237 Mo. 297 | Mo. | 1911
An indictment was returned in the circuit court of Johnson county against Benjamin M. Wilkinson, one count of which charged him with obtaining money from petitioner under false pretenses, and the other charged him with stealing the same money. Petitioner was a witness before the grand
Thereafter, on the oral application of Wilkinson’s attorney, the clerk of the court in wMch the indictment was pending issued a commission, in the usual form, to take depositions, notice was given the prosecuting attorney as required by the statute, and petitioner was duly subpoenaed to give Ms deposition in the case of State v. WilMnson before Charles W. Fulkerson, a notary public. Petitioner ignored the subpoena and was brought in by attachment, whereupon he filed a written statement of Ms reasons for refusing to reeogmze the notary’s authority, refused to be sworn and refused to answer questions put to Mm by Wilkinson’s counsel. Efforts to induce petitioner to reconsider were unavailing and he was committed for contempt. He brings tMs proceeding to obtain Ms release by writ of habeas corpus.
The statute (Sec. 2472, R. S. 1909) plainly marks the boundaries of the discussion in tMs case, viz.: “It shall be the duty of the court or magistrate forthwith to remand the party, if it shall appear that he is detained in custody . ... for any contempt, specially and plainly charged in the commitment, by some court, officer or body, having authority to commit for a contempt so charged.”
The power of a notary engaged in taking depositions to commit a -witness for contempt is not questioned, but it is contended that there whs no lawful occasion for' the exercise of that power in tMs instance.
The principal contentions are that the notary had no authority to commit petitioner because (1) the commission was void, (2) he was a witness for the State and consequently could not be a witness in defendant’s “behalf,” (3) petitioner having been before the grand jury, his name being indorsed on the indictment and he having been subpoenaed as a witness for
1. The commission was not invalid because issued on an oral instead of written and verified application. The right to take depositions in criminal cases is statutory and the statute required no affidavit or written application. Since the defendant may have witnesses examined, conditionally, in his behalf exactly as in civil cases (Sec. 5173, R. S. 1909), save that a commission must issue, and since in civil cases a party to a pending suit “may obtain the deposition of any witness, to be used in such suit, conditionally,” (See. 6384, R. S. 1909), the commission under section 5173 issues on demand as a matter of right without any preliminary showing.
The deposition of any, consequently every, witness may be taken, and the sole prerequisite to the issuance of a commission under section 5173 is that defendant desires one and asks for it. An affidavit or written application setting forth such desire could serve no useful purpose. The Legislature saw no reason for it and neither do we. When it deemed them necessary, that body expressly required petitions and affidavits prehminary to the issuance of commissions (Secs. 6398, 6420), and the omission to make such requirements in section 5173 was clearly deliberate.
Decisions in cases arising in connection with the taking of depositions under statutes and rules of court in which a limitation is fixed upon the taking of the deposition are not in point. Not the taking but the use of depositions taken under section 5173 is limited, and the fallacy of the argument to the contrary, based upon the word “conditionally” in the section mentioned was long since accurately pointed out. [Ex parte Livingston, 12 Mo. App. l. c. 85; Tullis v. Stafford, 134 Ind. 258.]
It may be added that the commission was in unexceptionable form and the objection that it was not directed to the notary by name must be overruled., [Borders v. Barber, 81 Mo. l. c. 639.]
2. The statute (Sec. 5173) providing that “the defendant in any criminal cause may also have witnesses examined on his behalf, . . .” it is argued that since petitioner testified before the grand jury, was subpoenaed by the State, and had been advised by the prosecuting attorney that he knew no facts which would benefit Wilkinson, he was a witness for the State and could not be a witness in Wilkinsori’s “behalf.” This carries with it its refutation. Neither the grand jury, the witness, nor the prosecuting attorney could determine for Wilkinson who were witnesses in his behalf. He and his counsel have the right to determine that, and they did so, so far as petitioner is concerned, for all the purposes of section 5173, when they caused him to be subpoenaed to give his deposition. Further, whether petitioner had knowledge of facts which would benefit Wilkinson on the trial was a matter for the latter and his counsel to decide.
If the prosecuting attorney or the witness can, directly or indirectly, determine for Wilkinson who are witnesses “in his behalf” under the provisions of section 5173, they can perform the same function with respect to his rights to “process to compel the attendance of witnesses in‘ his behalf” (Sec. 22, art. 2, Const, of Mo.) on the trial itself.
A somewhat analogous question was decided against petitioner’s contention in State v. Krueger, 69 Mo. App. 31.
3. It is earnestly insisted that considerations of public policy forbid the taking of the deposition of a witness who has appeared before the grand jury and whose name is indorsed upon the indictment. Counsel invoke the old common' law rule in support of their position.
One of the announced purposes of the common law in cloaking with secrecy the proceedings of the grand jury was the prevention of the subornation of perjury to meet the Crown’s evidence, and this is strongly urged upon our consideration. That was a part of a system which denied the defendant counsel, kept him in close confinement until the hour of trial, refused him the right to call witnesses, sent juries to jail for returning verdicts of acquittal and which, in short, was devised to convict the accused rather than to try the truth of the charge against him. In many respects, including the feature now pressed upon our attention, the rule 'in England has been changed by statutes (6 & 7 Will. IV. c. 114, s. 4; 11 & 12 Vic. c. 42; 30 & 31 Vic. c. 35), under which a criminal trial bears greater resemblance to a legal proceeding.
The present policy of English law is to be gathered from these statutes. Likewise the policy of our law is evidenced by our statutes. No considerations of policy derived from the common law can be relied upon to overturn statutes, the purpose of which was to supplant that policy with another. The enactment by the Legislature of statutes requiring the indorsement upon indictments and informations of the names of the State’s witnesses for the information of the
4. It is urged that since petitioner testified before the grand jury he cannot give his deposition without violating the oath he took as a witness before that body. The oath administered to witnesses before grand juries (Sec. 5070, R. S. 1909) binds them, among other things, not to disclose any fact concerning which they “shall here testify, unless lawfully required to testify in-relation thereto.”
It is obvious that if there is no other legal obstacle save the clause of the oath quoted, it does not prohibit the taking of petitioner’s deposition, provided his being compelled to give his deposition is equivalent to his being “required to testify.” To “testify” is to “make a solemn declaration, verbal or written, to establish some fact.” [Case v. James, 90 Wis. 1. c. 322; O’Brien v. State, 125 Ind. 1. c. 44; Nash v. Hoxie, 59 Wis. 1. c. 388; Gannon v. Stevens, 13 Kas. 1. c. 459; State v. Robertson 26 S. C. 1. c. 120.]
Under the provisions of a statute empowering a litigant to compel his adversary “to testify in his
These authorities and the ordinary and accepted meaning of the word “testify” convince us that the oath taken before the grand jury constitutes no obstacle to the taking of petitioner’s deposition. If the deposition is being lawfully, taken the deponent is lawfully required to testify, and the obligation of his oath is met even when the oath, is construed to mean all that counsel for petitioner contend it does mean.
5. It is unnecessary to discuss the cases holding that a witness cannot be committed for refusing to answer questions which themselves disclose that no answer made could possibly be relevant to any issue in the case in which the deposition is being taken. No such question is in this case. If it be true that the money Wilkinson is accused of obtaining by improper means was furnished him by petitioner and paid out by Wilkinson as agreed, for the purpose of settling a civil suit in which petitioner was defendant, that seems an important fact in Wilkinson’s defense. The questions put tended to elicit evidence on this theory. They were clearly relevant to the issue in the pending case.
Since petitioner refused to be sworn or testify at all, the record does not present any question as to Wilkinson’s good faith in taking these depositions. [In re Hammond, 83 Neb. 1. c. 644.] However, the questions put were relevant to the issue, there is no indication of a design to oppress and none of an officious effort to pry into petitioner’s private affairs not pertinent to the issues in the pending case. There
Except for some loose allegations in the form of conclusions, .the sole basis of the charge of bad faith,, outside the fact that the witness is among those relied on by the State, seems to be that the questions put were leading. It is urged that the effort was merely to cross-examine. No objection to the form of the questipns was made. The remedy for improper form is not by refusal to answer. If no objection is made before the notary to the form of question put, the answers could not be excluded on the trial because the questions are leading. Direct examination, as it is argued, is a condition precedent to cross-examination. It does not follow, however, that every examination in which leading questions are employed is a cross-examination in that sense. The form of the questions put cannot be relied upon as ground of discharge in a case of this kind.
For these additional reasons no question of good faith in taking petitioner’s deposition arises' on this record. It is therefore unnecessary to pass upon any such question and unnecessary to decide whether petitioner could raise any such question in this proceeding. [See Ex parte Brockman, 233 Mo. l. c. 153.]
6. The record of the notary and exhibits brought here disclose that petitioner filed a written refusal to be sworn and testify; that despite the notary’s efforts to induce him to be sworn, he refused to do so and also refused to answer the questions put to him, the relevancy of which we have elsewhere considered.
The record of the notary sets forth all the facts constituting the contempt, including the questions propounded and the refusals to answer, and shows an order and “judgment” that petitioner be committed for the doing of the things which constituted it. [In re Shull, 221 Mo. l. c. 628.]
7. The Legislature having specifically authorized the taking as in civil cases- of the deposition of any witness by a defendant in a criminal case, the extent to which the examination may go is the same as the taking of depositions in a civil case. With the policy of the statutes on this subject we have nothing to do. That is the business of the Legislature. [Tullis v. Stafford, 134 Ind. 1. c. 261.]
The petitioner is remanded.
The foregoing opinion of Blair, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.