8 Neb. 75 | Neb. | 1878
The plaintiffs in their petition allege that on the first day of August, 1872, the defendant was indebted to them in the sum of nine hundred and fifty dollars bal
To which the defendant made answer, and set up three defenses. His first defense consists almost entirely of negative matter, in which he denies all of the material allegations of the petition. In his second defense he alleges “that on the 25th day of May, 1872, he.employed plaintiffs as his attorneys and solicitors to represent and prosecute his entire claim, amounting at that time to the sum of about twenty to thirty thousand dollars against one Jasper A. Ware, in the bankruptcy court of the United States for the district of Nebraska; that in and by the terms of-such employment this defendant was to pay plaintiffs, and did pay them, fifty dollars in cash in full settlement and payment for all their services in case the creditors of Jasper A. Ware, including this defendant as well as
To this answer no reply was made. To be sure there is a reply copied in the transcript, but in the certificate of the clerk he states that it never was filed in this cause, but was found among the papers after the same was disposed of, and was put into the transcript at the request of the attorney for the defendant in error.
Hence the matters set up in the answer must for the purposes of this case be considered as admitted by the plaintiffs in the court below. Dillon v. Russell and, Holmes, 5 Neb., 488. Williams v. Evans, 6 Neb., 216.
It was therefore error in the court to find the issues for plaintiffs when upon the face of the pleadings they stand admitted in favor of the defendant.
Before the trial in the district court, the defendant moved to suppress the deposition of John I. Redick taken by the plaintiffs, for the reasons stated in said motion — insufficiency and informality of the certificate, want of venue in the certificate, etc. Defendant also filqd exceptions to the introduction and reading of said deposition for reasons therein stated; which motion and
The deposition was defective in- that it contained no venue. The certificate of the officer fails to show in what state or country it was taken, or from what state or country he received his. official authority to take it. A correct test is — Is the certificate such -that upon an indictment of the witness for false swearing the deposition itself could be introduced as evidence without further authentication ? In this case, without resorting to the notice, we cannot tell what state courts would have jurisdiction of such an indictment, and we nowhere find that Mr. J. Willis French certifies himself to be a notary public of the state of Colorado, where by the notice the deposition was .to have been taken.
This court cannot resist the inclination in this connection to express its disapprobation of a practice which seems to exist to some-extent, of taking depositions of witnesses in the office of the attorney taking the same and sometimes before a notary who is also the clerk or student of such attorney. In many of the states such practice is prohibited by statute. But in the absence of a statute it is so manifestly unfair and so liable to lead to abuse, that if it does not of itself render a deposition thus taken inadmissible, it might when taken in connection with other circumstances. The deposition in this case was taken, as appears by the notice, in the office of one of the plaintiffs, and although the point is not raised in the exceptions, if it had been made it would have added somewhat to the points raised, which were of themselves sufficient to have excluded the deposition.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.