52 So. 751 | Ala. | 1910
Appellee, a casualty insurance company, had a contract of insurance with the appellant by which it insured appellant against loss or liability to its employees, and the premiums of these insur
The bill certainly contains equity; no other adequate relief is availing. The information necessary to the stating of the account is exclusively with respondent, and can be had in no other way than by the production of its books, which it contracted to produce for inspection, and which are shown to be the sole repository of the information necessary to state the account, or to ascertain the exact amount of the premiums due. The bill is not one for discovery only, and therefore it was not necessary that it be sworn to.—Bromberg v. Bates, 98 Ala. 629, 13 South. 557.
It was said by Chief Justice Marshall, in the case of Russell v. Clark, 7 Cranch, 69, 3 L. Ed. 271: “That if
Mr. Pomeroy, speaking of the same rule, which he calls the American doctrine, says : “Tlie so-called American doctrine concerning the effect of discovery upon the equitable jurisdiction is thus practically as follows : Whenever in a controversy purely legal, depending upon legal interests and primary rights of the plaintiff, and seeking to obtain final reliefs Avhich are Avholly legal, the plaintiff prays for a discovery as a preliminary relief, and alleges and proves that such discovery is absolutely essential to the maintenance of his contention — that he is utterly unable to establish the issues on his part'by testimony of witnesses, or by any other kind of evidence admissible in courts of laAV — so that an action at law is utterly impracticable, then the court of equity, having jurisdiction of such a case to compel
The jurisdiction of chancery for' discovery is not affected by the statutory discovery by interrogatories to. the adverse party; that remedy is only cumulative.
It seems that the real source of equity jurisdiction, in cases like this, is the inadequacy of legal remedies when discovery or production and examination of books is necessary.
The following quoted maxims and propositions tend to show the equity of the bill under our chancery practice: The common law laid down as a maxim “Nemó tenetur armare adversarium suum contra se;” in furtherance of which principle it generally allowed litigant parties to conceal from each other, up to the time of trial, the evidence on which- they meant to rely, and would not compel either of them to supply the other with any evidence, parol or otherwise, to assist him in the- conduct of his cause. — Best on Evidence, § 624; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 329. A different rule grew up in equity. The defendant there was obliged to answer under oath the allegations of the bill, and might be compelled to produce for inspection by the’plaintiff documents that were in the defendant’s possession and control and* were material to the issues involved in the suit. In such cases the discovery was incident to the equitable relief sought. But it was not limited to the issues arising in suits in equity. “Many cases existed in which the plaintiff had a legal title, or legal right, or was pursuing a legal remedy, but wherein no redress could be actually obtained, simply because the plaintiff’s evidence either rested in the breast of the defend
The same principles govern in the practice as to discovery, whether it be invoked in aid of other issues involved in the suit in equity, or be invoked independently in aid of an action at law. — Lyell v. Kennedy, L. R. 8 App. Cas. 217; Drake v. Drake, 3 Hare, 525; Wigram’s Points on the Law of Discovery, 123.
It is urged that the bill does not sufficiently allege that complainant has complied with the laws of this state as to the right of foreign corporations to do business here. The bill alleges, among other things, “that at the time of making and entering into said contract, and continuously since that time, and at the time of the filing of this suit, it has been duly qualified to transact
The bill contains equity, and was not subject to the demurrer interposed, and the decree of the chancellor is affirmed.
Affirmed.