8 Mart. 682 | La. | 1822
Lead Opinion
The only question presented in this cause, is the correctness of the opinion of the court in refusing the defendants a continuance.
This action was commenced on the 24th day of May. The petition alleged that Robt. Andrews, the only partner of the firm of Andrews & Co. in the state, was about to depart therefrom, and prayed that he might be held to bail. On the 1st of June, his counsel made an affidavit that there were letters and papers material for the defence, and without which he could not file an answer. Sixty days were granted him to make one.
The 17th of September this answer
was
put in, and the same day a commission was
The affidavits on which this application was made, were sworn to by Dorsey, the agent of the appellants, and by their counsel in the cause.
The first mentioned witness declared, that he was informed, and believed, that there was a just defence to the action, and that by letters from the defendants, he was instructed, that one of them was to leave Kentucky on the first of October, and was expected here the first of November, bringing with him one Stockton, as the deponent believed, a material witness for the defendants; and that he expected said Stockton to prove the correctness of the items claimed as a set-off against
The declaration of the counsel in the cause, was to the same effect; and further added, that the reason of his not having forwarded the commission, was the information he had received, and the belief founded on it, that the witness intended to leave Kentucky about the first of October.
Applications of this kind are addressed to the legal discretion of the court, and must, in a great measure, depend on the particular circumstances of each case. In that now before us, the cause was at issue on the 17th day of September, and a commission was taken out the same day, which appears not to have been executed. I agree entirely with the position taken by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the change of determination in the defendants, to execute the commission, cannot affect the opposite party; that the trial ought not to have been postponed, because
It is true, the commission was not taken out here, but from the facts disclosed by the affidavit of counsel, for not acting under it, I think he was entitled to the same delay to procure the witness, that he would have had to procure the testimony from Kentucky,
We have held in the case of Lecesne vs. Coltin, 9 Martin, 454, where the subject of diligence was strenuously debated, that whenever the propriety of granting a continuance to a defendant was doubtful, the duty of the court was to accord it. Because, if there was error on that side, it produced but delay. If on the other, irreparable injury might be the consequence. Holding still the same opinion, I do not feel myself authorised to say that the defendants here were not entitled to further time.
The circumstances which attended the progress of the cause, before the answer was filed, are not of that nature to authorise us to declare that delay alone was intended from the commencement of the suit.
The judgment of the district court should be reversed, the cause remanded for a new trial, and the appellee pay the costs of this appeal.
The examination of witnesses, in open court, is so preferable to that before
I think, that in the present case, the defendants cannot be charged with having no other view than to obtain delay. The court a quo, in my opinion, erred in withholding the continuance. We ought to reverse the judgment and remand the cause for trial.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the opinion of my colleagues.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be annulled, avoided and reversed, and that the case be remanded for trial, and that the appellee pay the costs in this court.