68 Me. 217 | Me. | 1878
To prove the trespass alleged against the defendant, the plaintiff offered in evidence a mittimus, signed by the defendant as a justice of the peace, reciting all the acts and circumstances, which, if the justice was authorized by law to take the deposition therein mentioned, would amount to a contempt on the part of the plaintiff in refusing, though duly summoned, to give his deposition before said justice in a cause pending in the S. J. court.
But the plaintiff insists that the defendant’s mittimus does not make a prima facie justification for the defendant, because it is not therein alleged that the defendant was not interested in said cause. Based upon the decisions that nothing is to be presumed in favor of the jurisdiction of inferior courts, plaintiff’s counsel make an elaborate and ingenious argument that, in the absence of this
Indeed, whenever a justice of the peace or trial justice acts judicially, he must be disinterested, within the meaning of R. S., c. 1 § 4, Rule XXII; and yet we should not regard his judgments as erroneous, because the record fails to assert that he was not connected with either of the parties, by consanguinity or affinity within the sixth degree, and that he had no pecuniary interest in the suit.
We think that, where a party relies upon a personal disqualification of the magistrate to invalidate his official acts, the burden is upon such party to establish it by proof, and not upon the magistrate to prove a negative.
The plaintiff has no just cause of complaint as to this matter. The mittimus shows the imposition of a fine of twenty dollars for the contempt, and a commitment, “ until the fine and costs of commitment are paid.” A question has been made, whether this mode of proceeding is authorized by the statute, R. S., c. 107, § 29, which says that the magistrate may “ commit him (the recu-sant witness) to the prison of the county for contempt, as the-supreme judicial court may commit a witness for refusing to-testify.”
R. S., c. 82, § 91, provides that, “ when a witness in court refuses to answer such questions as the court allows to be put, he may be fined not exceeding twenty dollars, and committed until' the fine and costs of commitment are paid.”
The magistrate’s action, in this respect, seems to have been conformable to law. See, in addition to the sections above quoted, their source in laws of 1847, e. 9, § 2.
The presiding judge must have forgotten that the question was addressed to a witness who was also a party to the suit, and was not excused as well as not excluded from giving testimony.
The question called for evidence of ^admissions made by him as a party out of court, competent substantive evidence, irrespective of any tendency it might have to contradict the testimony he had just given respecting his knowledge of the relationship.
The opposite party,- upon the stand, in this respect occupies a different position from a witness who is not a party.
The force; and value of the admissions he may have made elsewhere are subjects for the consideration of the jury, and may depend upon his means of knowledge and the circumstances under which his admissions, if he has made any, were obtained. But it was clearly competent for the plaintiff to prove such admissions if he could, by the defendant or by any other witness, even against the defendant’s denial or professions of ignorance. For this cause, the entry must be,
Exceptions sustained.