Court Opinion

ID: 3848908
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:26:15.797829+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:49.889691
License: Public Domain

Submitted September 28, 1932.
This is an appeal from a decree in equity taken pro confesso against the defendants in default of appearance and answer. The facts are reviewed in the preceding opinion which was indexed in the court below as No. 196, March Term, 1932. Therefore it is not necessary to review the facts in this opinion. The court below held that the bill for discovery was a proper method and procedure and in proper form and contained the necessary averments, that the processes and procedure upon the bill ending with the final decree were complete and regular and that the defendants' exceptions to the final decree should be overruled and dismissed.
This conclusion on the part of the court below is in accordance with Equity Rules 50 and 51. In the brief for appellants it is stated "there might and very well could be numerous circumstances under which a decree pro confesso to produce a paper would be unjust and impossible; the contract might be lost or destroyed; it might not be in the possession of the appellants, or in the possession of persons who would deliver it to the appellants or who could be made to deliver except by subpœna or some other process of court."
Nowhere in the record is there any averment that the things which appellants argue might and could happen have happened. If it is impossible to produce the challenged *Page 425 
document, the court below has power, under Equity Rule No. 51, to open the final decree which it entered and to permit defendants below (that is, appellants here) to answer over, upon cause shown, and on such terms and conditions as to trial, continuance and costs as to the court shall seem meet.
The decree is affirmed at appellants' cost.