239 Mo. 438 | Mo. | 1912
— Plaintiff sued defendant by attachment in the Jackson Circuit Court on January 10, 1907, for $1816.28, balance claimed to be due on contract, with interest; and property of the defendant located in Kansas City was attached, the defendant being a nonresident.
On March 25; 1907, plaintiff sued out a commission to take depositions in the State of Illinois, and notice was duly given to defendant, and he was summoned on March 29, 1907, to appear, before the notary on April 2, 1907, to give his deposition. At the time and place given in the notice and summons, both parties appeared by counsel, and defendant’s counsel stated that his client refused to testify or give his deposition in the case. Plaintiff’s counsel thereupon informed defendánt’s counsel of the existence of our statute requiring a party to give his deposition, and on refusal, authorizing the court to reject his pleading. After which defendant’s counsel again stated that his client would not give his deposition.
On April 12, 1907, defendant, by Frank Hagerman, his attorney, entered his appearance and filed an answer, which was a general denial. By stipulation the attached property was released.
At the October term, 1907, the plaintiff presented his motion to strike out defendant’s answer on account
On October 26, 1907, the trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion, denied defendant’s right to be further heard, and, having heard plaintiff’s evidence in support of his petition, entered judgment for plaintiff for the amount demanded and interest. Defendant has. appealed.
I. It is contended on the part of appellant that the laws of the State, ex proprio vigore, have no force beyond the State boundary, and that, as no statute of Illinois is shown giving power to the officer in Illinois to summon defendant and compel him to testify, the whole proceeding before the notary was, so to speak, coram non judice and void.
While the general doctrine of the limitation of the force of laws to the territory of the sovereignty may be conceded, yet within the State the laws and the courts often act upon and determine rights based upon acts and conditions done or existing outside the State.
Thus it is said: “Notwithstanding the rigor with which the English courts have applied the lex rei sitae to immovables, the court of chancery has claimed the right to compel parties, subject to its jurisdiction, to take specific action with regard to foreign real estate. Thus, an injunction has been granted to restrain the prosecution of claims for such foreign realty, specific performance of articles of agreement for sale of foreign realty has been enforced; and reconveyances and releases ordered of estates fraudulently ac
It is also said, “When the personal property of a non-resident is within the State it is subject to its laws, and may be seized, attached, forfeited, as a thing guilty or hostile, the same as though the property of a citizen, and subject to the same rules and liabilities. The service of process or an order of court, made outside the boundary of a State, can have no more force than knowledge brought to a party in any other manner. [Brown on Jurisdiction, sec. 4.]
Section 6389, Revised Statutes 1909, says: “The commission shall authorize such officer to cause to come before him such person or persons as shall be named to him by the party suing for the same, and shall command such officer to examine such person touching his knowledge of anything relating to the matter in controversy,” etc.
Concede that the process for the witness called for in that section is no more than a notice as stated by Brown, yet it is that very notice which the statute has in view when it says, section 6361, Revised Statutes 1909, “If a party, on being duly summoned, refuse to attend and testify, either in court or before any person authorized to take his deposition,” etc. There is nothing to hinder the State from requiring from a non-resident, as well as from a resident, as a condition to his being heard in court, that he shall, on proper notice, give his deposition either in the State or out of it. We do not need the assistance of the laws or courts of Illinois in the enforcement of that statute.
The point is made that there had been no previous order of court requiring the defendant to testify. True there was no order of court, but there was a statute, and at the time and place when the deposition should have been given, counsel for plaintiff notified defendant’s Illinois counsel of such statute and of the consequences of such refusal.
II. The statute says “besides being punished himself for a contempt, his petition, answer or reply may be rejected,” etc.
Even if it be conceded, as it is not, that the court cannot “punish for a contempt” in such case, still such fact would not destroy the power of the court to strike out the pleading. If two penalties be provided for an act, the offender cannot wholly escape by showing that one of them is illegal or impossible. No authority for such a result has been shown us, and we know of none.
III. Complaint is also made that the Illinois officer had no power to protect defendant from an inquisitorial examination and that no limit was put upon the inquiry to be made. We will not enter upon an attempt to justify the wisdom of our statutes as to depositions. That has already been sufficiently done in Tyson v. Sav. & Loan Assn., 156 Mo. 588.
IV. The statute does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, nor does it deny the defendant due process of law. The case of Hovey v. Elliott, 167 U. S. 409, is cited by appellant. That was a case where a party was ordered to pay over a fund, failing in which his answer was stricken from the files and a decree entered
That court in Hammond Packing Company v. Arkansas, 212 U. S. l. c. 351, upheld the court’s power to strike out a party’s pleading for failure to produce proof when ordered, and distinguished the case then under consideration from Hovey v. Elliott as follows: “In the former due process of law was denied by the refusal to hear. In this the preservation of due process was secured by the presumption that the refusal to produce evidence material to the administration of due process was but an admission of the want of merit in the asserted defense. The want of power in the one ease and its existence in the other are essential to due process, to preserve in the one and to apply and enforce in the other. In its ultimate conception therefore the power exerted below was like the authority to default or to take a bill for confessed-because of a failure to answer, based upon a presumption that the material facts alleged or pleaded were admitted by not answering, and might well also be illustrated by reference to many other presumptions attached by the law to the failure of a
That court then, proceeds to show that ever since the judiciary act of 1789 the Federal courts have proceeded under a section of that act giving them authority to require the production of books and papers in the possession of a party, and of giving judgment against such party on failure to comply, and that the validity of that act was recognized in Thompson v. Selden, 20 How. 194, and Boyd v. United States, 116 U. S. 616.
Appellant does not claim to have acted in ignorance of our statute. He admits that he refused to give his deposition and gave no valid reason for such refusal. He did not, at any time thereafter, offer to purge himself of the contempt by giving his deposition. He is in the attitude of complaining that he was refused a hearing while refusing to speak.
The judgment is affirmed.
— The foregoing opinion of Bov, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.