege and not a right. The privilege, moreover, is not granted as of course, but only where a satisfactory reason is assigned, and in furtherance of truth and j ustice.

Where the testimony of a witness is taken on written interrogatories there is not the same strict application of the rule, for counsel framing such interrogatories for a distant and unseen witness cannot be held to anticipate everything that he will say or omit to say; and witnesses will not understand the formal written interrogatories, nor gather their thoughts and memories together as under the pressure of an oral examination. Yet here the reexamination is not of course, and the court allowing it should be satisfied that it is sought to supply unintended defects, and not to alter what was deliberately uttered. The case of Ranney et al. v. Weed et al. (1 Barb., S. C. R., p. 220) is a case in point. The defendants moved ufor leave to issue anew commission to reexamine one of the same witnesses examined under a former commissionP They placed their motion upon the ground that the witness “ toould now he able to testify more definitely than heforeP But the Supreme Court of New York refused to issue the commission, and through an eminent judge said:

Per EDMONDS, J.: With full knowledge on the part of the defendants as to what the witness could testify to, they issued their commission, framed their interrogatories, and obtained the witness’s answer; and now, without any suggestion that their witness had made any mistake, or that any new evidence had been discovered, but merely on the expectation that he may now swear somewhat stronger on a point upon which he [336]*336bas been already examined, tbe motion is to have the witness reexamined. That ought not to be allowed; the practice would be fraught with too much danger.7’

There is a third form of examination, where the witness is subjected indeed to oral examination, but where it is out of court, at a distance, and by counsel employed for that purpose, who knows little of the facts of the case. In such instances it would be rigorous to hold parties strictly to the rule of nisi prius. Courts, on the contrary, will incline to the more relaxed practice appertaining to an examination on written interrogatories.

In this court, where all testimony is taken by deposition, an order is always entered by the clerk for the taking of testimony as of course, (Eule XX.) No application to the court for an order in the instance of every witness who is to be examined is necessary. The examination of a witness before a commissioner is the usual,'established practice, and is a right; but when the right is exercised it is exhausted.

Should a party find it necessary to reexamine a witness, he ought to apply for leave to the court. Should he neglect to apply, he must take the risk of his second deposition being excluded. Should no such permission have been sought, the court will still exercise its discretion as to admitting the second deposition if it is objected to at the trial.

The case now before us is a suit brought to recover the net proceeds of one hundred and sixteen bales of cotton captured in Mississippi. The principal question is that of ownership. On the former trial the court was unable to reach a conclusion, and remanded the case under the following decision r

u Per CURIAM: After long and careful consideration we find the proofs in this case so defective and vague upon points in which, in the nature of things, there must be clear and definite evidence, that we have been unable to reach any satisfactory conclusion. We therefore send the case back that the parties, if they choose, may furnish other testimony on the following points: 1. When the transfer of the cotton was made to the claimant. 2. What was the consideration for the transfer. 3. When the claimant arrived at the age of twenty-one, or was first legally married.”

Upon this question of ownership the chief witness for the claimant on the former trial, as on this, was her mother, she being also the vendor of the captured cotton. Since the former [337]*337trial she bas been reexamined by tbe claimant on the precise point as to which she previously testified — the sale or transfer of the property. Both examinations were oral, and at both counsel for the respective parties attended. On the first of these the witness testified positively that the cotton was moved from her plantation to Kingston to keep it from being destroyed; and that u it was witness’s cotton when it was moved to Kingston.” On her reexamination, two years later, she testifies, “The sale to my daughter toolc place before it toas talcen to Kingston.” The two statements are utterly irreconcilable, and the context of each indicates that the witness said what she then meant.

This time of the alleged sale is an important element in the case; for if the sale took place before the cotton was transferred to Kingston, there are shown certain acts of the claimant which may be regarded as acts of ownership; if, on the contrary, the sale did not take place till after the transfer to Kingston, these acts can be deemed nothing more than the assistance which a daughter would naturally lend to her mother. The importance of the fact was as apparent on the first trial as on this, and if it existed the responsibility rested upon the parties to establish it then. On this, the second trial, they indeed produce, the testimony of a second witness, a servant girl fourteen years of age when the transaction took place, who, nearly eight years afterward, essays to fix positively the precise time. Without throwing discredit upon the testimony, we think the witness could not have known so much as the parties themselves; and that the vendor must have known better when and what she did than a chance listener of her mistress’s conversation. We come back, therefore, to the testimony of Mrs. Mitchell as the only light by which we can here be guided. She having been reexamined by the claimants without the leave of the court, the second examination in chief going to the same subject-matter as to which the first went, no excuse for or explanation of the discrepancy being vouchsafed, and the later testimony of the witness being entirely overthrown by the earlier, we think that it cannot avail the claimants anything.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ct. Cl. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahan-v-united-states-cc-1870.