Voss v. Luke

28 F. Cas. 1302, 1 Cranch 331
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedNovember 15, 1806
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 F. Cas. 1302 (Voss v. Luke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voss v. Luke, 28 F. Cas. 1302, 1 Cranch 331 (circtddc 1806).

Opinion

CRANCH, Chief Judge.

The questions, arising in this case, are: (1) Can the court issue an attachment of contempt, in any case, against a witness in a civil cause, for not attending according to summons'!1 (2) If so, upon what evidence of contempt will the court issue it? (3) Can the court issue an attachment against a witness in a civil cause, who resides out of the district, but within one hundred miles of the place of trial? (4) If so, to what officer shall it be directed?

1st. There seems to be no reason to doubt the power of the court to grant an attachment of contempt against a witness for not attending according to summons. The disobedience of any lawful command of a court of record is, at common law, a contempt of the authority of the court; and for all such contempts the common law process is an attachment. 2 . The common law being part of the law of Virginia, became part of the laws declared by the act of congress of the 27th of February, 1801 (2 Stat. 103), to be in force in this country. Hence, whatever powers are, by the common law, incident to a court of record, may be exercised by this court, unless restrained by statute; but so far from being restrained by statute, the power of punishing contempts, and particularly that of a witness refusing to attend according to summons, is recognized by the statutes of Virginia and of the United States. By the judiciary act of 1789 (1 Stat. 73), it is enacted, that “all the courts of the United States shall have power to punish, by fine and imprisonment, at the discretion of the said courts, all contempts of authority, in any cause or hearing before the same;” and in the 14th section of the same act, (page 81,) the power is given to issue all writs “necessary for the exercise of their respective jurisdictions, and agreeable to the principles and usages of law.” An attachment is a writ agreeable to the principles and usages of law, and is necessary for the exercise of their jurisdiction as to contempts. It is also necessary in another point of view. The court cannot exercise its jurisdiction in common cases unless the testimony of witnesses can be had either by deposition or viva voce. If the witness in any cause is within one hundred miles of the place of trial, he cannot be compelled to give his deposition; and his deposition, if taken, cannot be used; and if his personal attendance cannot be had, the court cannot exercise its jurisdiction in that cause, and his personal attendance cannot be had but by an attachment. An attachment, therefore, is a writ necessary for the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court in the trial of causes, as well as in the punish[1303]*1303ment of contempts. By the act of congress of the 13th of February, 1801 (2 Stat. 89), which was in force on the 27th of February, 1801, one judge of the circuit court was authorized to hold a court for certain purposes, and to direct subpoenas for witnesses to attend the same, and the requisite process on the nonattendance of witnesses and jurors, and to award and issue process, and order commitment for contempts. And by the act of February 27, 1801, this court and its judges have the same powers which were given to the circuit courts by the act of February 13th, 1801.

But it has been said, in argument, that the act of Virginia of November 29, 1792, § 4, (page 278,) having imposed a penalty of 16 dollars upon a witness failing to attend, and having given the party injured a right to sue the witness for damages, contains an implied prohibition of any other remedy or process to compel his attendance. But the 7th section of the same act recognizes a compulsory process different from a subpoena. The words are, “any subpoena or process to require or compel the attendance of any witness, may be served or executed in the district, county, or corporation, where the said witness shall be found.” This clause, as we understand it, ought to be construed reddendo singula singulis, so as to read thus: “Any subpoena to require, or process to compel, the attendance of any witness, may be served or executed (that is, the subpoena to require may be served, or the process to compel may be executed,) in the district, &c., where the witness may be found.” Here, then, is a direct recognition, by the law of Virginia, of a “process” “to compel” the attendance of a witness, and which is to be “executed” on the witness wherever he may be found. The act of Virginia, section 4, is evidently intended to be a copy, substantially, of the 12th section of the statute of 5 Eliz. c. 9, which, in England, has never been construed so as to deprive the courts of the power of proceeding against a witness by attachment.

Taking it, therefore, as established, that this court has power to issue an attachment of contempt against a witness for disobedience to a summons, it is to be considered, 2d. Upon what evidence of contempt will the court issue it? It is laid down by Bacon, (1 Abr. 180,) that it may be awarded upon a bare suggestion; a fortiori, therefore, it may be issued upon the return of a sworn officer, who certifies that he has summoned the witness; and upon the record' of the court, which certifies that, being called, the witness failed to attend according to the summons And this is the usual practice of the courts in Maryland. What the practice has been in Virginia we are not informed. In New York' it is not usual to grant an attachment in the first instance, (Jackson v. Mann. 2 N. Y. Term R. 92); and in England, it seems that the court has usually required an affidavit, and seldom grants an attachment without a previous rule to show cause. But in England the motion for an attachment is not made at nisi prius, but in the court at Westminster Hall; and the object is not to obtain the attendance of the witness, but to punish him for his contempt. In this country it is used as the means of compelling an actual attendance on the trial, so as to prevent a continuance of the cause to a subsequent term. If the witness, when brought in, clears the contempt on oath, he is discharged without fine. The return of the officer and the non-attendance of the witness, are certainly prima facie evidence of a contempt of the process of the court; and the remedy by attachment is found to be productive of very little inconvenience, and that is far overbalanced by the promptness of the remedy. The affidavit of a party could be very little more satisfactory to the court than the return of the subpoena. We are therefore of opinion, that the practice heretofore adopted by the court is proper.

But the great question is, 3dly, can the court issue an attachment, in a civil cause, against a witness who resides out of the district, but within one hundred miles of the place of trial? The constitution of the United States (eighth amendment) declares, that in criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have compulsory process for his witnesses. - What is compulsory process ? Not a summons alone. No other compulsory process for witnesses is, or has been known, by the laws of England, or of this country, than an attachment of conttmpt. It is true, in criminal prosecutions, the government bind their witnesses over by recognizance; and, if they do not attend, their recognizances are forfeited; but this is not compulsory process; a man may choose to forfeit his recognizance rather than attend. On criminal prosecution, therefore, we take it for granted that the accused would have a right to attachment for his wi tnesses; and as, in such cases, depositions cannot be used, the attachment must, of course, run through the United States, because the constitution has guaranteed to him this right.

By the act of congress of March 2d, 1793, (1 Stat.

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United States v. Anonymous
21 F. 761 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1884)
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Bluebook (online)
28 F. Cas. 1302, 1 Cranch 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voss-v-luke-circtddc-1806.