Walker v. Collins

59 F. 70, 8 C.C.A. 1, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1893
DocketNo. 325
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 59 F. 70 (Walker v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Collins, 59 F. 70, 8 C.C.A. 1, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332 (8th Cir. 1893).

Opinion

CALDWELL, Circuit Judge.

This is the second appearance of this case in this court. It was before the court at the May term, 1892, and reference is made to the opinion then delivered (4 U. S. App. 406, 1 C. C. A. 642, 50 Fed. 737,) for a full statement of the case. Upon the second trial in the lower court, Collins & Bretch, [71]*71the plaintiffs in that court, recovered judgment, and the defendants thereupon sued out this writ of error.

It is assigned for error that the lower court permitted a deposition of a witness to be read in evidence which had not been on file one day before the day of trial. This assignment of error is rested on paragraph 4456, Gen. St., (section 361 of the Civil Code of Kansas,) which provides that “every deposition intended to be read in evidence on the trial must be filed at least one day before the day of trial.” The deposition was taken and returned into court under the provisions of sections 863-865 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. A deposition taken under the provisions of these sections may be read at any time after it is filed and opened. The section of the Kansas Code quoted does not apply to depositions taken, under the act of congress, to be used in the federal courts. Moreover the time that must elapse before a deposition can be read which has been duly taken and filed in the federal court is so purely a matter relating to the orderly and convenient conduct of the business of the court that a rule established by a state statute regulating the practice on the subject in the state court can have no application to the federal courts, and the act of congress adopting the state practice “as near as may be” does not adopt such a rule. The codes of practice in some of the states descend into great detail, and prescribe the names and number of the court dockets, and direct how the cases shall be entered thereon, and prescribe the time and order in which the cases shall be called for trial, and require the court to devote a certain part of each day of the term to a particular kind of business, and contain other requirements of like character. See Mansf. Dig. Ark. §§ 5111-5124. The section of the Code of Kansas under consideration belongs to this class of rules. The constitution of the United States circuit court is such that the rules regulating in detail the time and mode of conducting the business in a state court are not applicable to that court. As to sueh rules and regulations the act of congress adopting the state practice is not mandatory. This section of the Kansas Code stands on the same footing with state statutes which prescribe the time and mode of charging juries, and the papers which shall be permitted to go to them in their retirement, and statutes which make it the duty of the court to require the jury to answer special interrogatories and other like requirements, all of which have been held to be inapplicable to the federal courts. Nudd v. Burrows, 91 U. S. 426; Railroad Co. v. Horst, 93 U. S. 291; Association v. Barry, 131 U. S. 100, 120, 9 Sup. Ct. 755; O’Connell v. Reed, 5 C. C. A. 586, 56 Fed. 531.

The defendants offered to introduce in evidence a copy of an affidavit made and filed in the state court by one of the plaintiffs to procure a writ of replevin for the goods in controversy. The court excluded the paper, and this ruling is assigned for error. Waiving any consideration of the question whether the copy offered in evidence was properly proved or authenticated, the ruling of the court was clearly right on other grounds. The plaintiffs purchased a stock of goods from one Cannon, for $6,000. The defend[72]*72ants 'afterward seized the goods on a writ of attachment as the property of Cannon. After a portion of the góods had been disposed of, the plaintiffs replevied the remainder, alleging in the affidavit to procure the writ of replevin that the goods were worth $6,000. The defendants contended tliat, as the plaintiffs recovered the goods sued for in the replevin suit, and these goods were 'alleged to be worth $6,000 in the affidavit filed to procure the writ of replevin, and the plaintiffs had only paid $6,000 for the whole stock, they had lost nothing by the marshal taking and disposing of a part of their goods; and it was solely to support Akis contention that the affidavit was offered in evidence. The bill of exceptions states that the affidavit was offered in evidence “for the purpose of showing that in the replevin suit against the sheriff plaintiffs had recovered from the sheriff the goods left by the defendants in the store at Newton; that these goods were worth $6,000, the full amount of the purchase price of the whole stock paid by plaintiffs to Cannon; that, therefore, nlaintiffs had lost nothing by the defendants taking what they took in this case; and that, as against the attaching creditors whom the defendants represented in this case, the plaintiffs could not recover the goods in question in this action.” It is scarcely necessary to say that the affidavit could not be received in evidence for any such purpose, and it was offered for no other. The plaintiffs were entitled to the benefit of their bargain, 'and, if the goods they purchased were worth more than $6,000, it is not perceived upon what principle the marshal and his deputies could take the excess over $6,000, and claim the plaintiffs were remediless because they only paid that sum for the whole stock of goods.

Other grounds for the admission of the affidavit are urged for the first time in this court'. We held in the case of Insurance Co. v. Frederick, 58 Fed. 144, that when a party states to the trial court the purpose for which a document is offered in evidence, and it is incompetent for that purpose, the party will not be permitted to change his ground in the appellate court, and insist that the lower court erred in not admitting it for a purpose not disclosed to thát court, and upon which its judgment was not invoked. We may add that an examination of the record shows that, even if the affidavit was admissible in evidence, it was, in view of other evidence, and the conceded facts in the case, not of sufficient importance to justify our reversing the judgment on account of its exclusion.

. To ah instruction comprising two-thirds of a printed page, and containing a statement of the pleadings and issues in the case, the defendants entered a general exception. The instruction excepted to begins with the statement that the “defendants admit that they took possession of the stock of goods, and appropriated and converted a portion thereof to their own use. * • * *” In this court it is said that all of the defendants did not make this admission, but that one of them denied that he had anything to do with taking the goods. The defendants were the marshal and his deputies. They all had more or less to do with the service and execution of the writ of attachment upon which the goods were seized, and it [73]*73is obvious from an examination of tbe record that the case was fried upon the understanding and theory that all the defendants were liable, if any of them were. Further more, if the statement of the judge as to the admission of the defendants in the particular mentioned was not well founded In fact, they should have called the court’s attention to the error at the time, and, if it was not corrected, should have leveled their exception distinctly at 'that statement in the charge. Railway Co. v. Johnson, 10 U. S. App.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F. 70, 8 C.C.A. 1, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-collins-ca8-1893.