52 N.Y.S. 1094 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This action, brought to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been' sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence of the defendant, involves, so far as this appeal is concerned, the question of the right of the defendant, under his papers, to examine the plaintiff before the trial. The complaint alleges that the defendant is the landlord of certain premises in the borough of Brooklyn, city, of Hew York, and that “on or about January 6, 1898, and for a long time prior thereto, the defendant knowingly, willfully, wrongfully and negligently, kept and maintained the carpet or covering to and upon a stairway of, in and to said premises in such a defective, unsafe and dangerous condition, that on or about the 6th day of January, 1898, plaintiff, while lawfully and necessarily using the same, and was free from all fault whatever on her. part, was thereby caused to trip and fall, and, by reason of the premises aforesaid, to sustain severe, serious, painful and permanent injuries to her body and health, all to her damage of thirty thousand dollars.” The answer set up a general denial, except as to the fact of land-lordship, which is admitted.
On the affidavits of Herbert T. Ketcham and David J. Stewart an order was granted, directing the plaintiff to appear before Frank H. Voght, referee, for examination; and it was further ordered that she appear before Fannie "W. Oakey, M. D., for a physical examination. On the hearing of a motion to show cause why this order should not be vacated, a Special Term of this court denied the motion to set aside this order, and from that order appeal comes to this court; it being contended, on the part of the plaintiff, that the affidavits on which the original order was granted did not set forth sufficient facts to enable the court to judicially determine that the information sought was material and necessary for the defendant. We are of opinion that this position is well taken.
The Code of Civil Procedure has not changed the rule insisted upon in courts of chancery, and it is necessary, in order to justify an order directing the examination of a party to an action before trial, to show to the court the facts which are within the special
The .affidavit of Herbert T. Ketcham, the defendant’s attorney, says that “ The testimony of ¡the plaintiff, as to the manner in which she received the injuries alleged in the complaint in this action and as to the nature, and extent of such injuries,, is material and necessary for the defendant and for the defense of such action. He cannot safely proceed to the trial- thereof without such testimony. I intend, upon such trial, to read in behalf of the defendant the testimony of the plaintiff .to be taken before trial.” This does not show that the examination of the plaintiff is material or necessary to the defendant in the defense of this action.
The action is -brought for the purpose of recovering for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence of tlié defendant. To justify the court in granting the order for an examination of the plaintiff, pending the trial of the action, the defendant should show to the court that the plaintiff is in the possession of knowledge of facts which it is necessary for the .defendant to know; that the defendant has taken steps to discover these facts from other sources; that he has been unable to make such discovery, and that he cannot safely proceed to trial without such knowledge of facts. The mere fact that the defendant’s attorney alleges in his affidavit that he intends to read' such testimony before the jury upon the trial, of the action, does not help the case,
The defendant in the case at bar doe's not show to the court that the plaintiff knows any facts which. are necessary to his defense; that there is any reason to believe that she will not be present at the trial, or that there is any reason to expect she will not be a witness, or that there is any way in which she can avoid disclosing all of the facts with which she is familiar in respect to this cause of action. “ The bill,” says Chancellor Kent in the case of Seymour v. Seymour (4 Johns. Ch. 409),. “ ought to have charged that certain facts were within the knowledge of the defendants and that a disclosure from them was requisite. The bill or affidavit, to support the injunction, must state the belief of the plaintiff that the answer would furnish discovery material to the defense and that the plaintiff had not the means of obtaining, .the facts without such discovery.”
“A bill for discovery and relief shows (as this does),” say the court in the case of Carroll v. Carroll (11 Barb. 298), “ a cause of action and prays for the discovery of particular facts alleged to be true in fact but which are peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant.”
All concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, with leave to defendant to renew application.