2 App. D.C. 28 | D.C. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the Court:
It is argued on behalf of the appellant: 1st. That his affidavit was sufficient under the rule; and 2d. That the rule itself was an unconstitutional and illegal exercise of power by the court,- and therefore void.
The requirements of the rule seem to be plain and simple enough. Proof is not required by it; details would be improper and conclusions of law impertinent. A brief and comprehensive statement of facts, or what the defendant supposes to be facts and honestly expects to prove at the trial, which would be sufficient in law, if adequately supported by testimony, to constitute a valid defense to the suit, is what the rule contemplates and requires.
The purpose of the rule undoubtedly was to expedite the administration of justice, and thereby effectually to do justice. The defendant who honestly believes that he has a good defense will have no difficulty in formulating an affidavit in accordance with its requirements. The defendant who has no honest defense ought to be precluded from the use of the processes of the courts to delay and hinder a plaintiff in the enforcement of his just claim; and usually failure to comply with the rule is sufficient indication that there is no good defense.
The Seventh Amendment to the Constitution provides that “in suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved.” And in the Fifth Amendment there is the provision that “ no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” And, in view of these provisions, it is claimed that a defendant cannot lawfully be deprived by any rule of court, or even by a legislative enactment, of his absolute and unqualified right to trial by jury, which it is argued that this rule- seeks to do by the substitution of trial by affidavit for trial by jury.
The argument is specious but not substantial. The evident meaning of the Constitution is that trial by jury, as it existed at the common law at the time of its adoption, should be preserved; and trial by jury at common law was the mode provided for the determination of issues of facts in suits at common law when those issues had been evolved from the pleadings. A suit at common law might well result, and frequently does result, in an issue of law, through the instrumentality of a demurrer, and assuredly it will not be claimed that in such cases there is any right to trial by jury. And it may possibly be that there are even yet other issues which have their own peculiar modes of trial, and are not proper for the intervention of a jury. Until an issue of facts is evolved in a suit, there is nothing to be tried by a jury; and consequently there can be no right to trial by jury. Pleadings have been instituted for the purpose of evolving issues between the parties, and these pleadings are conducted under the control and supervision of the court. They are subject to be fashioned and shaped by the court, and so regulated as that they will best elicit the ultimate matter in controversy between the parties — in other words, an issue of fact or an issue of law. If a party fails to plead at all, or if he
Now, as the court has the right to oversee and regulate the pleadings, it necessarily has also the right to prescribe what those pleadings shall be, and the rules of practice whereby the business of the court shall be properly conducted. This is a power inherent in every court of general jurisdiction by virtue of its constitution. Fullerton v. Bank of U. S., 1 Peters, 604; Clarke v. Magruder, 2 Harris & Johnson, 79. In establishing the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, the Congress thought proper to affirm this right by providing that said court “ may establish such rules as it may deem necessary for regulating the practice of the court.” Rev. Stats. U. S. for D. C., Sec. 770. And in the exercise of its inherent power and of the jurisdiction so conferred upon it, that court promulgated the rule in question among others.
Why is the rule not a proper exercise of the power of the court to make rules of practice? Certainly no court is under any obligation to permit its processes to be used to delay and hinder justice, or to enable a debtor to harass or defraud his creditor, when courts are established for the very opposite purpose. And no person is entitled to use the processes of a court of justice, be he plaintiff or defendant, without giving guarantees of good faith if such should be required. The rapid increase of the business of the courts in recent times, sufficient sometimes to block the administration of justice, and the facility with which unscrupulous persons may use the ancient processes for the purpose of fraud and delay, have induced throughout the United States the adoption of a very general modification of our system of pleading and practice, and the substitution in place of the old of new forms, based to a great extent on the
Now this course of procedure is not intended and does not have the effect to prevent a person from having an honest defense submitted to the arbitrament of a trial by jury. But it is intended, and does have the effect to prevent the abuse of the right of trial by jury when there is no bona fide defense and no honest issue to be tried by a jury. There is no magical effect in a mere verbal formula, designated by the name of plea, which in itself may be without the slightest foundation in truth, that should give it the force and strength of a constitutional fortress behind which a dishonest debtor may protect himself with the cry of “ trial by jury.” Constitutional guarantees are intended to protect the right, not to shield the wrong; and the plain scope and effect of the rule under consideration are, to give due force to those guarantees and to prevent their abuse.
All the States of our Union have provisions in their organic law identical with those in our Federal Constitution, for the preservation of the right of trial by juiy. We have yet to hear that in any State of the Union which has adopted such a code of procedure as we have mentioned, it has ever been held that such procedure was in antagonism to its constitutional guarantees. We find no such antagonism between this rule and our Federal Constitution.
It is argued further, however, that the rule is objectionable because it deprives parties of the right of cross-examination, prevents the credibility of witnesses from being
The plain answer to the argument is, that either there is a good defense to a suit, or there is none. If there is no defense, it matters not what the character of the plaintiff is for truth and veracity. If there is a defense, and the defendant sets it forth, as it is both his right and his duty to do under this rule, his affidavit necessarily prevails over that of the plaintiff, and the controversy is remitted for decision to a trial by jury.
There remains perhaps the question whether, even if the rule is not in itself unconstitutional, the subject matter of it is not more properly for legislative action than for judicial intervention. This question was suggested rather than argued by counsel, and we do not deem it necessary to go into it at any length. From what we have already stated, it is apparent in our opinion that the rule is a proper rule of practice to facilitate the administration of justice and to prevent abuse of the processes of the court. And being of that opinion, we must hold that it was properly within the power of the court to establish the rule.
At the risk of being somewhat prolix in our investigation of this question, we have deemed it proper to settle, so far as we may by our decision, the doubts in regard to the validity of this rule, which seem to have periodically reappeared from time to time, and to give our sanction to it as a useful and appropriate rule of practice.
The judgment of the court below in this case must be affirmed with costs ; and it is so ordered.