Steel v. McCutchen
Steel v. McCutchen
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Steel brought his action in the circuit court against McCutchen, where judgment being given against him, he appealed to this court.
At the second term of the circuit court, when, by law, he. was required to be ready for trial, or show cause for a continuance, he prayed a continuance, and filed an affidavit, in which he stated that he could not safely go to trial for want of a witness who was material; that said witness had been summoned, and was not absent by any contrivance of the affiant, either direct or indirect; that he knew of no other person by whom he could prove the same fads; and that he believed he would be able to procure the attendance of the said witness at the then next term of that court. The circuit court refusing a continuance of the cause, the plaintiff took a non-suit, and then moved the court to set aside the non-suit, because a continuance had been improperly refused. This motion was overruled by the circuit court.
The circuit court, as it appears to me, committed no error in overruling this motion; for it might, perhaps, have appeared to the court in evidence that it was in the power of the plaintiff to procure the evidence of the witness by taking his deposition. If the witness were to be
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