21 F. Cas. 145 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio | 1877
These .depositions were taken in Chicago, more than one hundred miles from the place of trial, in conformity with the Ohio practice. The notice was that, on Monday, the 27th day of August, 1877, the defendant would take the depositions of sundry witnesses, etc. The deposition shows that on that day a witness, who knew nothing of the case, was called, and this was repeated for four days, until on the fifth day the material witness was called. There was no cross-examination, and no counsel for plaintiff was present when the examination was had. The question arising here involves the construction of sections S63-865 and 914 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. It is admitted that the depositions are not taken in conformity with the requirements of the federal statutes on that sub.iect, and are in conformity with the law of Ohio. If we are to be governed by sections 803-865, the depositions must be suppressed; if we are to be governed by section 914 alone, it is claimed the motion must be overruled. Prior to the act of June 1st, 1872. the laws of congress regulating the taking of depositions, (sections 863-865), provided that the testimony of any witness might be taken in any civil cause depending in a district or circuit court, by deposition de bene esse, when the witness lives at a greater distance from the place of trial than one hundred
It is a settled rule of law, that a more ancient statute will not be repealed by a more modern one, unless the latter expressly negatives the former, or unless the provisions of the two statutes are manifestly repugnant. It will bo observed that this latter act does not in terms repeal the former acts upon this subject, nor does it in terms provide when, or the mode in which, a deposition shall be Taken. It is only, therefore, by the construction which shall be given to the general terms, “practice, pleading and forms and modes of proceeding” that we are to determine, whether, when and how a deposition may be taken, as provided for by this latter statute. The supreme court of the United States, in Nudd v. Burrows, 91 U. S. 426, held that these terms did not include tbernanner in which the judge, in the trial of a cause, should instruct the jury, or what papers should go to the jury, and the decision was reaffirmed in Railroad Co. v. Horst, 93 U. S. 291. In the recent case of Beardsley v. Littell [Case No. 1.185], decided in the United States circuit court, Southern district of New York, by Judges Johnson and Blatchford, it is said by the court: “It may well be doubted whether there is anything in this act which applies to the subject of the evidence of witnesses, either as to its character, competency or the mode of taking it.” And in our own administration of the law we have always held that it did not embrace the mode of examination of witnesses upon the stand, and have ruled in accordance with the doctrine of Railroad Co. v. Stimpson, 14 Pet. [39 U. SJ 461, and Houghton v. Jones, 1 Wall. [68 U. S.] 702, that the cross-examination of a witness must be confined to the facts and circumstances stated in his direct examination, which is in direct opposition to the doctrine of the supreme court of this state, as announced in Legg v. Drake, 1 Ohio St. 286.
But suppose it be conceded that the provisions of the act of June 1st, 1872, by any cou-I struetion, could be made to embrace the tak- ! ing of depositions, and that by implication' it repealed the former laws upon that question. Yet, after the passage of this act, congress, in 1873, revised and re-enacted the laws of the United States, and in section 5596 of the revised statutes it is provided what acts shall be in force on and after December 1st, 1873. This section provides, in terms, that all prior acts, “any portion of which is embraced in any section of said revision, are hereby re- • pealed, and the section applicable thereto shall Í be in force in lieu thereof.” Section 5595, i says: “The foregoing seventy-three titles em- ' brace the statutes of the United States, gen-j .eral and permanent in their nature, in force i on the first day of December, 1873.” Sections 863-865, then, are still in force; they are reenacted by this act, if they had been previously repealed; and we have sections 863-865, and 914, all in force on the same subject, if section 914 applies to the manner of taking testimony. We have a statute which does not state, in terms, that all depositions shall be ! taken according to the state law, but which | conforms the pleading, practice, and modes j and forms of proceeding to that of the state: | and another statute prescribing, in terms, the ¡ mode of taking depositions. Now, if section 914, standing alone, would apply to that, yet it must be construed as if sections 863-865 followed immediately after it, and it read, “except that depositions shall be taken in the manner following.”
¡ If this be not so, two provisions of law, i enacted at the same time, one, the former act of congress re-enacted, providing specifically and definitely the mode of taking depositions, the other, the state law upon the subject, entirely different in its provisions, and which it is claimed by general terms, is made the law of the United States. Under such circumstances, we think the question clearly within the reason of the rule announced by Justice Bradley, in Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schaefer, 94 U. S. 457, that “the laws of the state are only to be regarded as rules of decision in the courts of the United States
It is hardly necessary for me to refer to authorities upon the question as to the necessity of a strict conformity with the provisions of the statute in the taking of depositions; the reports are full of them. The latest utterance of the supreme court recognizing it is in the case of Shutte v. Thompson, 15 Wall. [81 U. S.] 159, though in that case it was held, and I think very properly, that the defendant liad by his acts -waived his right of exception.
The first reason assigned for suppressing the depositions in this case is, that the notice does not state the names of the witnesses whose depositions -were to be taken, as required by the statute. But it was presented to the plaintiff’s attorneys, and they indorsed their acceptance on it, and by so doing, I think, gave the opposite party the right to rely on the sufficiency of the notice, and this exception is waived. The second ground is, That the notice assigns no reason for taking the deposition. That is not required by the statute; so there is no foundation for their objection. Fourth, the deposition was not taken on the day named in the notice, and fifth, it nowhere appears that the witness was not, and is not now a resident of Cincinnati, etc. It is not necessary that it should appear in the deposition or the certificate that the party is not now a resident of Cincinnati: that might be made to appear on the trial of the cause. The deposition was not taken on the day named in the notice, and witnesses who testified simply that they knew nothing of the case were examined for four days to keep the notice alive until the real witness should appear. I have had occasion to remark before, that that was a practice not to be encouraged, but it is a general practice with the profession, and it is not for that alone that this deposition should be suppressed. The third ground of the motion is, that the officer who took the deposition does not in his certificate assign any reason for taking it, and that, I think, is fatal to the deposition. If the party had been present, and had cross-examined the witnesses, as in the case in 15 Wallace, and had been present at the time the certificate was made, it would have been within his power to suggest any change or alteration in the certificate; and if he had failed to do so. I should have held that, under that case, he had waived all his right to ole jections and exceptions. But the party was not present, and he was not really bound to attend four or five days continuously, while witnesses were being called who knew nothing of the case, and he had no knowledge as to who the witness was whose deposition was really sought. I think, therefore, that this deposition must be suppressed. I have been referred to rule eight of this court, passed in 1855. which provides: “It having been the usage of this court to receive depositions taken on notice under the statute of the state, such usage is not abrogated by the rules adopted by this court.” It has been the practice, since I have been on the bench, to receive depositions taken on notice under the statute of the state, and such will continue to be the usage of this court. If the party accept such a notice as this without objections, attend the taking of the depositions and cross-examine the witness and make no objections to the form of certificate at the time, he will be held to have waived his right of objection, and the depositions will be received.