111 F. 450 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Alabama | 1901
This case, which is a bill in equity to settle a partnership,, has been set down for hearing on a motion to appoint a receiver.' Pending that motion the complainant presents his petition, alleging that “there are persons residing in the
It is the practice to sustain an application for the appointment of a receiver by affidavits. 2 Bates, Fed. Eq. Proc. § 588. Affidavits are received in evidence both to sustain and to resist the motion. Such affidavits are obtained usually without notice to the opposing party. The question presented by this petition is whether it is proper for a judge of this court to make an order authorizing a commissioner to require persons having knowledge of relevant facts to make affidavits to such facts. An affidavit is usually understood to be a voluntary statement. Ordinarily, when witnesses are comr pelled to testify, the proceeding is not ex parte; both parties to the suit are permitted to propound questions. No authority is submitted to me by counsel where the court or a judge has delegated authority to a commissioner or officer to require persons to make affidavits. There is no statute of the United States authorizing such procedure. A commissioner appointed for such purpose could only proceed by propounding questions or permitting counsel to propound them. This would be in effect taking a deposition, and, of course, to make it legal, the notice required by lav/ should be given. The distinction between an affidavit and a deposition is that the former is ex parte and voluntary, and the latter is made after notice, and is compulsory. An affidavit is a voluntary, ex parte statement, formally reduced to writing and sworn to or affirmed before some officer authorized by law to take it. If the witness is subpoenaed, sworn, and required to answer, his evidencé reduced to writing is his deposition, and it could only be legally taken on notice with the right of cross-examination. In Iowa, and perhaps in other states, there is a statute providing a mode for obtaining affidavits in pending cases by issuing a subpoena for the witness, and, if he fails to make a full affidavit of the facts known to him, his deposition is taken ex parte and used as an affidavit. Dudley v. McCord, 65 Iowa, 671, 22 N. W. 920. In Bacon v. Magee, 7 Cow. 515, a motion was made for a rule to compel one Wilson, who had knowledge of relevant facts, to make an affidavit. The court said that it was not aware of any precedent for such a rule, though there must have been frequent occasions for it. “The uniform course in relation to these summary applications,” said the court, “has been to trust to voluntary affidavits; and the want of power to coerce them has often been urged in argument without contradiction as a defect in this kind of proceeding. We do not think we have power to make the rule applied for.” Whether or
The application is denied.