29 N.C. 79 | N.C. | 1846
The objection to the deposition was properly overruled. The testimony was not offered to establish the contents of the instrument before the jury, in the sense of dispensing with the original for that purpose. On the contrary, the original was produced and given in evidence. The sole purpose, then, of setting out the copy of the note in the deposition was to identify the particular instrument, which was the subject of the transaction to which the witness refers and primarily deposes. There may have been many papers of the kind, and therefore it might be material to identify that about which the parties dealt. That might have been done by this witness saying, for example, that it was the only one he ever endorsed, or was sued on in Granville Court, or the like. It does not hurt his testimony that after stating the suit on it, he proceeded further to set out a copy, so that any paper that might be produced as an original might be compared with the copy, as a test whether it was really that of which the witness was speaking. It was a particularity that might have operated inconveniently to the plaintiff, if the witness or the commissioner had made a slip in copying; but it can by no means hurt the deposition as evidence of identity, (83) which was the sole purpose for which it was offered upon the trial. It is in that respect that this case differs from that ofRegina v. Douglass, 1 Car. Ker., 670, where the original books were produced before the court in Madras, which took the deposition, and they were retained there, and a copy of them sent in the deposition as the only evidence upon the trial in England of the contents of the originals. *65
There is nothing, we think, in the notion that, as the commissioner acts under and as the substitute of the court in taking the deposition, he ought not to take testimony from the witness to any fact to which the witness could not under the same circumstances testify before the court; for the deposition is not at the taking offered as evidence, but it is taken to be offered as evidence on the trial of the cause; and it will or will not be received, as it may then appear to have been duly taken. For example, the commissioner may proceed to take the deposition without proof before him of the notice to take it; or he may examine a witness as to the contents of a lost bond, though the loss be not first proved; but before the deposition can be read in evidence the notice must be shown to the court, or the loss must be established at least, prima facie. The truth is, however, that there is nothing in this deposition which the witness might not have stated if he had been personally examined on the trial; for he did not mention the contents for the purpose of establishing them thereby, but merely to designate what original he was deposing about.
Jones v. Cannady,
The next objection is that the day of payment of the usurious interest is erroneously stated to be 4 May. If it be necessary that the precise day of taking the unlawful premium should be laid in (84) the declaration, this objection is fatal, inasmuch as it was held in Wright v. Gibbony,
It is, indeed, further insisted that the period of the forbearance is not properly alleged in the declaration, because it extended to 10 May, 1841. This point is not stated in the exception to have been taken in the Superior Court, and, therefore, could not be insisted on here. But it is admitted that it was intended to be stated, and agreed that is should be considered as having been stated, and that if the Court should find anything in it the exception should be amended. But the Court is of opinion that the declaration states the forbearance truly, according to the evidence; for, although the defendants did not actually receive the money into their own hands, so as to incur the penalty under the statute, until 10 May, there was yet, not a forbearance to that day, but the payment was exacted from the debtor on 4 May. The forbearance to the debtor certainly terminated with the payment by him, which discharged his debt and put the money beyond his control, unless it had become his again by refusal of the creditor to receive it and his direction to the sheriff to pay it back.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
(87)