Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Brewer

128 So. 83, 157 Miss. 890, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 289
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1930
DocketNo. 28502.
StatusPublished

This text of 128 So. 83 (Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Brewer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Brewer, 128 So. 83, 157 Miss. 890, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 289 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

*896 McGrOwen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

An original bill was filed in the chancery court of Coahoma county by the appellant, the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, against Earl Brewer, Mrs. Earl Brewer, M)rs. Earline Brewer Shelton, W. P. Holland, Mrs. Florence T. Holland, J. W. Cutrer, and Mrs. J. W. Cutrer; and subsequently E. W. Smith was made a party thereto.

Before the bill was filed a chancellor of another district granted a fiat for the writ of injunction against the Bank of Clarksdale; to restrain it from paying over to the appellees funds in its hands, which the appellant contended should be subject to the payment of an indebtedness owing to it, guaranteed to be paid by Earl Brewer and J. W. Cutrer.

*897 The hill sought to set aside certain conveyances from Earl Brewer to Cutrer and Smith, from Earl Brewer to Mrs. Brewer and Mrs. Shelton, and from Mrs. Shelton to Mrs. Holland; and conveyances from J. W. Cutrer to Mrs. J. W. Cutrer; and subsequently the Planters ’ Bank was made a party, and an injunction was sued out, restraining it from paying out money upon which a lien was asserted.

The bill sought a personal decree against Cutrer and Brewer on a certain contract of suretyship or guaranty, executed by Brewer and Cutrer, as sureties or guarantors of indebtedness of the Planters’ Bank of Clarksdale, in favor of the appellant. These contracts of suretyship were in writing, and were several times renewed, and the indebtedness alleged to be due by the Planters ’ Bank to the appellant was evidenced by the bank’s promissory notes.

The answers admitted the signing of the contract of suretyship; but Brewer and Cutrer said they were induced through fraud to sign the same; denied that there was any indebtedness by the Planters’ Bank, the principal, to the appellant; set up an agreement of settlement of other litigation between the Canal Bank & Trust Company of New Orleans and Earl Brewer; and denied all the' several allegations of fraud.

There are more than two thousand three hundred pages in this record, much of the contents of which are to be found scattered here and there in the reports of decisions of this court. We therefore refrain from making a detailed statement of facts, but shall only set forth such facts as are necessary to a decision of the several points presented here.

The court below finally dismissed the bill as to all parties defendant. The principal sum on which the suit is based was in excess of two hundred sixty-nine, thousand dollars. The Mississippi Valley Trust Company prosecutes an appeal here. In their order we shall take up the assignments of error.

*898 First, the court erred in sustaining the motion to suppress the deposition of the witness, H. A. Fagan. The contents of this deposition were material on the issue of fraud; and counsel practically concedes that it is all the testimony he had.

On Saturday, February 25, 1928, one of counsel for appellant made an affidavit, in which he alleges that H. A. Fagan was a nonresident witness for the appellant; that he had been sick for some time; and that Fagan’s physician had advised the attorney that, because of the nature of Fagan’s illness, a serious operation would have to be performed on him on the following Monday or Tuesday, the 27th or 28th. It was also alleged that the operation might prove fatal. This affidavit, together with interrogatories to be propounded to Fagan, and answered by him, were filed after three o’clock on Saturday afternoon, in the chancery clerk’s office. A copy of the interrogatories, with notice, was served on Cutrer and Smith, attorneys for all the defendants, and for themselves, about seven o’clock that afternoon, after the clerk’s office had been closed for the day. The notice required the appellees to file their cross-interrogatories on the following day, Sunday, so that the interrogatories and cross-interrogatories might be mailed to Chicago; and recites that the deposition must be taken in Chicago at ten o’clock Monday morning, the 27th.

Fagan was not a party to the litigation. Brewer and Mrs. ¡Shelton were not served with copies of the interrogatories until after the deposition of Fagan had been taken; which deposition was taken ex parte on Monday morning, no one appearing for the appellees, either by cross-interrogatories, or by personal appearance in Chicago. It is shown that a train left Clarksdale at about four o’clock Sunday afternoon, arriving in Chicago about an hour before the time appointed for the taldng of Fagan’s deposition. The record discloses that later, on the motion to suppress the deposition, the appellant served notice on the appellees to retake the deposition *899 of Fagan, on which occasion Cutrer and Brewer were in Chicago for the purpose of taking the deposition two or three days prior to the date set.

Counsel for appellants became involved in a controversy with the chancery clerk, and because of this declined to take the deposition, although Brewer and Cutrer advised counsel that they would waive all formalities, and take the depositions at the time named; the deposition was not retaken. Fagan lived until February, 1929.

The court below suppressed the deposition on the ground that the notice to take the deposition, under the circumstances, was not reasonable. The deposition was sought to be taken by virtue of section 1669, Hemingway Js Code 1927, section 1936, Code of 1906, which is as follows:

“Depositions de bene esse may be toben on filing bill in chancery. — After bill filed in chancery, the complainant, on affidavit made and filed that any of his witnesses are sick, aged, infirm, or about to go out of the state, may take the deposition of such witness, on giving the opposite party, if resident in the state, such reasonable notice as the circumstances will admit, of the time and place of taking the same.”

Pretermitting any discussion of whether or not the notice, in point of time, was reasonable, we are of opinion that the section quoted above only authorizes the taking of depositions of witnesses within the state; and does not contemplate the filing of interrogatories to be answered by the witness, but, as we see it, provides for the taking of depositions of witnesses in the state who are “sick, aged, infirm, or about to go out of the state.” The language of the statute negatives the idea, in the light of these provisions — and the several statutes must be taken and construed together — that this provision for such depositions applies to witnesses residing out of the state. The language of the statute carries that conviction and sustains that construction.

*900 Appellant sought to avail itself of both statutes by filing cross-interrogatories as provided in section 1661, Hemingway’s Code 1927, section 1928 of the Code of 1906, and then serving the notice as provided in section 1669, supra.

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128 So. 83, 157 Miss. 890, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-valley-trust-co-v-brewer-miss-1930.