Warner v. Bay View Hotel

60 A.2d 488, 74 R.I. 264, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 16, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 A.2d 488 (Warner v. Bay View Hotel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner v. Bay View Hotel, 60 A.2d 488, 74 R.I. 264, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 79 (R.I. 1948).

Opinion

*265 Condon, J.

This is a workmen’s compensation case in which the superior court, on the motion of the petitioner, issued a dedimus potestatum to a notary public in Massachusetts to take the depositions of the petitioner and two of her witnesses in that state. Respondent thereafter moved to revoke the dedimus on the ground that the taking of the deposition of a party was unauthorized and illegal, and on the further ground that the issuance of the dedimus on the ex parte motion of the petitioner without first giving respondent" an opportunity to be heard thereon was also illegal and void. After a hearing on the motion to revoke at which evidence was received as to the necessity for taking the deposition of the petitioner the superior court denied and dismissed that motion.

Respondent, believing that it had no other adequate remedy for obtaining a review of that action, applied to this court for certiorari. On the allegations set forth in its petition therefor it appeared to us that review by certiorari was warranted in accordance with the authority of Brickie v. Quinn, 63 R. I. 120, and cases cited therein. We accordingly issued the writ, and in response thereto the clerk of the superior court has made a return of that court’s record of its proceedings in the instant case.

That return shows that the petitioner filed her petition for workmen’s compensation on October 14, 1943, in which she alleged that she received an injury by accident arising *266 out of and in the course of her employment by the respondent at its hotel in Jamestown in this state on June 23, 1942. She further alleged therein that she was then totally disabled and under the care of her physician. It also appears that petitioner was a patient in a hospital in Brook-line, Massachusetts, and later in a convalescent home while her petition was pending in the superior court, and that at the time the court issued the dedimus on March 1, 1948 she was confined to her bed and that, in the opinion of her physician, she would so continue the greater part of the time for at least a month. The return finally shows that the justice of the superior court who heard the respondent’s motion to revoke the dedimus held that it was properly issued under the authority of general laws’ 1938, chapter 528, §17, or chap. 300, art. Ill, §14, and that no cause had been shown for revoking it.

Respondent contends that neither of the above-cited statutes governs the taking of depositions in a workmen’s compensation case, but that the applicable statute is G. L. 1938, chap. 539, §1, and that such statute does not authorize the taking of the deposition of a party. Petitioner on the other hand contends that, since the procedure in workmen’s compensation proceedings follows the course of equity, the trial justice properly rested his decision on the provisions of §17, chap. 528, which governs the use of depositions in equity suits.

We are of the opinion that petitioner’s contention is correct. Workmen’s compensation proceedings strictly are neither actions at law nor suits in equity but special statutory proceedings which, however, the legislature has made more nearly akin to equity than to law. And this court has held that the legislature has clearly indicated in the workmen’s compensation act that the procedure therein should follow the practice in equity. Jules Desurmont Worsted Co. v. Julian, 56 R. I. 97. Therefore G. L. 1938, chap. 539, §1, would not be applicable in a workmen’s compensation case in the absence of the promulgation of a *267 general order by the superior court or the entry of a special order by a justice of that court in a particular case, pursuant to G. L. 1938, chap. 300, art. Ill, §14, which expressly provides that “The superior court shall prescribe forms and make suitable orders as to procedure adapted to secure a speedy, efficient and inexpensive disposition of all proceedings under this chapter; and in making such orders said court shall not be bound by the provisions of the general laws relating to practise. In the absence of such orders, special orders shall be made in each case.”

The superior court has promulgated no general order with reference to the use of depositions in workmen's compensation cases. Nor was any special order of that nature expressly entered by the trial justice in the particular case which we are now considering. On the contrary he expressly approved the practice prescribed in G. L. 1938, chap. 528, §17. If his further reliance upon G. L. 1938, chap. 300, art. Ill, §14, may be deemed in effect to be a special order it must be construed as adopting the procedure prescribed in chap. 528, §17, for practice in equity and causes following the course of equity.

The question here, therefore, resolves itself into whether or not the issuance ex parte of a dedimus to a notary in Massachusetts to take the deposition of the petitioner was a proper compliance with the provisions of §17. The part of that section with which we are concerned is as follows: “At any time after a cause is at issue, except in vacation, commissions to take testimony orally, on examination and on cross-examination, may be taken out, as of course, jointly by both parties; or for cause shown, upon special order of the court, may be taken out by either party.”

It will be noted that those provisions are confined to the taking of oral testimony where full opportunity to examine and cross-examine is prescribed; that the taking of testimony is not confined to witnesses; that a commission may be taken out by one party for cause shown, that is, *268 to the satisfaction of the justice who issues it; and that no notice to the opposite party of such action is required. However, later in the section the rights of the opposite party in such a case are safeguarded by requiring observance of the provisions of G. L. 1938, chap. 539, governing the taking of testimony by the commissioner. One of those provisions is that if the deposition is taken without this state “the party causing such depositions to be taken shall notify the adverse party, or his attorney of record, of the time and place appointed for taking the same * * * .” Chap. 539, §5.

However, where the commission is to take testimony not orally on examination and cross-examination but upon interrogatories filed in the clerk’s office, it is further expressly provided by chap. 528, §17, that the party taking out the commission shall give the adverse party ten days’ notice thereof in which to file cross-interrogatories before the commission is issued, and if no cross-interrogatories be filed within such period the commission may issue ex parte. Apparently in the first instance the legislature saw no need of notice to the other party before the issuance of a commission to take oral testimony, on examination and cross-examination ; while in the second instance, where there was to be no oral examination, the necessity of such notice to enable the adverse party to avail himself of the right to interrogate by filing cross-interrogatories was expressly recognized.

In the case at bar the dedimus

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A.2d 488, 74 R.I. 264, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-bay-view-hotel-ri-1948.