State v. Truax

164 P. 597, 96 Wash. 1
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1917
DocketNo. 14004
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 P. 597 (State v. Truax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Truax, 164 P. 597, 96 Wash. 1 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

— Agnes Geissler died testate in the state of Washington, and her will was duly admitted to probate in the superior court of Adams county. Within due time after the admission of the will to probate, one Agnes M. Weber, an heir at law of the testatrix, filed a petition under § 1307 of the code (Remington’s), seeking a contest of the will, averring therein that the testatrix was lacking in the necessary capacity to make a will and was subjected to undue influence by her husband, one of the beneficiaries of the will and the person named therein as executor, at the time the same was executed. After issue had been joined on the petition, the contestees applied to the superior court for a commission to take the deposition of one Linne Thompson, who resided in the state of Iowa, before a notary public named in the application. In the affidavit filed in support of the application, it was averred, that the witness named was the nurse who attended on the testatrix during her last illness; that by her the contestees expected to disprove the allegations of the contestant as to the capacity of the testatrix to make the will; that, since the proceeding was begun, none of the contestees nor their attorneys had personally talked with the witness, and that it was, therefore, impossible for such attorneys to frame written interrogatories to be propounded to the witness which would elicit such knowledge as she had on the question involved. In the application it was asked that the witness be examined upon oral interrogatories to be propounded to her at the time and place of her examination.

After a hearing on the application for the commission, the court found from the records and the representations [3]*3of counsel that the witness named may be a necessary and material witness in the proceeding, and directed a commission to issue. The court refused, however, to permit the deposition of the witness to be taken on oral interrogatories as requested, but directed that the deposition be taken upon “written interrogatories, direct and cross, without there being present any of the interested parties to this proceeding or their counsel”; further directing that any such interrogatories as the parties desired to be submitted to the witness be prepared and served and noticed for settlement before the court upon any regular law and motion day, if objections thereto be made. The proceeding in this court is an application by the contestees for a writ of mandamus to compel the court to issue a commission permitting an examination of the witness on oral interrogatories, as requested by the contestees in the court below.

In this state, the proceeding to take the deposition of a witness to be used as evidence in the courts thereof is governed by statute. If the witness whose testimony is desired is within the state, the moving party has a choice of modes for taking his deposition; he may take the deposition before a designated officer after the service of a prescribed notice on the adverse party, or he may apply to the court for a commission to take such deposition. Where the witness is without the state, the mode permitted is by commission only. The applicable provision of the statute relating to the taking of depositions by that mode is found at § 1240 of Remington’s Code, and reads as follows:

“Any superior court in this state, or any judge thereof, is authorized to grant a commission to take depositions within or without this state. The commission must be issued to a person or persons therein named, by the clerk, under the seal of the court granting the same, and depositions under it may be taken upon written interrogatories or upon oral questions or partly upon oral and partly upon written interrogatories. Before any such commission shall be granted, the person intending to apply therefor shall serve upon the [4]*4adverse party a notice of his intention to make such application, stating the time when and the place where such application will be made, which notice shall be served in the same manner and for the same time as provided in section 1233, unless the the court or judge, for sufficient cause shown by affidavit, prescribe a shorter time. At the time the application is presented, the court or judge shall settle the interrogatories, if any have been served and the parties have not settled the same. The clerk, upon issuing the commission, shall attach the interrogatories thereto, if any have been agreed upon or settled by the court, and immediately forward the same to the commissioner. At least five days’ notice must be given to the party or witness to be examined out of the state, in case such examination shall be had upon oral interrogatories, and the person before whom the deposition of the witness shall be taken shall have the same power to compel the attendance of such parties or witnesses as any person authorized to take such deposition within this state.”

With reference to the manner in which a witness without the state may be examined on a commission issued for that purpose, it was the view of the learned trial judge that it was within the discretion of the court to whom the application for a commission was made to permit it to be done in any one of three ways: (1) wholly upon written interrogatories settled in advance of the issuance of the commission; (2) upon interrogatories propounded to the witness at the time and place of the examination; and (3) partly upon written interrogatories settled in advance of the issuance of the commission and partly upon interrogatories propounded to the witness at the time and place of the examination; holding, in conformity with this view, that it was the duty of the court to exercise this discretion as the facts might appear on the hearing provided for by the statute when the application for the commission is made. We have not been favored with a brief from counsel who represented the contestees at the hearing at bar; but, if we have correctly gathered his meaning, he makes the alternative contention, first, that the court is without discretion of any kind in the matter, that [5]*5it is its duty to issue the commission when a reasonable cause therefor is shown, and that it is the privilege of the party applying for the commission to examine the witness in any one of the three methods provided by statute; or, second, that if an option as to the method of examination exists at all and this option must be expressed in the commission, it is the privilege of the applicant for the commission to exercise the option when the commission is applied for.

It is our opinion that the construction put upon the statute by the court presents the sounder view. The language of the statute, it may be conceded, is not entirely clear, but the legislature, in requiring the examination to be made upon commission and in requiring notice to the adverse party of the application for the commission, must have had a purpose, and that purpose we think was to enable the court to insure to each of the parties an equal opportunity in the presentation of evidence. A case can be conceived where the necessary witnesses may reside at widely separated places. If it were at the option of the moving party to examine them on a commission without interrogatories attached, it can readily be seen that it might amount to a denial of justice to the adverse party, since such a party, without knowing in advance the interrogatories that were to be propounded to the several witnesses, could not intelligently frame proper written cross-interrogatories, and his want of means might prevent him from either appearing in person at the hearing or procuring a proper representative.

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

Related

State Of Washington, V S.b.
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2017

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 P. 597, 96 Wash. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-truax-wash-1917.