Volusia County Bank v. Bigelow

45 Fla. 638
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 45 Fla. 638 (Volusia County Bank v. Bigelow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volusia County Bank v. Bigelow, 45 Fla. 638 (Fla. 1903).

Opinion

James F. Guen, Commissioner.

It appears from the abstract in this case that the defendant in error filed a claim affidavit asserting that certain personal property levied upon under execution against her husband, J. E. Bigelow, belonged to her as her separate property, and upon trial the jury found in her favor.

[642]*642The first assignment of error relates to the action of the court in sustaining exceptions of defendant in error to a series of eighty interrogatories propounded to her before the trial, for the purpose of .obtaining discovery from her under the provisions of ¡petio-n 1116 of the Revised Statutes, which provides as follows: “In.all causes in any of’the courts of this State either party may, at .any time, deljyer to the opposite party, 'or his attorney, interrogatories in writing upon any matter as to which discovery. may be sought, and require such party, or in case of a body corporate, any of the officers of such body corporate, within ten days, to file in the court in which the cause is pending, written answers under oath to such interroga! oriels. Such answers shall be evidence against, but not for, the party making them. A failure to answer such interrogatories ’ shall be deemed a contempt of court.’’ Section 589, the pleading and practice act of 1861, of. which the above section is a substantial re-enactment (with, some Ajnges not material now) was almost a literal copy oifPfction 51 of the English common law procedure act of 1854, the only substantial change being-that the latter required the “order of the court or a judge” as a prerequisite to the ’propounding of interrogatories, while the former did not. In Day’s Common Law Procedía e leaver t,-e piocedure acts (4th ed.) pages 305-309, the decisions under the English act are collated, and the following rules announced: Such interrogatories are not within the section (1) as seek exclusively for the case of the other side; (2) as are of a merely fishing character; (3) as are not reasonably relevant to the issue; (4) as are unnecessary or useless; (5) as seek to establish a forfeiture strictly so called; (6) as seek to contradict a writteu instrument; and (7) ás are privileged upon grounds of [643]*643public interest. But interrogatories may...be admissible. (1) the answers to which may expose other persons to actions; (2) 'the answers to. which may expose the" party interrogated to'penalties; (3) whére a defendant in ejectment seeks to'discover the character in which the plaintiff claims, and the pedigree upon which he relies; (4) that seek secondary evidence of lost written documemts; (5) that inquire into confidential communications that' the party interrogated would not be privileged from disclosing upon oral examination;- (6) that seek to disprove the bona fides of a prima facie defence, or to show that the defendant has acted fraudulently. The only objection urged in this case to the entries series of interrogatories was “that the questions propounded are improper and illegal and not comprehened within the statute.” There was in addition an objection to certain designated interrogatories that' they were “irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial,” but the court sustained the objection to the entire series, and it must, therefore, be assumed'that the ruling- was based on the ground of objection to the entire series, as the fact that some interrogatories might be objectionable could afford no basis for refusing to answer the others. Dalgleish v. Lowther, L. R. 2 Q. B. Div. (1899) 590. The purpose of the interrogatories evidently was to secure evidence from the claimant to disprove the bona fides of her alleged ownership of the property claimed by her, and that; we think, was a legitimate object of discovery. In seeking to elicit evidence for that purpose, plaintiff in execution was not seeking exclusively for m disclosure of claimant’s case, but for affirmátive evidence to disprove the bona fides of that claim or rebut a prima facie title asserted by her, by establishing fraud, so that the case was within the rule stated by Day as set forth [644]*644above. Bayley v. Griffiths, 1 H. & C. 429; Blight v. Goodliffe, 18 C. B. (N. S.) 757; Todd v. Bishop, 136 Mass. 386; Wilson v. Webber, 2 Gray, 558. To the extent indicated it was competent for the plaintiff in execution to interrogate the claimant, and the court erred in sustaining claimant’s objection to the entire interrogatories. It is neither necessary on this writ of error, nor would it be profitable, to pass upon the propriety of each of the eighty interrogatories submitted. That can be done in the court below in the future progress of the cause, if specific objection is made to any particular interrogatories; and such objections, if any, should be determined in view of the rule that a wide latitude is allowed in the range of examination for the purpose of proving fraud, and in view of the fact that the statute was designed to enable a party, if he can, to secure admissions from his adversary, in advance of the trial, for the purpose of relieving himself from the necessity of- adducing evidence to prove any particular thus admitted. Attorney-General v. Gaskill, L. R. 20 Ch. Div. 519; Baker v. Carpenter, 127 Mass. 226; Jacksonville, T. & K. W. Ry. Co. v. Peninsular Land, Transp. & Manuf’g. Co., 27 Fla. 1, 9 South. Rep. 661.

II. The next assignment of error relates to the oath administered to the jury, to which exception was taken by plaintiff in error. The oath was_as follows: “You, and each of you, do solemnly swear that you will well and truly try the right of property between Marion L. Bigelow, the claimant, and J. E. Bigelow, defendant in execution, and a true verdict render according to the evidence; so help you God.” Objection was made to the oath on the ground that it did not correctly advise the jury as to the issues, informed them that J. E. Bigelow was a party to the suit, and was misleading. It was said in the case of [645]*645Baars v. Creary, 23 Fla. 311, text 315, 2 South. Rep. 662, that “the right of property which the jury is sworn, to try is an issue of superiority as between the right of the plaintiff in execution to subject the chattel to the satisfaction of his writ, and the claimant’s title on the other hand, as against such right; an issue of the liability of the property to thp plaintiff’s execution as against the claimant’s title.” The case of Moody v. Hoe, 22 Fla. 309, is to the same effect. It follows that the oath administered did not correctly advise the jury as to the issue on .trial., Instead of advising the jurors that, the issue was as to the superiority of the right of the plaintiff in execution,, on the one hand, and the claimant on the other, it advised them that they were to “try the right of .property between Marion L. Bigelow, the claiüiant, and J. E. Bigelow, defendant in execution,” which was. a question foreign to the issue. As ' between the claimant and the defendant in execution the-' right of property might be in the former, while at the same time the property might be subject to execution against the deefndant in execution. The grantee in a conveyance designed to defraud creditors acquires a good -title as against the grantor, and yet such title is not good as against an execution against the former. Kahn v. Wilkins, 36 Fla. 428, 18 South. Rep. 584; Bellamy v. Bellamy, 6 Fla. 62; Mayer v. Wilkins, 37 Fla. 244, 19 South. Rep. 632.

III. The third assignment of error is that “the court erred in permitting the claimant’s witness, Marion L. Bigelow, tp read to the jury memoranda of sums of money claimed by witness to have been advanced by her to her husband, J. E.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Fla. 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/volusia-county-bank-v-bigelow-fla-1903.