Wallace v. Wilmington & N. R.

18 A. 818, 13 Del. 529, 8 Houston 529, 1889 Del. LEXIS 13
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 13, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 18 A. 818 (Wallace v. Wilmington & N. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Wilmington & N. R., 18 A. 818, 13 Del. 529, 8 Houston 529, 1889 Del. LEXIS 13 (Del. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Comegys, C. J.:

The majority of the Court decide that the offer is inadmissable.

The reason of my brethren is this, that it is contrary to public policy according to the views they take of the matter, understanding, that he is not counsel in the case.

[532]*532Houston J.

It is well settled and has been ruled in this-Court that counsel in the case cannot be a witness or is incompetent, not by any law, but by reason of the public policy which has-been recognized and established. I am very sorry that this question has arisen, but- as it has arisen, I must decide it according to the dictates of my own conscience. Mr.. San-born, in whom I have as much confidence as any gentlemen at the Bar, has been so immediately identified with the counsel in the trial of this case, and the preparation of it, that I consider that the principle of public policy applies to him and forbids his examination as a witness as much as if the counsel himself proposed to prove the facts.

Also on the further ground that it would be very easy in this method to avoid the difficulty of counsel testifying. The danger of that is it opens the door to it, and in a case like this, which all new methods will be adopted as they can be on both sides for the purpose of getting in evidence, I feel the obligation more imperative upon me to adhere strictly to the principle as ruled, and that is-that public policy forbids the examination of such witnesses, counsel or any one who has been so particularly identified with the-counsel in the trial of the case as Mr. Sanborn has admitted to have been by his own statement in this case.

That is the ground upon which I put it, and I think it rests upon the same foundation that excludes counsel from being a witness. Hot that I mean to intimate that any such thing has -been done in this case, but it opens the door to it. I see that very readily if it is allowed.

Paynter, J.

It is the same as a privileged communication,, that counsel have not only not got the right to give away themselves, but even if they want to give away, the Court has got no; right to hear them. The rule is for the protection for attorneys in their practice, and applies to whatever come in their knowledge as-attorneys. I am speaking now of where they are counsel. In this-[533]*533case, it has been said that Mr. Sanborn is not actually counsel, but facts have been mentioned here, and we know that he has been here taking notes, and he says he has been looking up cases and looking for evidence; and also the fact that he is in Mr. Bird’s office and is closely allied with him, and although he may not have a special pecuniary interest in this case, yet he has an interest in Mr. Bird’s practice, and though it is nothing whatever against him, or his character as an attorney, it is strictly according to that rule, that Avhere an attorney is in any way interested in a ease at all, he must be excluded as a witness, and anything that comes to his knowledge as such attorney is excluded, not only for its effect upon the case itself, but for the interest of the attorney also.

I think that Mr. Sanborn is too closely allied to Mr. Bird, to be a Avitness in this case.

Ch. Justice. 'The rule as I understand it is, where the relation of attorney at trial exists between parties, that the parties should not be allowed to be witnesses in a case, and that for very evident motives of public policy. I have never heard of the rule being extended any further.

I was for a long while student at law, and to very great advantage to me I assisted my preceptor in searching up authorities for his cases, days and nights and weeks, and assisted him otherwise in the preparation of his cases for trial, and it never occurred to me for a moment that I would not be a competent witness to prove any fact.

I might have become so identified as being his student and take the deep interest as I did in his welfare as to have created a bias in my mind. That is a matter for the jury.

When the relation shown, the intimacy of it, and all that, it is a question for the jury to determine whether under such circumstances they would give much credit to the testimony of one who has taken so active a part.

In this case on the other side it has been shown that Mr. Me[534]*534Causland, one of their principal witnesses, has assisted in the preparation of this case. He has taken, and it is not anything to his discredit, but to his credit as a faithful officer of the company, an active interest and pains to assist the counsel in preparing this case for trial.

It does not occur to me that Mr. McCausIand stands in any other relation to this case looking at it in a common sense point of view than Mr. Sanborn, because Mr. Sanborn, was not counsel, not consulted as counsel has no interest in the cause and nothing he had depended on the cause at all, but he has assisted his preceptor, as he ought to have done, to prepare it for trial. I can see ng distinction in reason between his case and'that of Mr. McCausIand or any other witness on the defendant’s side.

The rule is not an absolute rule; that is, it is not one to be followed always, for Courts will allow an attorney to give testimony in a case, but they will compel him beforehand to withdraw from the case so that he no longer has the inclination to represent things in a different light from what they were before. It is not done commonly, but it has been done under circumstances.

Here the object is to contradict a witness; that is a very material and very important matter, indeed, and that cannot be done apparently by anybody else, if it can be done by him, and it strikes me it would be a very hard case to deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of the testimony of Mr. Sanborn in this case to contradict the very important testimony of Dr. Smiley simply because he assisted his preceptor in the preparation of this case for trial.

Houston J.

I did not suppose there would be any necessity for it or I would have averted to it. This only applies to gentlemen who stand in the relation of legal counsel, professional counsel. It cannot apply to any witness in a case unless he is a lawyer by profession and is so intimately associated with the member of the bar who has charge of the trial of the case as to identify him with it. It is on the ground of public policy. Mr. McCausland’s case is very different; he is not a lawyer, he does not come as a relative or connected with the counsel.

John Biggs and Levi C. Bird for plaintiff:

The plaintiff was a passenger of the defendant company, towards whom it was bound to exercise the utmost care. Not only that it would safely carry her; but also provide for her a safe landing place, and leave her surrounded by conditions that were reasonably safe.

Knight v. Portland, &c. R. R., 56 Me., 234; Hurlbert v. New York Cent. R. R., 40 N. Y., 145-146 ; McDonald v. Chicago, &c. R. R., 26 Iowa, 142.

Plaintiff fell from platform. Dark.

Held : Eailroad must keep safe its ground, &c., approaches to which passengers would naturally resort.

Brassed v. N Y. Cent. R. R., 3 A. & E. 383, 84 N. Y., 241.

Note to same case page 384.

John v. Bacon, L. R., 5 C.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 818, 13 Del. 529, 8 Houston 529, 1889 Del. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-wilmington-n-r-delsuperct-1889.