93 N.Y.S. 396 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The objection which the defendant most earnestly takes to this order is, that the court has no authority to grant one requiring a physical examination of the defendant. In my opinion such objection is not well taken. The old Court of Chancery never refused, that I can discover, to exercise sueli authority. On the contrary, it would never grant a decree annulling a marriage on that ground until such an examination had been had by competent and disinterested surgeons, named or approved by the court, and such an examination would be directed and the defendant ordered to submit thereto upon the court’s own motion, in the event that neither party applied, upon the ground that public policy required such proof of
There is no ground, therefore, for the reversal of this order because the court has assumed to require the defendant to submit to a .physical examination.
It is urged upon us, however, by the appellant that the rights of the defendant have not been sufficiently protected by this order, and that it contains some provisions that must necessarily operate to his prejudice.
Rone of the provisions of the Oode of Civil Procedure apply to such a jiroceeding as this, and none of the requirements of the order appealed from are warranted by that act. Reither is there, any fixed and definite procedure laid down by the court or by any statute to control such proceedings, and,' therefore, the method to be adopted must rest largely in the judicial discretion of the court at Special Term.
The defendant complains in this case that the order leaves the proceeding, so far as his oral examination is concerned, wide open, and permits the plaintiff to inquire as to any subject which may be deemed pertinent to any issue raised in the action, and that it also requires the examining physicians to be sworn before the referee and to give their' evidence and opinions upon the issues presented.
Evidently the order seems to contemplate that the deposition of both defendant and the physicians is to be talcen before the referee, but it makes no- provision as to how the record thereof is to be taken or used, nor as to what effect it is to have upon the trial. May it be used upon the trial only in the absence of the defendant or physicians so examined % Or are they to be excluded from the presence of the court and the deposition so taken substituted as their evidence, or under what circumstances and in what manner is it to be used ? It must be remembered that there is no general provision of practice which is applicable to or controlling in such cases. The authority to take such examination and evidence does not go as a matter of course, nor is the procedure to be followed in taking it controlled by the usual rules.
And while I would not hold that a reference may not in any instance be ordered, at which such evidence may be taken, I am of
All concurred.
Order reversed, without costs to" either party, with leave to respondent to apply for an order for a physical examination of the defendant.