117 Ind. 356 | Ind. | 1889
The appellee was served with summons in an ordinary civil action. He pleaded in abatement these facts: That he then was and had been for more than eighteen years a citizen and resident of the State of Kentucky; that during the April term of the Montgomery Circuit Court he left his home in the State of Kentucky for the sole purpose of defending an action pending against him in that court, and testifying as a witness therein; that the action was brought against him by the plaintiff, and the cause was called for trial on the 24th of May, 1882; that the defendant announced that he was ready for trial and the court ordered the trial to proceed, whereupon the plaintiff dismissed his action, and withdrew all the papers from the files of the court; that immediately after the dismissal was entered, Wilson, the plaintiff, refiled his complaint and caused a summons to issue; that the defendant started home at once but was served with summons while he was on his way home, although he was still in Montgomery county.
The contention of appellant’s counsel is, that the fact that the appellee was in Indiana in attendance upon court as a party
The counsel are, therefore, in error in completely isolating the statutory provision we have referred to, since if we should find a well established principle of law exempting non-residents who are in this State for the purpose of attending court as parties or witnesses, we should be bound to construe the statute with reference to that principle, for we could not hold that the Legislature meant to entirely disregard it and establish an independent rule. Such narrow views as those of counsel, if allowed sway, would mar the symmetry of our system of jurisprudence and greatly impair its usefulness. Laws are necessarily expressed in general terms, but these general terms do not and can not embrace all cases. An element is often present which takes a case out of the operation of the general words of the statute, and that element is here present. Broom Legal Maxims, 43.
We can not, as the appellee’s counsel urge us to do, allot any controlling force to section 2658 of the statute, which exempts persons engaged in necessary attendance upon courts from arrest on civil process, for the reason that there was no attempt to arrest the appellee. All that the appellant attempted to do was to compel the appellee to appear and answer in an ordinary civil action.
The fact that an arrest is not, under our system of jurisprudence, made on ordinary civil process, supplies a substan
It is an evidence of respect for our laws and confidence in our courts that he comes here to litigate, and the laws he respects should give him protection. If he can come only under the penalty of yielding to our jurisdiction in every action that may be brought against him, he is deprived óf a substantial right because he is willing to trust our courts and our laws, without removing his case -to the Federal courts, or refusing to put himself in a position where personal judgment may be rendered against him. High considerations of public policy require that the law should encourage him to
In Mitchell v. Huron Circuit Judge, 53 Mich. 541, Cooley, C. J., said: “We think the ease is within the principle of Watson v. Judge of Superior Court, 40 Mich. 729, and that the writ should issue. Public policy, the due administration of justice, and protection to parties and witnesses alike demand it. There would be no question about it if the suit had been commenced by arrest ; but the reasons for exemption are applicable, though with somewhat less force, in other cases also. The following cases may be referred to for the general reasons: Norris v. Beach, 2 Johns. 294; Sanford
Very much the same ruling as that announced by Chief Justice Cooley was made by the Court of Appeals of New York, in Matthews v. Tufts, supra, where it was said: “In Van Lieuw v. Johnson, decided March, 1871, and referred to in Person v. Grier, 66 N. Y. 124, a majority of this Court were of opinion that a summons could not be served upon a defendant, a non-resident of the State, while attending a court in this State as a party. This immunity does not depend upon statutory provisions, but is deemed necessary for the due administration of justice.- It is not confined to witnesses, but extends to parties as well, and is abundantly sustained by authority.”
We do not cite the authorities adduced by the court, for the reason that most of them are collected in the quotation made from the opinion of Chief Justice Cooley.
Mr. Rorer says: “ It is the policy of the law to protect suitors and witnesses from service .of process in civil actions, whether the process be such as required their arrest, or be
The only case cited by the appellant’s counsel which directly opposes the opinion which we accept as the correct one, is that of Bishop v. Vose, 27 Conn. 1, and that decision is not supported by authority, nor are any satisfactory reasons assigned for the conclusions of the court. Greer v. Young, 120 Ill. 184, was the case of a party who came into Illinois to attend the taking of depositions, and not the case of a defendant in attendance at court.
In King v. Phillips, 70 Ga. 409, there was no pleading questioning the service, and it was on this point that the case was decided.
The facts in Robbins v. Lincoln, 27 Fed. Rep. 342, were, that the person served with process was an attorney and not a party.
In Smith v. Jones, 76 Maine, 138 (49 Am. Rep. 598), the question arose in a collateral action, and there the plaintiff sued to recover damages for an illegal arrest. Catlett v. Morton, 4 Litt. (Ky.) 122, simply decides that a member of the Legislature is not so far privileged as to be exempt from answering a summons in an ordinary civil action.
Our ultimate conclusion is, that a person who comes into this State for the purpose of testifying as a witness in an action in which he is a party, can not be legally served with a summons at the suit of the party plaintiff in the action he came here to defend, and that our statute does not apply to such a case.
Judgment affirmed.