The statute of 23 Philip & Mary,made of force by the act of 1712, (Pub. Laws, 59,) authorises any justice before whom any prisoner shall be brought on a charge of manslaughter or felony, to take his examination, and the information of those who bring him, of the. facts and circumstances thereof, and the same or so much thereof as shall be material to prove the felony, and within two days thereafter to reduce it to writing and certify it to the next general goal delivery ; and the examinations of witnesses, taken in conformity with this statute, have been uniformly, admitted in evidence against the prisoner, when they had been taken in the presence of the prisoner, and an opportunity afforded him of a cross-examination, if the deponent be dead at the time of the trial. Rex v. Fleming cited, 1 East, P. C. 440; Rex v. Paine, 1 Salk. 281; Webster’s case, Leach, 14; Buller N. P. 242. In the argument here I understand it to bo conceded that the deposition given in evidence was made on the application for a warrant to arrest the prisoner, and in his absence; and the case is narrowed down, to the question, whether it was admissible under such circumstances.
The statute does not prescribe any new rule, but simply provides for the examination of the accused and his accusers, leaving the use to be made of the examination, as it used at the common law to be admitted or rejected according to the rules of evidence. Generally, the viva voce examination of the witness in the presence of the party on trial is required, because it is the best evidence. The direct and cross examinations are the best means of eliciting the whole truth, and the manner of the witness is one of the tests by which to determine the degree of credit to which he is entitled ; but this is not always attainable, and what a deceased witness, or one who from other causes has become incapacitated to give evidence, has sworn on a former trial, is admitted on the principle that it is the best of which the case admits, provided, first, that the 'evidence was given in the regular course of a judicial proceeding;
The case of the King v. Paine, 1 Salk. 281, is authority at least for the general position that the ex parte examination of a witness, although taken in the course of a judicial proceeding,.is not admissible in evidence, although the witness be dead, and 1 have before remarked that the statute does not prescribe any new rule of evidence. It provides simply for the examination of the prisoner and his accusers, for the purpose, as I have supposed, of enabling the magistrate to determine whether the prisoner ought or ought not to be committed: and to enable the prosecuting officer to judge of the propriety of proceeding with the prosecution; and in the King v. Eriswell, Lord Kenyon supposes that it was intended to be preserved as a test of the consistency of the witnesses, so that the statute will have had its full and legitimate operation without rendering the depositions competent evidence on the trial; and it never will be inferred that the legislature intended this indirectly to break down one of the most important rules of evidence. Depositions taken upon a coroner’s inquest in pursuance of the statute of 1 and 2 Phil. & Mary, Ch. 13, seem generally to have been admitted as an exception to this rule on the ground of the publicity and importance of the proceeding ; but I incline to think with Mr. Starkie, that even this is mot warranted, and that it will deserve grave consideration when the question arises, whether it ought to be supported, Starkie Ev. part 2, p. 492. The rules of evidence, as Lord Kenyon observes in the case before cited, do not depend on technical refinement, but on good sense, and in their application we must constantly keep in view their practical effect and operation, and I venture to affirm that no rule would be productive of more mischief than that which would allow the ex parte depositions of witnesses, and especially in criminal oases, to be admitted in evidence. Charges for criminal offen-
Motion granted.
