Hunter v. District Court of Polk County

126 Iowa 357 | Iowa | 1905

Bishop, J.

— ■ The return to the writ issued shows that in October, 1903, an information was filed in the district court of Polk county charging this plaintiff with a contempt of court, for that, well knowing that one M. Y. ICennedy was a juror duly summoned, drawn, and sworn as one of the jury in a civil cause wherein one Pflanz was plaintiff, and the Iowa Telephone Company was defendant, then pending and on trial in said court, he did willfully and knowingly attempt to improperly influence said juror to render a verdict in said' cause, by causing and procuring one M. H. Drady to converse with said juror about said cause, the merits thereof, and the verdict to be rendered therein, and to inform said juror as to the nature and amount of the verdict in. said cause expected and desired by said company, and requesting said juror to render a verdict favorable to said company, and requesting said juror to see said Blunter in respect to the verdict to be rendered in said cause. Upon filing of such information, a rule issued, and in response thereto this plaintiff appeared and made answer in writing and under oath, in which he denied, all and singular, the allegations in the information contained. A motion for discharge based *359upon tbe denials contained in tbe answer having been overruled, a trial was bad, resulting in a finding of guilty, and tbe entry of judgment for a fine and costs. It further appears from tbe return that upon the trial in tbe district court, and at tbe beginning thereof, tbe court, on its own motion, made tbe following announcement and order: It being apparent to tbe court from tbe informations filed in tbe case of Tbe State v. Drady and Tbe State v. Hunter that these two cases rest, in part, at least, upon tbe same state of facts, as claimed, and tbe testimony in tbe case of Tbe State v. Drady having been taken, it is tbe order. of tbe court, made to avoid an unnecessary consumption of time, that tbe testimony in tbe case of Tbe State v. Drady shall be considered in this ease as taken therein, subject to tbe objections, rulings, and exceptions made on tbe taking of that testimony, and subject to tbe further right of tbe defendant, Hunter, to object to any part thereof as being incompetent, immaterial, or irrelevant, as relating to him.” To this order both parties objected and took exception. Thereupon tbe trial proceeded, and a submission of tbe case was taken upon tbe oral testimony of two witnesses, and a transcript of tbe evidence taken upon the trial of tbe Drady case. It appears that included' in tbe latter was a document in writing purporting to be a transcript of evidence given under oath by M. Drady before a committee of tbe bar of Polk county appointed by tbe court to make investigation in respect of alleged attempts theretofore made to influence jurors in attendance upon said court.'

Tbe contention is now'made in this court by counsel for plaintiff that the admission of tbe transcript of tbe evidence of the various witnesses who testified in tbe Drady case, and especially tbe transcript of tbe evidence given by Drady before the bar committee, as evidence in tbe instant case, was unauthorized and illegal, and that such transcripts were wholly incompetent and irrelevant as evidence upon tbe trial of tbe case against this plaintiff; further, that there was not *360sufficient competent evidence to authorize the judgment against this plaintiff.

Confessedly, the oral testimony introduced upon the trial, taken by itself, was insufficient to warrant a finding of contempt as charged in the information. We are brought, then, to the inquiry, were the transcripts put in evidence by the court on its own motion competent ? We think this question must be answered in the negative. Especially in cases involving an alléged constructive contempt, the statutes of this State contemplate a trial. Code, section 4466. And such is our holding in the cases of Wells v. District Court, 126 Iowa, 340, and Drady v. District Court, 126 Iowa, 345. Now, a trial means an investigatiori into the facts according to the forms of law. It means that, in character, the evidence brought forward in proof of the charge made must be competent and relevant to the issue, and this according to the established rules relating to the admissibility of evidence. Whether Hunter had the right to have the witnesses confront him in person, we need not decide. To say the least, he had the right to have the testimony taken under the issue made by his answer, and to conduct the examination and cross-examination of the witnesses, make objections, etc., according to his own conception of his rights and interests. He was not a party to the Drady Case, nor to the bar committee investigation; and certainly there is no statute provision, nor is there any rule at common law. recognized in this State, under which his conviction- could be accomplished by confronting him with a case previously made up on an issue .between other parties, and saving to him only the right to make additional objections if he was so advised. In our view, the recitals of fact contained in the transcripts could not bind any one aside from the immediate parties to the proceeding in which the evidence was taken. To all others they were as hearsay, and could not, therefore, be admissible in proof of any substantive fact in issue in any trial, civil or criminal. Our conclusion has support in the following *361authorities: State v. Van Winkle, 80 Iowa, 15; Southern W. L. Co. v. Haas, 73 Iowa, 399; 11 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 526, and cases cited.

It follows from what we have said that the judgment-entered by the district court was unauthorized and void, and that the same should be annulled. It is so ordered.— Annulled.