105 Ga. 51 | Ga. | 1898
Section 5315 of the Civil Code provides, that “In all counties of this State of twenty thousand inhabitants and upwards, either party litigant in any court of record in any such county may, without any order or commission, take the depositions of any witness or witnesses in said case, whether resident in the county or not, upon giving the opposite party five days notice of the time and place with the names of the witnesses.” The code also provides that such depositions may be taken before any of the commissioners appointed by the judge of the superior court. After providing that all motions and all objections to the witnesses or the proceedings should be made to the commissioner, filed and returned, and prescribing how the examination should proceed and how the depositions should be returned, the code (§5321) declares: “The commissioner shall have the same power and authority to sum
The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error1 based the refusal of his client to testify mainly upon the ground that, under the above-cited sections of the code, the commissioner had no power to take the testimony of a party to a case pending; that these sections of the code did not contemplate that a plaintiff' or defendant should be compelled to testify; that parties to a cause are not, in the strict sense of the term, witnesses. When the ease came on for consideration by this court, we discovered that the code gives no jurisdiction to the judges of the city or superior courts to attach a witness' for contempt for refusing to testify under this particular proceeding, but that the power and authority to do so is, in express terms, given to the commissioners, as will be seen by reference to section 5321, above quoted. That section gives the commissioner the same power to compel
Judgment reversed.