Kendall v. Limberg

69 Ill. 355 | Ill. | 1873

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of trespass, brought by Limberg against Kendall, for false imprisonment. A verdict and judgment were rendered against the defendant, and he has appealed from the judgment.

Errors are assigned in respect to depositions which were taken in the cause :

First—That they were not accompanied by a certificate of the official character of the person taking the depositions. They were taken by a commissioner, and no such certificate was required.

Seco7id—That the commissioner certifies he was acting under a commission, bearing test in the name of Noel Brassean; and the" commission issued bears test in the name of Geo. E. Letourneau.

The commissioner was not required to certify any thing in respect to the commission. His duty in the premises was, to inclose the depositions with the commission and interrogatories, and send the same to the clerk of the court Avho issued the commission. The commission shows an authority to take the depositions. The undertaking of the commissioner to describe the commission, and in doing so, his misdescribing the name of the clerk Avho issued it, in no way detracts from such authority.

Third—The name of the plaintiff is Julius M. Limberg, and it is objected, that in the commissioner’s certificate annexed at the foot of the depositions, he certifies, “'that preA-ious to the examination of the Avitnesses in the suit betAveen the said Jolm M. Limhe7'g, plaintiff, and the said Edwin E. Iiendall, defendant, they Avere each duly SAVorn to testify the truth in relation to the matter in controversy betAveen the .said John M. Limberg, plaintiff,” etc. In the caption of the depositions the commissioner recites, that he was directed by the commission to take the depositions of the Avitnesses in a suit pending in the circuit court of Kankakee county, Avherein Julius M. Limberg Avas plaintiff, and EdAvin E. Kendall Avas defendant, and that the Avitnesses Avere duly SAvorn by him, as Avitnesses in said cause, previous to the commencement of the examination, to testify the truth in relation to the matter in controversy betAveen the said plaintiff' and defendant.

There was clearly a clerical mistake in the description of the name of the plaintiff in the certificate. The caption showed this, and sufficiently corrected the mistake.

Taking the whole deposition together, there can be no doubt that the witnesses were properly sworn.

Fourth—-That the court refused to suppress' the answers to the 8th interrogatory, which were as follows :

‘Interrogatory. Please state the manner in which said defendant treated said plaintiff, and what, if any thing, was said to you by the said parties in the hearing of each other, or by you to the said parties, at the said time, in the presence of each of them, and all that occurred at said time?

Answer of Edwin J. Green : I thought then, and I think now, that defendant’s treatment of plaintiff was very indecent, brutal, and very unbecoming an officer and gentleman. I have related the circumstances between the parties, and with me, and in my presence, in answer to interrogatories 4 and 6 of this deposition.

The answer of the other witness was, that he considered the treatment rude and ungentlemanly.

To refuse to suppress the first sentence of the above answer, was a plain error. But we hardly think it one serious enough to require a reversal of the judgment. All the particulars of defendant’s treatment of plaintiff, the acts and words, had been fully detailed in the answers to the 4th and 6th interrogatories. The jury had before them full means of judging, for themselves, what kind of treatment it was. The witness’ characterization of it, although manifestly wrong, does not seem calculated to have produced enough of injury to the defendant to make the error a fatal one.

It is urged as error that the court excluded the records of the town clerk’s office, which were offered in evidence for the purpose of showing the appointment of defendant to fill a vacancy in the office of constable; the defendant justified as a constable, and thence a necessity of proving him to be such. But the statute prescribes, that a vacancy in the office of constable shall be filled by appointment by warrant, under the hands and seals of the justices of the peace of the town, the supervisor, and the town clerk. The record offered was not the proper proof of the appointment. Besides, the defendant himself testified, without objection, to the warrant of appointment, and to his taking the oath and giving bond as constable ; and the instructions in the case make no question as to defendant being a constable, but they make the right of recovery to depend upon whether defendant arrested the plaintiff in the State of Indiana, and compulsorily brought him into this State, or whether the plaintiff voluntarily returned here with the defendant. There is nothing in this point.

It is lastly urged, that the court erred in not granting a new trial, on the ground of newly discovered evidence.

As to Williams, who was with defendant at the time of the alleged arrest, his testimony was known to defendant previo us to the time of the trial, and it is only his place of resideuce that has been discovered since the trial. The defendant should have made an application for a continuance, on account of not having been able to procure the testimony of this witness, instead of voluntarily going into the trial without it. And, as to all the newly discovered testimony, it is not conclusive in its character, and is merely cumulative, and contradictory of plaintiff's witnesses, and does not afford ground for a new trial, according to the well settled rule upon the subject. Smith v. Shultz, 1 Scam. 491; Martin v. Ehrenfels, 24 Ill. 187; Adams v. The People, 47 Ill. 376.

The judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

midpage