Maxwell v. Rives

11 Nev. 213
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1876
DocketNo. 785
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 11 Nev. 213 (Maxwell v. Rives) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxwell v. Rives, 11 Nev. 213 (Neb. 1876).

Opinions

By the Court,

Beatty, J.:

The respondent is judge of the seventh district, and this is a proceeding by certiorari instituted for the purpose of reversing his order adjudging the petitioner guilty of contempt of court. The return to the writ discloses the following state of facts :

The Meadow Yalley Mining Company sued the petitioner to recover a lot of crude silver bullion valued at $4000, and he was subsequently indicted by the grand jury of Lincoln county for the larceny of the same bullion. Both cases were set for trial on the same day—October 14, 1875—the trial of the criminal case to take precedence. On the fourth of October the attorney of the Meadow Yalley Company gave notice that he would take the deposition of Maxwell in the civil case before the respondent, the district judge, on the ninth of October, and at the same time filed and served the ordinary affidavit for taking the deposition of a party to an action. The petitioner being confined in the county jail under the indictment for larceny, the respondent, as district judge, ordered the sheriff to bring him into open court for the purpose of giving his deposition, and in com[217]*217pliance with that order the sheriff produced him in court on the ninth of October, and he was sworn as a witness. He was then ashed a number of questions, some of which he answered and some of which he declined to answer. Those which he declined to answer were all addressed to the same point, and amounted in effect to this: “How-did you become possessed of that bullion?” The grounds specified for his refusal to answer were various, but are all comprised under these heads: First. The proceeding to take his deposition was not authorized by law; and, Second. To answer would expose his defense to the criminal charge upon which he was about to be tried, and so give the state an undue advantage over him. The court overruled these objections and found him guilty of a separate contempt for' every question that he refused to answer—ten in all—and imposed ten fines amounting in the aggregate to $4250. The court also struck out his answer in the case. After an attempted trial of the criminal case, in which the jury disagreed, the petitioner, through his counsel, offered to answer the questions which he had before refused to answer, and thereupon moved the court to vacate the orders fining him for contempt and to reinstate his answer. These motions were overruled. The affidavits filed in connection with the various proceedings in the district court contain a great many allegations intended to prove that the taking of petitioner’s deposition in the civil case, before his trial on the criminal charge, was designed for no other purpose than to fish for evidence and discover - his defense, so as to put him in the power of “his enemies,” meaning thereby the Meadow Valley Company and the district attorney. These •allegations, however, cannot be considered. In this proceeding we are not at liberty to extend our inquiry beyond the simple question whether» the respondent exceeded his jurisdiction. The motives of those who invoked his action, however wicked they may have been, are entirely beside the purpose, and our decision will be based solely upon the material facts which are above fully set forth.

It will not be necessary either to specify all the particulars of the alleged excess of. jurisdiction, as three only of [218]*218his specifications are relied upon by the petitioner, which are:

First. The court exceeded its jurisdiction in ordering the sheriff to bring him out of jail and into court;

Second. In ordering him to be sworn and to answer as a witness; and

Third. In imposing successive or cumulative fines.

The first and second points have been argued and will be considered together. With reference to both it may be said that there is no pretense that the Meadow Yalley company would not have had the absolute right to take the deposition of the petitioner on the notice and affidavit filed, if he had not been a prisoner confined upon an indictment for the larceny of the bullion which was the subject of the action; and there is no pretense that the district jirdge was not the proper officer to take the deposition. The whole argument is confined to the two propositions, that the court could not order the petitioner to be brought out of jail and into court to give his deposition, and that he could not be compelled to testify if his answers would expose his defense to the indictment.

The provisions of the statute relating to the first proposition are contained in sections 1459, 1460, and 1461 of the compiled laws, and counsel for the petitioner contends that a proper construction of those three sections excludes the notion that a prisoner can be brought out of jail in any case for the purpose of giving his deposition. His deposition, it is said, must be taken in jail. He can only be brought before the court for the purpose of testifying orally at the trial. He contends further that if a prisoner can be brought into court in any case for the purpose of taking his deposition, the petitioner could not be so produced,in this caso, because there was no affidavit filed to show what his testimony was expected to be, or that it was material, as required by section 1460. It is true there was no compliance with the provisions of that section; and there is no doubt that the affidavit filed by the attorney for the Meadow Yalley company failed to make out a case for an order to produce the prisoner before the court for the purpose of [219]*219having Lis deposition taken, even if such an order -is proper in any case—a question we think it unnecessary to decide. It seems perfectly clear, however, that the order for his production in court is a matter of which the petitioner is not entitled to complain, and that the jurisdiction of the court to take his deposition did not depend upon the validity of that order. The two things are entirely distinct. A party to a civil action has a perfect right to take the deposition of his adversary whether he is in or out of jail. Rut when he is in jail the aid of a court, or judge, is necessary'in order tp obtain access to him there, or to secure his production in court. A judge is not bound to make an order for that purpose, and ought not to do so unless the ends of justice, require it; and the evidence requisite for showing that the order is necessary is an affidavit setting out the testimony that is expected from the prisoner and its materiality.

But the law which provides for such an affidavit was never designed for the protection of the prisoner, but only to prevent improper and unnecessary interference with the custody of prisoners. The sheriff is responsible for their safe keeping, and the law very properly provides that he shall not be obliged to produce them in court, or admit strangers to see them in jail, unless an important purpose is to be subserved. But when he obeys an order to produce a prisoner in court, although it may have been improvidently granted, it is no concern of the prisoner that his jailer has been more compliant than he was obliged to be. He is actually in court, and, being there, may be sworn as a witness in the same manner as if he had attended in obedience to a subpoena. (Comp. Laws, sec. 1453.) His right to stay in jail is not so sacred as to invest him with any greater privilege than other persons who happen' to be proseut.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Nev. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-rives-nev-1876.