8 Vt. 404 | Vt. | 1836
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The deposition of ,D. Corss was offered in the county court, and objected to, upon the grounnd that it had been altered by the magistrate taking the same, after it had been signed and sworn to, and without the knowledge or assent of the deponent, bv erasing the word ‘on’ and inserting the word ‘at.’ This objection, although well-founded in fact, was overruled by that court, and the deposition admitted. To this decision the plaintiffs excepted.
Depositions are a species of evidence in suits at law altogether unknown to the common law. They are not used inEng-land and many of our sister states. They are, moreover, a species of evidence of a most unsatisfactory character, and should always be received with the utmost caution. The legislature have guarded them with great care, and the courts have rigidly enforced all the safeguards which the legislature have established.
The statute requires that they shall be signed by the deponent, as well as sworn to. The object of signing is doubtless to make the deponent responsible for the phraseology of the deposition; for, by signing, he adopts the language as his own. Had the statute required that the magistrate only should sign the paper, the committing the testimony to paper might be considered the act of the magistrate, and the peculiar language used might perhaps be considered as his. In such a case, it might be competent for the magistrate, so long as the paper remained under his control, to correct the phraseology according to his understanding of the purport of the testimony.
But, under the statute, the language of the deposition must be considered as emphatically the language of the witness, and he
But it seems that the court, in this instance, permitted the deposition to go to the jury, accompanied with proof of its original ten- or, and instructed them to regard it as evidence, in the terms in •which it was originally written. Piad the original expression been still legible, there might have been some plausibility in this course. But the writing, in this instance, was wholly obliterated, and its original tenor not discoverable upon inspection of the paper. Parol proof was resorted to, in order to ascertain the testimony of the deponent. The proof was therefore no better than hearsay. The evidence did not consist in the written deposition, signed and sworn to by the witness, with all the forms, and tinder all the safeguards provided by the statute, but in the testimony of third persons as to what the witness testified before the magistrate.
Another most satisfactory reason for rejecting the evidence, is to be found in the extreme danger of suffering the magistrate thus to tamper with the instrument. Every consideration of general expediency, as connected with the elucidation of truth, and with safety in the administration of justice, forbids it. To admit this evidence would be unsafe in the particular instance, and dangerous in the last degree as a precedent.
It is urged, however, that the alteration in this case is immaterial. It was doubtless considered otherwise by the magistrate who made it, as well as by the attorney of the party with whose concurrence it was done. And, in our opinion, it is so in fact. The word ‘on’ itnplies, not only that the bridge was standing, but also that the witness was on it when the conversation testified to took place. If the bridge was not in existence at the time, the circumstance certainly establishes an inaccuracy in the particular of either time or place. How far this might have impaired the credibility of the witness, in the minds of the jury, is not for us to determine. It certainly had such a tendency ; and if so, it was material, whether in a greater or less degree, is unimportant.
Whether an alteration, in no sense material, as a correction of errors in orthography, or grammatical expression, would vitiate the
Judgment of county court reversed, and cause remanded.