97 S.E. 147 | N.C. | 1918
The judge affirmed the order of the clerk. Defendants appealed.
It is admitted that no such cause as is entitled above is pending in Superior Court of Forsyth County, although there is such a cause pending in the Superior Court of Wilkes. No examination can be had in any case until the summons had been issued and the suit commenced in the Superior Court of the county. The motion for an examination must be made before the clerk of the Superior Court where the suit is pending or before the pudge presiding in that court or holding the courts of the district. The party may be examined before a commissioner appointed to take the examination, but the commission must issue out of the court in which the cause is pending. This is the plain purport of sections 865 and 866 of the Revisal. It is not contemplated by the statute that the clerk of Forsyth Superior Court shall have jurisdiction to make an order in a cause pending in Wilkes. If that were the law, then every other clerk of the Superior Court in the State could make an order for the examination of a party without regard to where the action was pending. Such construction of the statute would produce infinite confusion and lead to greater hardships and would make the statute "the means of the greatest abuse and oppression," as said by Justice Walker
in Smith v. Wooding,
This statute is discussed by Chief Justice Smith in Strudwick v.Brodnax,
The position that the appeal is premature cannot be maintained. None of the reasons given in Vann v. Lawrence,
Error.