Stuart v. Allen

45 Wis. 158
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 45 Wis. 158 (Stuart v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stuart v. Allen, 45 Wis. 158 (Wis. 1878).

Opinion

Oetoh, J.

This cause was pending in the county court of Milwaukee county, and at issue upon complaint and answer, and the appellants had given notice to the respondent, under sec. 55, ch. 137, E. S., and its amendments, to appear and he examined before Edward M. Hunter, Esq., a court commissioner of Milwaukee county, and the respondent did so appear; and, while being- examined, certain questions were propounded to him by the appellants’ counsel, which were objected to by the counsel of the respondent on the ground of their irrelevancy, and the respondent refused to answer the same, and they remained unanswered when the examination was closed; and thereupon the appellants’ counsel requested the commissioner to certify the deposition and such refusals to answer, to the county court, for the purpose of obtaining its determination as to the propriety of the questions which the respondent so re[160]*160fused to answer, and for obtaining an order from tbe court compelling tbe respondent to answer tbe same. Tbe appellants also obtained from the county court an order upon tbe respondent, to show cause why be should not answer eaeb and all of tbe questions which be has so refused to answer before tbe commissioner, or, in default thereof, that bis complaint be stricken off, etc.

Upon the hearing of this rule, the county court made tbe following order: “Tbe court, now being sufficiently advised, adjudges that the objections of the plaintiff’s counsel to the several questions propounded to the plaintiff which the plaintiff refused to answer, and which are certified to this court for decision by said court commissioner, should be and are sustained, for the reasons stated in said several objections, and that the said plaintiff rightfully refused to answer the same upon the advice of his said counsel, and that therefore the motion of the said' defendants, based upon their order to show cause, is denied.”

From this order or decision, the appeal is taken to this court, which the respondent’s counsel now moves to dismiss on the ground that such an order is not appealable.

The order itself, although in the form of an order denying the motion based upon the order or rule to show cause, is really nothing more than the ruling of the county court as to the relevancy and admissibility of certain evidence offered by the appellants and objected to by the respondent, and is no order, either intermediate or final, properly so called, which, under the statute, is appealable.

In this state, the court commissioner conducting such an examination, though having the power to compel the attendance of the party for such purpose by attachment, as in cases of taking depositions by sec. 94, ch. 13, R. S. 1858, has no lawful authority to punish a party or witness for refusing to testify or to answer questions propounded to him, as for contempt. Such an examination of a party before trial is strictly a statutory proceeding; and the officer conducting it, whether a judge at chambers, the county judge or a court commissioner, has [161]*161no power to punish for such contempt, unless specially conferred by the statute. In re Remington, 7 Wis., 643; Appleton v. Appleton, 50 Barb., 486; People v. Brennan, 45 id., 344.

The course to be pursued by the commissioner in the examination of a party previous and ancillary to the pleadings in the cause, in place of and as a substitute for a bill of discovery proper, where the proper order is obtained, and the interrogatories and proper questions to be propounded, and their materiality to the proposed issue, are settled and determined beforehand, and such party refuses to answer them, or any of them, would seem to be plain; for it is.clearly and directly a contempt of the court granting such order, and so directing; and, upon the report of such refusal by the commissioner, unless the questions objected to are waived by the opposite party, the court would at once punish for the contempt.

But in an examination of a party after issue, upon verbal interrogatories or orally, where no order is made by the court, and no special direction given to the examination, questions of the materiality or relevancy of the evidence will necessarily arise to be decided. The proper practice in such case, and how and by whom these questions are to be decided, are not so clear, and there seems to be a strange dearth of authorities upon the subject. It would seem that in such case the same practice would obtain, and the testimony would be taken in the same manner, as in talcing the depositions of witnesses upon verbal interrogatories to be used conditionally or otherwise in a cause at issue pending in court. Secs. 54, 55, ch. 137, E. S. 1858; First National Bank of Elkhorn v. Wood, 26 Wis., 500; McVickar v. Greenleaf, 30 How. Pr., 61.

In the case of People v. Dyckman, 24 How. Pr., 222, the course pointed out in the opinion, to be pursued in New York, when the officer conducting the examination has the power to punish for contempt for refusal to answer,, would seem to be equally the proper practice in this state, or anywhere where no power to punish for such contempt is given to the officer taking the evidence. The court say: “ The judge [taking the evidence] is to decide whether the question is legal and perti[162]*162nent to the issue . . . Before compelling the witness to answer1, the judge must be satisfied that the question propounded is legal and pertinent to the issue formed by the pleadings.”

There would seem to be great propriety in a court commissioner, examining a party before trial in this state, deciding upon the objections made to the relevancy of evidence so taken, at the time, and if such objection should be overruled by him, and the witness ordered to answer, and-he should then persist in refusal to answer, in his reporting the whole matter to'the court in which the action is. pending, for proper proceedings against the party for such contempt. Then, in either case, the court might punish the party by fine or imprisonment, or by striking his pleadings from the files; and from such final order perhaps an appeal would lie to this court, as from an order affecting a substantial right or a provisional remedy. Noonan v. Orton, 28 Wis., 386; Blossom v. Ludington, 31 id., 283; First National Bank v. Wood, supra; Forbes Willard, 37 How. Pr., 193; Green v. Herder, 30 id., 210. But these questions we do not decide, as they are not pertinent to this motion, but suggest them, as they may throw some light upon the real question here, the appealability of this order. Whether it is the proper practice for an officer taking depositions in this state, when he has no power to punish for contempts, to so decide upon the materiality of the evidence at the time, and shut out or fail to take evidence offered which he deems impertinent and irrelevant, as in some states, or to take down all the evidence offered, material or immaterial, subject to objections, and return the evidence and the objections to the court, as in Michigan (23 Mich., 56), we do not decide. But in case of persistent refusal of a party to answer questions propounded, it would seem to be necessary, in order to obtain the evidence of the party before the trial, that immediate report should be made by the officer to the proper court, for proper judicial action. When the practice is adopted, as in this case (wanting only the ruling of the commissioner upon the objections), the court may properly pass upon such [163]

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Bluebook (online)
45 Wis. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuart-v-allen-wis-1878.