23 F. 303 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1885
The- appellee moves to suppress the depositions of witnesses taken in this court, by the appellant because, although the witnesses were present at the instance of the appellant at the hearing in the district court, they were not examined. It is insisted that a party should not be allowed to produce upon appeal testimony which ho has deliberately withheld in the court below.
Although appellate courts in admiralty treat an appeal as a new trial, and exorcise great liberality in permitting new proofs and new pleadings in furtherance of justice, they are not constrained by any arbitrary rules which require them to receive testimony which ought to have been produced but was not produced in the court of original jurisdiction. In the case of The Maybey, 10 Wall. 419, 13 Wall. 738, the supreme court refused to allow a commission to examine witnesses because no excuse was shown in the moving papers why the wit
If parties are permitted to withhold evidence in the district court, take the chances of success without it, and then avail themselves of it by appeal in case of failure, the practice would tend to intolerable abuses. It would be unjust to the adverse party, because he might prefer to abandon his case if the testimony had been presented, rather than incur further expense and labor in litigating. It would be trifling with the court of original jurisdiction by invoking its decision upon an hypothetical case while withdrawing the real case from consideration. It would impose unnecessarily upon a court of appellate jurisdiction the duty which appropriately belongs to a court of original jurisdiction.
The authorities referred to justify the granting of the motion.