150 N.Y.S. 947 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1914
This is a motion to set aside an order for the examination before trial of two of the defendants. The action is for the recovery of damages for the alienation of a wife’s affections, and the defendants are the father, mother and stepfather of the wife; and the complaint alleges that they conspired together to, and did, alienate her affections. The answers, made part of the papers, categorically deny all the charges. It is elementary (as true in one cause of action as another) thát to entitle a plaintiff to examine a defendant before trial it must affirmatively appear, specifying facts and circumstances, that the testimony to be taken is material and necessary for the plaintiff Or the prosecution of the action. Code Civ. Pro. § 872; General Rules of Practice, Rule 82. The papers here fail entirely to show by any legal evidence that the testimony directed to be taken is material or necessary for the plaintiff. For example: Plaintiff’s affidavit alleges that the grounds for believing and the sources of Ms information as to the belief that the defendants conspired, etc., are conversations and correspondence which would indicate such conspiracy. What they were does not appear. That they would indicate something is a mere conclusion of affiants. It is for. the court, not plaintiff, to determine the necessity and materiality. If part or the substance of such conversations and correspondence were set out so that the court could see what they indicated and thus determine whether the testimony as to them of the persons to be examined was or would be material and necessary for plaintiff or the prosecution of the action,
Motion granted, without prejudice to another application.