291 N.W. 337 | Wis. | 1940
Volney B. Hyslop, plaintiff, commenced an action on May 17, 1939, against Isabel Hyslop, his wife, for a divorce. The matter being at issue upon defendant's answer, *431 defendant caused plaintiff to be subpoenaed for an adverse examination under sec. 326.12, Stats. In the course of that examination plaintiff declined under a claim of privilege to answer certain questions concerning his health, and refused to answer certain other questions upon the ground that his answers would tend to incriminate him. Thereupon defendant petitioned the circuit court on November 22, 1939, that plaintiff's complaint be dismissed upon the ground that "the plaintiff should be required to do equity before requesting relief of the court." On December 12, 1939, the trial court entered an order denying this motion. On December 13, 1939, defendant filed a supplementary petition realleging the facts contained in the former petition, stating that the court commissioner before whom the adverse examination had been taken had filed his report and the same is a part of the record in the proceedings; that such report specifically shows that defendant had answered in the negative a question with respect to his sexual relations with another woman. The petitioner asks for an order dismissing plaintiff's complaint for want of equity, or, in the alternative, for an order requiring plaintiff to answer the questions specifically referred to in the original petition and motion. On December 13, 1939, this motion was denied. These are the orders appealed from by defendant. We do not reach the merits of this controversy, nor is it necessary or expedient to state them for the reason that the orders involved are not appealable. In her brief defendant concedes that the order denying defendant's motion to dismiss is not a final order and not *432 appealable. This being obvious, we shall not discuss the point further.
Plaintiff also contends that the order denying defendant's motion to compel plaintiff to answer certain questions upon an adverse examination is not an appealable order, and we are satisfied that the contention is correct. So far as applicable here, sec. 274.33, Stats., provides:
"The following orders when made by the court may be appealed to the supreme court: . . .
"(2) A final order affecting a substantial right made in special proceedings or upon a summary application in an action after judgment.
"(3) When an order grants, refuses, continues or modifies a provisional remedy. . . ."
Cases involving the appealability of orders relating to the taking of adverse examinations were in some confusion up to the decision of this court in Milwaukee Corrugating Co.v. Flagge,
In Blossom v. Ludington,
In State ex rel. Finnegan v. Lincoln Dairy Co.
The conclusions from these cases are, (1) that the adverse examination is a provisional remedy; (2) that being granted as a matter of course by statute, no order of the *434 court can be considered appealable upon the ground that it grants this provisional remedy; (3) that an order refusing to suppress is not an appealable order upon the ground that it continues a provisional remedy; and (4) that an order limiting the adverse examination does not refuse or modify a provisional remedy. The only orders found appealable by the earlier cases were those refusing to suppress or to limit adverse examinations, and these holdings were upon the theory that such orders continued a provisional remedy. This position was abandoned in the Milwaukee CorrugatingCo. Case, supra, and in the Finnegan Case, supra, this court refused to entertain an appeal from an order which, by limiting the scope of the adverse examination, was argued to have modified or in part refused a provisional remedy. Such orders merely regulate the procedure upon the examination and do not operate upon the provisional remedy which the adverse examination constitutes. It is an inescapable conclusion that the order in question is not appealable and that this court has no jurisdiction to review it.
By the Court. — Appeal dismissed.