36 A. 15 | N.H. | 1895
Parties and their witnesses are privileged from arrest while going to, attending upon, and returning from the trial of an action. A person who procures an arrest in violation of the privilege is guilty of contempt of court; and the action in which the arrest is made is subject to abatement for want of proper service. State v. Buck,
The right to take the deposition of a non-resident witness does not answer the requirements of justice. It is often indispensable to a just decision of a cause, and is always desirable, that testimony shall be given orally in open court. The triers are more likely to understand the testimony fully and correctly. The appearance of the witness aids materially in forming a correct judgment of the credibility and weight of his testimony. All the issues of fact that may arise at the trial can seldom be foreseen. A fact within the knowledge of a witness may appear to be so foreign to the case when his deposition is taken that it is not deemed worth while to question him upon it, and yet the course of the trial may be such that it is the fact which will control the verdict. See Metcalf v. Gilmore,
These and other considerations have led to the establishment, quite generally, of the doctrine that non-resident witnesses are privileged from liability to be sued while attending the trial, and going to and returning from it; and that a violation of the privilege is cause for abating the action. In re Healey,
The question whether the defendant, as the petitioner's attorney, was exempt from the service of process (Bac. Abr., Privilege, B, 1, 2; 1 Tidd Pr. 195, 196, and cases; 1 Gr. Ev., ss. 316, 317; Meekins v. Smith, 1 H. Bl. 636; Newton v. Harland, 8 Scott 70; Luntly v. Nathaniel, 2 Dowl. 51; Castle's Case, 16 Ves. 412; Williams v. Webb, 5 Scott N. R. 898; Commonwealth v. Ronald, 4 Call 97; Secor v. Bell, 18 Johns. 52; Corey v. Russell, 4 Wend. 204; Humphrey v. Cumming, 5 Wend. 90; Cole v. M'Clellan, 4 Hill 59) has not been considered, because the defendant does not claim exemption on that ground.
It is immaterial that the defendant was not sworn, if he attended in good faith as a witness. Whether he did or did not attend in this character does not distinctly appear. The exception will be overruled or sustained according as the judge at the trial term may find on that question.
Case discharged.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *315