Lead Opinion
Mоtion to dismiss an appeal from an order granting in part and denying in part an inspection of books and papers in the possеssion of one of the parties.
G. S. 1923 (
*633 Is an order granting or denying such a motion an appealable order ? , It is urged that such an order is a provisional remedy and appealablе under § 9498 (2) of the statutes.
Discovery under the common law was by bill in equity for discovery of facts residing in the knowledge of the defendant named in thе bill, or discovery and inspection of deeds, writings, or other things in his custody, but seeking no relief other than such discovery. It was a separate action or proceeding wherein the one seeking discovery was plaintiff and the other party or parties to a pending or contemplated action at law were defendants. Interrogatories were included in or attached to the bill, and the1 defendant'or-defendants therein were required to answer them.
Our statutes do not provide any such proceeding. The order for an inspection of books and documents is. a mere order of the court in a pending action. The statute does not in terms require any formal application or notice. The order may apparently be made during or before trial on notice or ex parte. An appeal from such an order is likely to result in serious delay in the prosecution of the action. If held a provisional remedy, the granting of such inspection will prevent the dismissal of the suit by the plaintiff before trial. G. S. 1923 (
*634 Provisional remedies have been enumerated as including arrest, attachment, bail, claim and delivery, injunction, ne exeat, and receivership.
Inspection of books and papers, undеr the Wisconsin statutes, has been held in that state to be a provisional remedy. The Wisconsin statute goes farther than ours and permits еxamination of an adverse party as a witness, practically the same as the common law suit for discovery. See Ellinger v. Equitablе L. A. Society,
The case of Alexander v. U. S.
We find nothing in subds. 3, 5, or 7 of § 9498 of the statutes making the order here in question appealable.
The order was not an appealable order, and the appeal is dismissed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
If I were making law I Avould do it precisely аs it is done in the majority opinion, which probably reaches the more desirable result. But inasmuch as we must take the statute as we find it, I reаch the opposite conclusion.
If the order in question is one granting or denying a provisional remedy, within the meaning of G. S. 1923 (
To say that under our present procedure such an order is interlocutory merely (see State ex rel. Seаttle G. C. Co. v. Superior Court,
