Tolson v. Tolson

4 Md. Ch. 119
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedJuly 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 119 (Tolson v. Tolson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tolson v. Tolson, 4 Md. Ch. 119 (Md. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The original bill in this case was filed in March, 1834, and the cause, therefore, has been pending nearly twenty-five years, during which long period the complainant has been deprived, for the most part, of the support which, according to two several adjudications of the Court of Appeals, he is unquestionably entitled to. It would, therefore, be a subject of regret if any substantial and insurmountable objection existed to the speedy determination of the controversy.

After the decision of the Court of Appeals at the December term, 1849, and the reinstatement of the cause in this court, a commission issued, by consent, to John C. Mullikin to take further evidence, and the depositions of several witnesses were taken and returned by him in November, 1852. Among them is the deposition of Edward Tolson, who appears, by the return of the commissioner, to have been examined on the 19th of September, 1851. This deposition has, to some considerable extent, been made the basis of the last report of the Auditor, and the principal ground of objection to that report urged on the part of the defendants, refers to that deposition and the influence it has had upon the account.

It is to be remembered that the witness is himself a defend[121]*121ant equally bound with the other defendants to contribute to the support of the plaintiff, John Tolson ; that he was swearing against his own interest, in like manner, as against his co-defendant’s, and that every objection, therefore, to his proof coming from himself and his associates should he regarded with some degree of jealousy. The deposition, as has been stated, was taken in September, 1851, and was returned to, and filed, and has remained in this court 'since the 15th of November, 1852, without a whisper from any quarter that there was any mistake or misapprehension in the nature or purport of the answers given by him to the questions until the petition of himself and others was filed on the 80th of July last. The Auditor, in the mean time, had made his report, founded in part upon this evidence. This report was filed prior to the commencement of the recent July term of this court, and was submitted on the part of the complainant on the 19th of that month, during the sittings ; exceptions having been filed thereto by both parties, and at the close of the sittings was in strict conformity with the practice laid before the Chancellor for his decision. It was in this state of the case, after the sittings of the term had expired, that a petition was filed by the same Edward Tolson and others, alleging errors committed by the commissioner in writing down his testimony, exhibiting in writing, and in the form of a deposition, what he alleges was, or was intended to be, his proof before the commissioner, and praying that the commission may bo remanded, thus causing additional delay, or that the complainants may be required to admit the corrections of the proof the witness displayed upon the face of this paper.

My opinion is, that neither alternative of this application can be granted. The proof had been taken, and lying in the office of the register of this court for upwards of eight months, subject to the inspection and examination of all parties, and the Auditor’s report, founded upon it, was likewise filed prior to the commencement of the recent term. To this report both parties filed exceptions, but no complaint was hoard that the proof of Edward Tolson was not reduced to writing correctly [122]*122by the commissioner until the term had closed, and the papers were with the Chancellor for his decision. Under such circumstances, I cannot bring myself to think it would be compatible with justice, the practice of the court, or the analogies to be derived from proceedings at common law, to allow the witness to take back or explain proof which he had given nearly two years before, and which had been in court, and subject to the inspection of all parties, for upwards of eight months. ISTo sufficient excuse, in my opinion, is given for this great negligence, and I am not disposed, in the absence of such excuse, to sanction a practice from which so much inconvenience might be fairly apprehended. The petition, therefore, will be dismissed, and the only question then arises upon the exceptions to the last .report of the Auditor.

The sixth exception of the defendants to the report filed on the 21st of July last, and in their exceptions to the testimony filed on the 30th of the same month, the testimony of the said Edward Tolson is excepted to upon the ground that the previous order of the court for his examination had not been obtained, and in the paper last filed, it is said that none of the parties except the witness himself had notice of his examination, or opportunity of cross-examination.

But this statement, that the defendants had no notice of his examination, if it refers to the time and place of his examination, is contradicted by the return of the commissioner, which states expressly that the meeting at Bladensburg on the 19th of September, 1851, when he was examined on the complainant’s interrogatories was, “pursuant to previous notice thereof given to the parties.” The defendants, therefore, had notice that on that day, and at that place, the complainants would proceed to take proof, under a commission issued by consent of parties, and it was their own negligence if they did not attend. It is true they were not specially notified that Edward Tolson would be examined, but they knew that proof would be taken, and might and ought to have been present. Nor can it be said they have been deprived of the privilege of cross-examining the witness, for it cannot be doubted that if application had [123]*123been made in a reasonable time after the return of the commission, that such privilege would have been accorded them. The commission to Mr. Mullikin, issued in February, 1851. The witness, Tolson, was examined in September of that year, and the proof was returned to the office in November, 1852, and it is not until July, 1853, after the Auditor’s report was filed, and the cause submitted to the court for final decision, that the defendants set up the objection that there was no previous order for the examination, or opportunity of cross-examination.

If they have lost the benefit of the cross-examination, they have none but themselves to blame, and the question, therefore, is, whether, in the absence of all substantial ground of objection, the mere omission to procure the order of the court for the examination of the witness, (which is almost always passed as of course,) shall exclude it from consideration ?

The order for the examination of a party, says the late Chancellor Bland in Lingan vs. Henderson, 1 Bland, 268, “is granted almost as a matter of course, leaving the objections to bo made and considered when the testimony is brought in.” The omission to procure the previous order of the court is at most a mere irregularity, and when it is apparent, as in this case, that no substantial injustice has been inflicted upon the opposite party by denying him the benefit of a cross-examination, and that delay and consequent injury will be visited upon the party relying upon the proof by allowing the objection to prevail, it seems to me it ought not to be permitted to do so.

The lying by and withholding the objection until thé present time, when it might have been interposed at an earlier period, and thus vexatious delay and expense avoided, relieves the court, in my judgment, of all obligations to give effect to it.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolson-v-tolson-mdch-1853.