1 Gill 66 | Md. | 1843
delivered the opinion of this court.
Two exceptions were taken to the opinion of the court below in this case, both of which relate to questions of evidence.In the first exception, the witness produced to give evidence for the plaintiff being incompetent, by reason of interest, certain paper writings or documentary proofs were offered in evidence, for the purpose of restoring his competency, which being held by the court sufficient for that purpose, the defendant excepted. Much of the argument urged by the appellant’s counsel is rendered unavailing by certain admissions and facts stated in the bill of exceptions and the operation of law upon-those facts and admissions. In 2 Tidd’s Practice, 913, the following principle of law is stated in relation to the legal effect and eonclusiveness of a bill of exceptions; “when the bill of exceptions is sealed, the truth of the facts contained in it, can never afterwards be disputed; for this principle, Show. P. G. 120, is referred to. The ground upon ■which the witness produced by the plaintiff was contended to be incompetent, being his liability for any devastavit of the plaintiff, as her surety in the administration of her husband’s estate, one of the proofs produced to obviate that objection, was a release executed by Joseph T. Mitchell, who is stated in the bill of exceptions to be the sole heir at law of his father Joseph T. Mitchell, and who is expressly admitted in said bill of exceptions to have been of full age at the time it was executed; a certified copy of said release was also produced, authenticated by the signature and seal of the Register of Wills for Kent county. This release contained an express acknowledgment that he had received his full share of his father’s estate, and released the administratrix and her sureties from all responsibility therefor. This release was moreover executed after a lapse of eight years
We think, also, that there was no error in the opinion of the court below in the second exception. The defendant in the suit was dead, and no new party had been made when the notice was given and the deposition was taken by the commissioner. The act of 1828, ch. 165, under which the deposition was taken, manifestly contemplates a case where both plaintiff and defendant are in existence, and actually parties to the litigation upon the record at the time the notice is given by the commissioner, and the deposition is taken in pursuance thereof. The language of the 2nd section of the act is, “that either party, in any action depending in the said courts, after due notice to the other party or his attorney, agreeably to such rule as shall be made by said courts respectively, may take the deposition of any witness before any one of the said commissioners, to be used as testimony on the trial of such action.” The defendant in this case being dead, and no new party having been made, the deposition was taken without legal warrant or authority, according to the provisions of this act, and was, therefore, properly rejected by the court. We wish it to be understood, that in deciding the question as to the admissibilty
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.