178 Ky. 463 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Reinstating in-. junction.
In this action, pending on the equity docket of the Franklin circuit court, the plaintiffs, E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons, a'corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of whiskey, arid W. S. Sandifér, its secretary’ and bookkeeper, in the absence from the county of the’ judge of. the Franklin circuit court, after due notice to the opposing parties and the execution of the required bond, obtained at the hands of the clerk of that court an injunction restraining the defendants, Sterling B. Thornton, notary public; R. C. Hieatt, county judge, and M. B. Lucas, jailer, all officers of Franklin county, in the respective capacities indicated, from enforcing an order entered ’ by Thornton as notary public, approved by Hieatt as county judge, and attempted to be executed by Lucas as jailer, declaring the plaintiff Sandifer guilty of contempt, and, by way of punishment therefor, inflicting upon him a fine of $30.00 and twenty-four hours’ imprisonment in jail, because of his refusal to produce before Thornton as notary public, in obedience to a subpoena duces tecum issued by the latter, certain books and papers in his custody belonging to E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons, for the inspection of the attorneys of Julius Levin Co., and use, together with the deposition of Sandifer then being taken, as evidence in behalf of Julius Levin Co., in an action pending in a court of the state of California, wherein that company is the’plaintiff and Sherwood and Sherwood aré defendants. After the granting of the injunction by the circuit clerk the defendants, Thornton, Hieatt and Lucas, following the service upon plaintiffs of a notice to that effect, entered before the Honorable Robert L. Stout, judge of the Franklin circuit court, a motion to dissolve it, which motion was sustained and the injunction dissolved by Judge Stout. The case is now before me as a judge of the Court of Appeals upon the motion of the plaintiffs to reinstate the injunction thus dissolved by the circuit judge. Judges Miller, Carroll, Hurt, Thomas and Clarke were associated with me in the careful consideration given the case and all concur in the conclusions set forth in the opinion. Judge Sampson, being necessarily absent when the case was considered, did not participate in its decision.
It is alleged in the petition that the Julius Levin Co., a corporation engaged in the wholesale liquor business and having its chief office in the city of San Francisco,
It is further alleged in the petition herein that though the taking by Julius Levin Co. of the deposition of the plaintiff, Sandifer, and its attempt to thereby obtain an inspection of the books of E. II. Taylor, Jr., & Sons, was and is for the ostensible purpose of using the deposition and information obtained from the books in its action against Sherwood & Sherwood in the state of California, the real object of the Julius Levin Co. was to thereby obtain, if possible, information for use in an action it contemplates bringing against E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons, for an alleged breach by the latter of the agency contract it had with the Julius Levin Co.
It appears from other allegations of the petition that the deposition of Sandifer was taken by the defendant, Sterling B. Thornton, as notary public, under a commission issued by the California court in the case of JuliusLevin Co. v. Sherwood & Sherwood, appointing him commissioner for that'purpose, and also to take the depositions of various other witnesses in the same ease: The commission thus received by him, Thornton produced before. the defendant, R. C. Hieatt, judge of the Franklin county court, who thereupon issued a subpoena requiring
Sandifer appeared the next morning, but failed and refused to.produce any of the .books, records or papers called for by¡the subpoena. Whereupon Thornton declared. Sandifer in contempt and imposed upon him as. punishment therefor a fine of $30.00 and twenty-four hours in jail; and immediately made to the county judge, Hieatt, a written report of the testimony of Sandifer, his action in adjudging him guilty of contempt, and in fixing' his punishment for same, and the reasons therefor. The county judge approved the action of Thornton, declared Sandifer in contempt, and directed him to produce the books and documents called for on November 10th, in default of which he should be fined and imprisoned. Although Sandifer again appeared before Commissioner Thornton on November 10th as directed by the order of the county judge, he still refused to produce the books, records and papers required of .him by the order; thereupon Thornton again declared him guilty of contempt, fined him $30.00 and inflicted twenty-four hours!' imprisonment upon him, of which he again made a written report to the county judge.
Upon receiving this report, the county judge made the-following order, which was not, however, entered upon the records of his court:
‘ ‘ The witness, W. S. Sandifer, appearing and still declining to produce the books and papers described in the subpoena duces tecum entered herein, it is now ordered and. adjudged that a fine of $30.00 be and the same is imposed upon him, and further that he be imprisoned for twenty-four hours in the county jail of Franklin county, and the said Sandifer is now committed to the custody of the jailer in said county iñ satisfaction of this judgment.”
As previously stated, the enforcement of this order was prevented by the injunction issued by the clerk of the-circuit court. • .
. The single question to be decided upon the record before us is, had the defendant, Sterling B. Thornton, as-commissioner or notary public or County Judge Hieatt, the power, by subpoena duces tecum, to compel the witness, Sandifer, to produce the books and papers- specifically described in the subpoena?
“A party desiring to take depositions in this state to be used in judicial proceedings in other states, may produce to a judge of the county court of the county where the witnesses reside a commission authorizing the taking of such depositions or a notice duly served; whereupon it shall be the duty of the judge to issue a subpoena requiring the witnesses to attend at a specified time and place for examination, and, in case of their failure to attend or refusal to be sworn or to testify they may be punished as is provided in section 538. (By similar proceedings before an examiner, justice of the peace or a notary public, depositions may be taken by such officers in this state to be used in judicial proceedings in other states; and the officer so taking such depositions shall have the same powers in taking the same as judges of the county courts now have; but in cases of contempt and the infliction of punishment for the same, or a failure upon the part of the officer to punish for contempt, then it shall be the duty of the officer, upon the motion of the witness or either party to the suit, to promptly, in writing report his actions and the reasons therefor to the judge of the county court for the county in which the deposition is being taken; and the court may change, modify or vacate the order of the officer, and shall render judgment for the fine imposed by the officer or by himself, and he shall, in accordance with the judgment rendered, certify to the officer what further steps shall be taken.) ”
The words in parentheses appearing in the section were added thereto by an amendatory act of 1884. The object of this amendment was to confer upon justices of the peace and notaries public of this state the same authority and power to take depositions for use in judicial proceedings in other states, when commissioned so to do, that had been conferred by section 591, as originally enacted, upon county judges alone, except that in case of the failure of a witness to appear when subpoenaed or of his refusal to be sworn or to testify, in order to punish the witness for such contempt, it is, by the section as amended, made the duty of the justice of the peace or notary public taking the deposition to report, in writing to the judge of the county court for the county in which the deposition is being taken, his action in declaring the recalcitrant witness
' It is manifest that the section, supra, does not confer upon the county judge, justice of the peace or notary public who may be commissioned under its provisions to take depositions to be used in an action or other judicial proceeding in another'state, any power to compel by-the writ known as the subpoena duces tecum the production-of books or papers by a witness. The section treats exclusively of the taking of depositions of witnesses and confers on the officer authorized to take the depositions such power as will compel the attendance of the witnesses and the giving of their depositions. Among the powers enumerated by the section, because essential to the accomplishment of the end in view, is authority to the officer taking the depositions to punish, as for contempt, a wit- ■ ness who fails to attend, in obedience to a subpoena, at the time and place fixed for taking his deposition; or who, though in attendance, refuses to be sworn or to testify. The only kind of subpoena mentioned in section' 591 is the ordinary subpoena technically called a subpoena ad testificandum, which is “a process to 'cause' a-' witness to appear and give testimony. . . . before a court or magistrate therein named, at a time therein ■ mentioned, to testify for the party named under a penalty - therein mentioned. ’ ’ The subpoena duces tecum is a writ ■ which, though in form not unlike the subpoena ad testifir candunt;- must include a clause, or command ‘ ‘ requiring the witness to bring with him and produce to the .court books, papers, etc., in his hands tending to elucidate the matter in issue.” The subpoena duces tecum is not-named in the section, supra, and as it is never named - without the intention to give it its technical meaning and to ■ distinguish it from the ordinary subpoena employed alone for the attendance of a witness, there is no ground ■ for saying that the authority given by the section to.the officer taking the depositions, to “issue a subpoena requiring the witness to attend at a specified time and place, etc.” can be held to confer authority upon him to issue a subpoena duces tecum.
While a notary public, commissioned as was the defendant, Thornton, to take depositions in this state, in
In this jurisdiction a subpoena duces tecum is never issued without an order of the court. It has, however, always been the rule that the subpoena commanding the personal attendance and giving of the testimony of the witness be issued, as a matter of right to the applicant, by the clerk of the court if the testimony of the witness is required in an action pending in court, but if the attendance of the witness is required for the purpose of taking his deposition, the subpoena is issued by the ministerial officer before whom the deposition is taken. The subpoena duces tecum has for time out of mind been issued onlv upon order of the court, or the judge of the court; that is, by the court in which the action is pending, or the judge thereof. This is c-earlv shown by the provisions of Civil Code, section 528, which are as follows :
“ (Subpoena defined — Subpoena duces tecum — Court may direct issual of.)
“The process by which the attendance of a witness is required is a subpoena. It is a writ directed to the sheriff requiring him to summon the person named therein to attend at a particular time and place, to testify as a witness. It may, when the court or the judge thereof so directs, requires the witness to bring with him any book, writing or other thing, under his control, which he is hound by law to produce in evidence.5 ’
It is not the object of this section to create new writs or even define process, but to approve and adopt certain
It is also patent from the language of section 528 that the order granting the subpoena duces tecum must be made by the court or judge having jurisdiction of the' pending action in which the books, papers or other thing sought to be produced through the process is to be used as evidence. This must be so, as that court, or the judge thereof, is best qualified to understand the competency of. the evidence that may be furnished by the books or other documents proposed to be produced. In this way the exposure of books and papers not competent as evidence would be less likely to be allowed.
"While it is true the order for the subpoena duces tecum desired by the Julius Levin Co. could not be made by the California court, entertaining the pending action in which the evidence attempted to be obtained by the production of the books of E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons is expected to be used, because the court of a foreign state is without jurisdiction to make such an order operative in this state, it does not follow, as claimed by defendants’ counsel, that the reinstatement’ of the injunction in the instant case would leave the Levin Co. without remedy. It'seems to have been held in Marion Nat. Bank v. Abell’s Admr., 88 Ky. 429, that such a remedy may be afforded by a bill of discovery filed in a court of this state having jurisdiction of the parties, upon a sufficient showing of such right or interest of the plaintiff in such action to the books or documents demanded, as would authorize the court to compel their production by the owner or custodian.
The contention of the defendants that the injunction in this case was properly dissolved, because not granted by a court in which the judgment sought to be enjoined
The question whether the evidence attempted to be obtained by the Julius Levin Co. from the books and papers of E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons, would be competent or relevant upon the issues involved in the action of the former against Sherwood & Sherwood pending in the California court, is not before us for, decision, and is not, therefore, decided. -
For the reasons indicated, the motion of the plaintiffs, E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons, and Sandifer, to reinstate^ the injunction dissolved by Circuit Judge Stout is sustained and the injunction reinstated.