227 F. 950 | S.D.N.Y. | 1915
The respondent Hamburg-American Line is seeking discovery, not for the purpose of enabling it to answer, which it can do, but because it does not wish to
I see no power under local admiralty rule 39 to grant discovery before answer. Interrogatories attached to the pleadings furnish the usual, if not the exclusive, remedy in admiralty, and, as I held in a memorandum dated March 16, 1915, in the case of Webb v. Samuels et al., 227 Fed. 948, a defendant in a civil suit must take his choice between answering or letting the proceeding go against him by default, and cannot, in my opinion, urge that he should be relieved from answering because his answer may incriminate him. Of course, he need not answer, but must suffer the consequences if he fails so to do. If the respondent, as appears to he the case, is in position to set up a defense which will be a bar to the action, it must plead it in the usual way.
The argument of counsel for the Hamburg-American Line is ingenious ; but, if the course he suggests were permitted, it would be incumbent upon this court to try out by affidavits and. examinations the question as to whether a party could be brought into court to plead at all. I know of no such practice, and while it may be that a preliminary hearing after issue joined might be a desirable way of disposing of some litigations without awaiting delay and expense of a formal trial, there is no such practice known to this court, and the suggestion on the part of respondent goes even one step further, and urges the court to allow a preliminary investigation to determine whether a party shall plead or not.
This should not, I think, be allowed.
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