Court Opinion

ID: 7159262
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:14:45.930645+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:15:19.558544
License: Public Domain

Bullard, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.
The petitioner, alleging himself to be the heir at law of Corbin Lee, deceased, instituted the present suit against the *536defendant, as surety of James A. Lee, in a bond executed by him on bis appointment, as curator of the vacant estate of said Corbin Lee.
An exception to the jurisdiction of the District Court, having been, we think, correctly overruled, the defendant answered to the ^merits, and among other matters, not now necessary to mention, specially denied the heirship of the plaintiffs. In order to establish the fact of heirship, a commission was issued, addressed to Stevenson Archer, Henry G-. Waters, or some other magistrate of Harford county, state of Maryland, as commissioners.
On the trial in the District Court, certain depositions of witnesses, taken under that commission, were offered in evidence, and rejected; and the'case is before this court, upon a bill of exceptions, taken to the opinion of the judge in that particular.
The ground upon which the depositions were rejected, appears from the bill of exceptions, to have been that the proems verbal required by law, to attest the jurat of the witness, should have constituted one consecutive act; should appear to have been done simultaneously, or immediately after the oath had been administered and reduced to writing, whereas, this appears to have been done on a subsequent day, and, if allowed, might be extended to a,ny length of time; and on the further ground, that the certificate is informal, not directly, but by way of recital, and evidently executed by an improper and partial commissioner.
It appears from the return to the commission, that several witnesses were examined on. oath; that the acting commissioner commenced the examination on the 25th of January, 1836, continued it on the 26th, and the commission was finally closed, and the proces verbal bears date the 28th of the same month. In the caption, the commissioner merely certifies under his signature, that in virtue of the annexed commission, he had summoned several witnesses to appear before him, and that he had administered an oath to them seperately, and that he had proceeded to take their answers to; the several interrogatories. On closing the commission *537three days afterwards, he certifies that some of the witnesses had been examined on the 25th, and some on the 26th, and that their answers to the interrogations will be found above each of their own proper signatures. The whole are annexed to the commission and original interrogatories, and returned under the seal and signature of the commissioner. It appears to us that this is, if not a literal, yet a subtantial compliance with the 433d article of the Code of Practice, which requires that after the depositions have been taken, the commissioner must cause them to be signed, and that he shall then draw a prochs verbal of the taking of such depositions. The Code does not require that the prochs verbal shall, under pain of nullity, immediately follow the examination of the witnesses. It is sufficient, in our opinion, if within a reasonable time after the witnesses have been examined on oath, and their depositions reduced to writing and signed, as required by law, the commissioner makes his certificate of the manner in which he has executed the commission.
The 433d article of the Code of Practice requires that after depositions of •witnesses are taken, the commissioner must cause them tobe signed, and then draw a proces verbal of the taking such depositions.
But the Code does not require that the proces verbal Easily under pain of nullity, immediately follow the examination of the witnesses. It is sufficient, if within a reason-«ble time their examination on oath, and í^ducetPto wrf-ailtl s.'Sl;ed> the commissioner makes his mánner)n which ]!e has oxfellted
Any opinion missi0ner may certificate0 'or procés verbal, ciency of the {heffot in-which the witnesses have been examined, will be ^"mhSfand of no effect,
The last objection, to wit: that the commission was evidently executed by an improper and partial commissioner, J J 1 1 r , appears to be founded on a statement made by him, and appended to his prochs verbal, that “ he did not think it necessary to multiply testimony, else it would be no J r J J * . matter to find ten or fifteen respectable witnesses that would testify to the same facts, &c. If he only meant to say that the fact sought to be proved, was as well established by the oath of four witnesses, as it would be by ten or fifteen others, it was certainly a very harmless opinion. His opinion, as to the sufficiency of the evidence, could not possibly have any influence in the decision of the cause, for his prochs verbal is only intended to satisfy the court, that the depositions of the witnesses have been regularly taken, and they alone are to be received in evidence. The commission issued by the . ... i-ii . . District Court in this case, authorized the commissioners to examine all witnesses whatever, without naming any in particular. The commissioner perhaps thought himself obliged to state why he did not proceed to examine any others than those specially named in the interrogatories; at any rate, we *538are of opinion, that such an intimation frotp him, forms no sufficient ground for rejecting the depositions, and that the court erred.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court, be annulled, avoided and reversed; that the case be reinstated and remanded for a new trial, with instructions to the judge, not to reject the depositions in question on the grounds set forth in the Bill of Exceptions, and that the appellee pay the costs of the appeal.