128 N.Y.S. 130 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
On June 23, 1910, the plaintiffs obtained an order requiring the defendants Edward Wallace, Elizabeth H. McCune, Mary H. Wallace and Margaret S. Wallace to be examined as parties before trial, pursuant to section 873 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The affidavit upon which this order was obtained disclosed that the plaintiffs are the committee of the person and property of one Allen Wallace, an incompetent; that the defendants Edward Wallace, Elizabeth H. McCune, Mary H. Wallace and Margaret S. Wallace, the four defend
The court below assumed that this question has been decided by this court in Gilroy v. Interborough-Metropolitan Co. (120 App. Div. 883, affg., 55 Misc. Rep. 32), which was an appeal from an order vacating an order for the examination of the plaintiff, who was a resident of Scotland. The motion to vacate the order was made upon an affidavit from which it appeared that the party sought to be examined resided in Scotland, was not within this State, and could not be served within this State. The justice at Special Term held that on these facts the order should be vacated, citing Witcher v. Tribune Association (59 N. Y. Super. Ct. 224), although the Appellate Division in the Second Department had refused to follow that case in Campbell v. Bauland Company (41 App Div. 474). Upon an appeal to this court that order was affirmed, but as we did not adopt the opinion below and wrote no opinion, it cannot be said that we adopted the views of the Special Term in deciding that case, or that we intended to reverse or refuse to follow Campbell v. Bauland Company (supra). In Hartmann v. Hearst (121 App. Div. 925) the Special Term also vacated an order for the examination of a party before trial; and the order in that case was also affirmed by this court without opinion. In neither of these cases did this court approve of the grounds assigned by the Special Term. The affirmance in both cases was upon the ground that, upon the facts which appeared, we were satisfied that the order for the examination was not obtained for the purpose of procuring the testimony of the witness, but' for an ulterior purpose, and the applicant had not, therefore, brought himself within the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. Where a party sought to be examined resides in a foreign country and is not at the time of the granting of the order and never has been within this State, and there is no possibility of ever being able to serve the person sought to be examined, there is ground for saying that the order for the examination of such person within this State was not for the purpose of obtaining the testimony, but as a basis for some further application to the court because of the failure of the person required to appear for examination to appear and be examined. The question as to whether or not an order of this character is obtained in good faith for the pur
In Bluthenthal & Bickart, Inc., v. Crowley, No. 2 (138 App. Div. 845) this court reversed an order vacating an order for an examination before trial of the officers of a foreign corporation, which is a later authority than any one relied on by the court below.
It follows that the order for the examination should not have been vacated, and the order appealed from is, therefore, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to vacate the order for the examination denied, with ten dollars costs, and the order for the examination reinstated.
Laughlin, Clarke and Miller, JJ., concurred; Dowling, J., dissented.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, motion denied, with ten dollars costs, and order for examination reinstated.