Court Opinion

ID: 6574420
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:32:54.643565+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:01.982514
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Royce, Ch. J.
The case, as now presented to this court, involves the single question, whether the deposition of Eunice Parker was rightly excluded. We should doubtless be warranted in affirming that decision, on the ground that the testimony of the witness does not appear, from the case as certified, to have been at all material, or even pertinent, to the issue on trial. But as this point has not been made in the argument, and the defect might probably be supplied by amendment of the case, it will be assumed, that the deposition should have been received, unless it was legally inadmissible by reason of the time and manner of taking it,
Those provisions of the statute, which authorize the taking of depositions by a justice of the peace, evidently contemplate, that the suit, for which a deposition is taken, shall be pending at the time of the taking, and that it will, in regular course, be before the court named in the caption, at the time or term designated for the trial. And such has always been the construction. Depositions may accordingly be taken by a justice after the suit is commenced by service of the writ, and before its entry in court, and after the appeal of a suit, and before its entry in the appellate court; because, in each case, the action, in the usual and legal course, will be in the court, to which it is brought, or appealed, at the time mentioned in the caption for the. trial. But in this instance the cause was not pending in the county court, when the deposition was *614taken, nor could it then be known, that it ever would be; — the parties might at least as well have expected it to be finally determined in the supreme court, where it was then pending on exceptions. We are therefore satisfied, that the justice had no authority to take the deposition; and that the party should have applied to a judge of the supreme or county court, under other provisions of the statute.
Judgment of county court affirmed.