Tex. & Pac. R'y Co. v. Hardin

62 Tex. 367, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 250
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 11, 1884
DocketCase No. 1721
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 62 Tex. 367 (Tex. & Pac. R'y Co. v. Hardin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tex. & Pac. R'y Co. v. Hardin, 62 Tex. 367, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 250 (Tex. 1884).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

Application for a continuance was based on the absence of the testimony of certain witnesses who were named; and it shows that the appellant had made an effort to get their depositions by making out interrogatories and sending them to counsel for appellee, who promptly crossed them, and made an agreement waiving commissions and consenting that the depositions might be taken by any officer authorized to take depositions.

This was not the use of such means as the law furnishes to procure testimony. Arts. 2219, 2225, 2227, 2228, B. S., provide a means by which witnesses may be compelled to give their testimony by deposition, and one who fails to use such means cannot be said to have used due diligence. McMahan v. Busby, 29 Tex., 194; Hensley v. Lytle, 5 Tex., 499.

An application which shows that the means given by the law to procure testimony have not been used is addressed to the discretion of the trial court, and unless it clearly appears that such discretion, which is not an arbitrary one, has been abused, this court will not [370]*370reverse a judgment because the court below overruled a motion for a continuance.

The application states that the interrogatories and agreement to take the depositions of the witnesses Bixler, Gastello, Gibson, Armstrong, Williams and Dillon, were sent to a responsible and reliable person in Howard county, Texas, where those witnesses were said to live, that they might be taken by an authorized officer. There is no statement that the interrogatories were ever delivered to any officer authorized to take the depositions, or that any step was taken in reference thereto by the person to whom the interrogatories and agreement were sent. It is not shown that the evidence of the witnesses would have tended to prove any of the defenses set up in the answer, further than is so shown by the general averment that their testimony is material; nor is it shown that the appellant expected to have their testimony at the next term of the court.

It is not shown that the witnesses actually resided in Howard county, nor that they lived there when the interrogatories and agreement were forwarded and had since removed, and that thereby the appellant had been unable to ascertain their residences and procure their testimony. Such facts should have been shown in an application addressed to the discretion of the court. Trammell v. Pilgrim, 20 Tex., 160; McMahan v. Busby, 29 Tex., 195; Baldessore v. Stephanes, 27 Tex., 455; Byne v. Jackson, 25 Tex., 96; Townsend v. State, 41 Tex., 135; Chilson v. Reeves, 29 Tex., 279.

The interrogatories to the witnesses Jackson and Allen, with the agreement to take their depositions without commission, were sent to the clerk of the district court for Tarrant county, where the witnesses resided, on or about May 3, 1884; and the application states that soon after the clerk received the interrogatories and agreement, he notified appellant’s counsel that Allen had gone to Sedalia, Missouri, but promised to take the deposition of Jackson.

The statement as to what occurred in reference to getting the testimony of Jackson after the papers went into the hands of the clerk, as made in the application, is correctly set out in brief of counsel for appellant as follows:

“ That the said Hartsfield, district clerk, as aforesaid, advised defendant’s said attorneys that he would take .the depositions of the said Dr. Jackson as soon as he returned to the city of Fort Worth, which he thought and understood would be about June 1,1884, and defendant’s attorneys wrote him to take the same as soon as Jackson returned. That on or about June 18, 1884, defendant’s attorneys, learning that the depositions of the said Jackson had not been [371]*371taken, wired him to come to Dallas and see them in respect thereto. That said Jackson obeyed said message and went to Dallas, and by defendant’s attorneys’ advice, went on to Terrell to visit plaintiff and examine his arm, hand and injuries. That said Jackson and Allen, as physicians and surgeons, had treated plaintiff and his wife for said injuries immediately after they were sustained, and for some time thereafter. That defendant’s attorneys notified said Jackson that this cause was set for trial on the 24th day of this month, and instructed and requested him to attend in person as a witness for defendant herein, and said Jackson promised so to do. That on the evening of Saturday, June 21, 1884, defendant’s said attorneys, in order that said Jackson might not fail to attend as such witness on the trial of this cause, sent him another telegraphic dispatch to be present on June 24, 1884, the day this cause was set for trial. That in obedience to said dispatch, said Jackson, on yesterday, the 24th of June, came as far as Terrell with the view of attending this court as a witness in this cause. From that point he notified defendant’s claim agent, J. T. Brown, that he was sick, suffering from dysentery. Defendant’s said agent, Brown, then notified him to come here to-day so as to be present at the trial hereof, but thereafter said Brown was notified by telephone that said Jackson had grown worse with his said ailment and had returned to Fort Worth for medical treatment.”

On this state of facts the court below may have held that the appellant relied on having the witness present at the trial, and, therefore, did not use such diligence to get his deposition as it might have used. If so, we cannot say that such ruling, under the facts, was erroneous.

If the clerk of the district court for Tarrant county had been clothed with such powers as the articles of the statute before referred to would have given to him, had the statutory method of taking depositions been pursued, it may be, and is most likely, true, that the deposition of the witness would have been taken.

The witness Jackson is shown to have been in charge of the appellant’s hospital at Fort Worth, and over him the appellant seems to have exercised such control as enabled it to call him to Dallas, to send him to Terrell, and, but for his indisposition, to have secured his attendance on the trial; and the court below may have held that the exercise of such control as the appellant had over the witness would have enabled it to get his deposition. The appellant knew that his deposition had not been taken on June 18th; that the cause had been set for trial on the 24th; yet no effort seems to have been made between these dates to get his deposition.

[372]*372After appellant’s counsel were notified that the witness Allen had gone to Sedalia, Missouri, other interrogatories were made out to him, and as early as May 12, 1884, these were crossed by counsel for appellee, and an agreement made that the depositions of the witness might be taken without commission by any qualified officer. These were at once sent to Sedalia, Missouri, to have the deposition of the witness taken. To whom these papers were sent does not appear; that any further step was taken to procure his testimony does hot appear; and besides, the application was wanting in these matters referred to, in connection with the effort to get the testimony of witnesses from Howard county.

Interrogatories and agreement to take without commission the depositions of the witnesses Foule and Bogert were sent to the clerk of the district court for Tarrant county May 3, 1884.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Tex. 367, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tex-pac-ry-co-v-hardin-tex-1884.