Allen v. Rand
Allen v. Rand
Opinion of the Court
The only question raised in this case, is, whether the deposition of Mrs. Trowbridge was legally rejected. By statute it is enacted, (p. 47.) that “ the party, his attorney, or any person interested, shall not write, draw up or dictate any deposition ;" and that every such deposition, shall be rejected by the court. Whether the deposition of Mrs. Trowbridge was taken under the above law, or while the preceding statute was in force, does not appear from the motion ; but this is perfectly immaterial, as the law now existing is precisely similar to the former, not in words, but in the construction, which the courts had put upon it. The law will not trust an agent to draw up a deposition for his principal ; as by the insertion of a word, the meaning of which is not correctly understood, or by the omission of a fact that ought to be inserted, the testimony thus garbled and discoloured, will be false and deceptive. Nor is there a possible argument in favour of such a proceeding. The deponent may write the deposition ; or procure it to be written, by a disinterested person ; or it may be drawn up, by the magistrate who takes it ; or the parties may agree on a fit person for this purpose. The statute, even when strictly construed, is sufficiently lax, when ex parte depositions are taken, at least not unfrequently, to admit of the poisoning of justice in the very fountain ; for if the evidence is untrue or partial, the result can never be conformable to right.
The deposition in question was written by Cornelia Hall, in the absence of the plaintiffs, their counsel, and the magistrate,
New trial not to be granted.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Allen and another against Rand and another
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published