12 S.E.2d 652 | N.C. | 1941
This appeal is from an order entered upon motion of the plaintiff directing the defendants to produce, for the purpose of inspection and copying, the correspondence, memoranda and other writings among the several defendants and others, relative to the establishment of rates upon petroleum products from Wilmington and River Terminal to points in North Carolina, bearing dates between November, 1934, and December, 1937, said motion having been lodged by virtue of C. S., 1823 and 1824.
The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that the rates on petroleum products from Wilmington and River Terminal were established by agreement among the defendants as a result of a conspiracy existing among them to lower the rates and thereby destroy the plaintiff's business of transporting such products by motor trucks, with the intent and purpose of raising such rates as soon as the competition of the plaintiff was removed, in violation of Consolidated Statutes, ch. 53, Monopolies and Trusts. The defendants in their answers admit that such rates were established by agreement among themselves but deny that they conspired to destroy the plaintiff's business, or in any way violated the law.
The order appealed from directs the production, for inspection and copy, of all correspondence, memoranda and other writings among the eight defendant railroad companies, and between said companies and the Southern Freight Association, relative to the establishment of rates on petroleum products from Wilmington and River Terminal to other points in the State of North Carolina, from November, 1934, to December, 1937.
The plaintiff's affidavit upon which he bases his application for the order fails to designate any specific letters or documents desired, and fails to state the contents thereof, and does not aver that the information or proof sought is not obtainable elsewhere. Such an affidavit is an insufficient basis for an order to produce practically all the correspondence and writings among the defendants relative to the establishment of the rates involved upon the theory that they will have a direct bearing on an issue addressed to an unlawful conspiracy among the defendants to injure the plaintiff by destroying his business and thereby remove competition. It is required by the statute that the facts showing the materiality and necessity of the documents sought be set forth, the mere naked averment that they are material and necessary, is insufficient, being nothing more than an expression of the applicant's opinion.
Adams, J., in speaking of the requirements of the statute, C. S., 1823, in Dunlap v. Guaranty Co.,
The affidavit made by the plaintiff is insufficient to support it and therefore the order made must be set aside.
Error.