Wertheim v. Continental Ry. & Trust Co.

15 F. 716, 21 Blatchf. 246, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2065
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 17, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 15 F. 716 (Wertheim v. Continental Ry. & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wertheim v. Continental Ry. & Trust Co., 15 F. 716, 21 Blatchf. 246, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2065 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

There are informalities in the record upon which this motion to attach witnesses for contempt has been argued, which lead to a denial of the motion. But counsel have desired that the main question involved should be considered and decided as a guide to their future action in the cause. This question is whether the president and secretary of the North River Construction Company, a corporation, can be compelled by a subpoena duces tecum to produce books and papers of the corporation in a suit in equity, to which the corporation is not a party, upon the application of one of the parties. The proceeding is opposed upon the authority of several cases in the state courts of New York which deny the right of a pa'rty to compel the officers of a corporation to produce its books as evidence in a cause to which it is not a party. The first of .these cases is the President etc., of Bank of Utica v. Hillard, 5 Cow. 153, where a clerk of the bank refused to produce the books. Savage, C. J., said: “The obligation of the-witnesses to produce the books upon the duces tecum depends on the question whether they were in his possession or under his control ; ” and the obligation was denied because he was a mere clerk of the corporation. The same case was before the court again (5 Cow. 419) upon a motion to attach the cashier of the bank, who had refused to produce the books under the subpoena, and was denied because the bank could not be required to produce evidence against itself as a party to the action. Both of these cases, by the strongest implication, concede the power to compel the production of the books by an officer when the corporation is not a party. Thirty years later the point arose again in La Farge v. La Farge Fire Ins. Co. 14 How. 26, upon a motion for an attachment against the president of the defendant for refusing to produce its books under a subpoena duces tecum, and the motion was denied upon the authority of the cases in 5 [717]*717Cow. The precedent thus established was recognized incidentally or directly in several subsequent cases, and was assumed to apply whether the corporation was a party or not a party to the suit. The question was never considered by the courts of last resort, and was put at rest by section 868 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which expressly conferred the right theretofore denied.

As this suit is in equity, the present motion is not affected by the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the court is asked to apply the doctrine of the antecedents decisions of the state courts. No authority is found in any decisions of the federal courts denying the right to compel corporations to produce evidence which may be necessary and vital to the rights of the litigants. On principle it is impossible to suggest any reason why a corporation should be privileged to withhold evidence which an individual would be required to produce. It may be inconvenient, and sometimes embarrassing, ta the managers of a corporation to require its books and papers to be taken from its office and exhibited to third persons, but it is also inconvenient and often onerous to individuals to require them to d® the same thing. Considerations of inconvenience must give way t® the paramount right of litigants to resort to evidence which it may be in the power of witnesses to produce, and without which grave interests might be jeoparded, and the administration of justice thwarted.

The researches oE counsel have been unavailing to -find any decisions of the courts of other states which sanction the rule thus maintained by the courts of New York. Notwithstanding these cases, it is believed to have been the common practice in this state to subpoena officers as witnesses to produce the books of their corporations in actions between third persons. In other states, so far as-is known, the right to do so has never been controverted. There has been strenuous opposition on the part of corporations to the production of their papers and records in suits to which they were not parties. The effort of telegraph companies to maintain the privacy of their messages is an illustration, (see Henisler v. Freedman, 2 Pars. Select Cas. 274; U. S. v. Babcock, 3 Dill. 566,) but immunity has never been claimed upon the ground now taken.

Why should not the officers of a corporation be required to produce the books of the corporation as witnesses when the hooks are necessary evidence ? The corporation can only act through, its officers. The suggestion that the books are in the legal custody of the corporation, and not of its officers, may be theoretically correct. If tech[718]*718nieally true, it is not an objection to compelling the officers to produce them. As said by Lord Ellenborough, in Amey v. Long, 1 Campb. 17: “Although a paper should be in the legal custody of one man, yet if a subpoena duces tecum is served on another, who has the means to produce it, he is bound to do so.”

In Crowther v. Appleby, L. R. 9 C. P. 27, Lord Denman asks: “When documents are in the possession of a company, who but the secretary can be subpoenaed to produce them ?” Courts of equity have always permitted the officers of corporations to be made parties to bills of discovery, upon the theory that they are the custodians of the books and documents of the corporation, and may be compelled to produce them and answer to the interrogatories propounded.

As has been indicated, the cases in 5 Cow. have been misapplied by the later cases in the courts of New York, and do not sanction the precedent which they are asserted to establish. This court must refuse to follow these later decisions, deeming them to be unsupported by precedent, an innovation upon the rule generally recognized, and opposed to good sense.

The production ot documentary evidence in which a party to a cause has an interest, may, at common law, (independent of the auxiliary remedy by bill of discovery in chancery,) be had in three .ways: (Í) By an order for inspection ; (2) by a notice to produce; (3) by a subpoena duces tecum;—the first used where the writings are required before the trial takes place or the pleadings are completed; the last two where the writings are wanted at the trial. The purpose of this note is to give a concise statement of the rules governing the subpoena duces temm, hut as an introduction to these it is proposed to present a brief sketch of the two other methods just stated.

I. The Order for Inspection.

The English courts of common law early exercised a power to make an order for the inspection of writings in the possession of one party to a suit in favor of the other,

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 716, 21 Blatchf. 246, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wertheim-v-continental-ry-trust-co-nysd-1883.