When a witness whose deposition is taken
de bene esse
under Rev.Stat. § 863, lives more than 100 miles from the place of
trial when the deposition is taken, it will be presumed that he
continues to live here at the time of trial, and no further proof
on that subject need be offered by the party
Page 119 U. S. 523
offering the deposition unless this presumption is overcome by
proof from the other side; but if it be overcome, and the party
offering the deposition has knowledge of his power to get the
witness in time to secure an attendance at the trial, the
deposition will be excluded. This rule does not apply to
depositions taken under § 866.
When the statutes of the United States make specific provisions
as to the competency or admissibility of testimony, they must be
followed in the courts of the United States, and not the laws or
practice of the state in which the court is held when they are
different.
The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, the trial was by the court, a jury having been
waived. The record presents a special finding of facts, and certain
exceptions to the rulings of the court on the admissibility of
testimony. Upon the facts as found, we should have had no
hesitation in affirming the judgment, but in the rulings excepted
to there was error. As part of the evidence on which the findings
were made, the court, against the objections of Whitford, the
plaintiff in error, allowed a deposition of N. T. Cherry, taken
de bene esse under § 863 of the Revised Statutes, to be
read, when it was made to appear before the reading that the
witness was himself actually present in court, ready and able to
testify in the case if called. From the opinion filed on the
decision of a motion for a new trial,
Whitford v. Clark
County, 13 F. 837, it appears that the court held the rule on
this point
"to be that when a deposition in a civil action has been duly
taken, because the witness resides more than one hundred miles
distant, said deposition is admissible, subject, however, to the
right of the adverse party to place him on the witness stand if
present. Such is understood
Page 119 U. S. 524
to be the true rule, although decided cases are not fully in
accord."
But by § 865 of the Revised Statutes, it is expressly provided
that,
"unless it appears to the satisfaction of the court that the
witness is then dead, or gone out of the United States, or to a
greater distance than one hundred miles from the place where the
court is sitting, or that, by reason of age, sickness, bodily
infirmity, or imprisonment, he is unable to travel and appear at
court, such deposition shall not be used in the cause."
This was first enacted in the Judiciary Act of September 24,
1789, c. 20, § 30, 1 Stat. 90, and it has been in force from that
time until now. In
Patapsco Ins. Co. v.
Southgate, 5 Pet. 604,
30 U. S. 617,
it was said, in reference to this provision, that
"the act declares expressly that, unless the same (that is, the
disability) shall be made to appear on the trial, such deposition
shall not be admitted or used in the cause. This inhibition does
not extend to the deposition of a witness living a greater distance
from the place of trial than one hundred miles, he being considered
permanently beyond a compulsory attendance. The deposition in such
case may not always be absolute, for the party against whom it is
to be used may prove that the witness has removed within the reach
of a subpoena after the deposition was taken; and, if that fact was
known to the party, he would be bound to procure his personal
attendance. The onus, however, of proving this would rest upon the
party opposing the admission of the deposition in evidence. It is
therefore a deposition taken
de bene esse."
And in
The Samuel, 1
Wheat. 15, Chief Justice Marshall said, a deposition taken under
the statute
de bene esse "can be read only when the
witness himself is unattainable."
See
also Harris v.
Wall, 7 How. 693, and
Rutherford
v. Geddes, 4 Wall. 220,
71 U. S. 224. It
thus appears to have been established at a very early date that
depositions taken de bene esse could not be used in any case at the
trial, if the presence of the witness himself was actually
attainable, and the party offering the deposition knew it, or ought
to have known it. If the witness lives more than one hundred miles
from the place of trial, no subpoena need be issued to secure his
compulsory attendance. So, too, if he lived more than one
hundred
Page 119 U. S. 525
miles away when his deposition was taken, it will be presumed
that he continued to live there at the time of the trial, and no
further proof on that subject need be furnished by the party
offering the deposition, unless this presumption shall be overcome
by proof from the other side. But if it be overcome, and the party
has knowledge of his power to get the witness in time to enable him
to secure an attendance at the trial, he must do so, and the
deposition will be excluded. Such was this case. While the witness
lived more than one hundred miles from the place of trial when his
deposition was taken, he was actually in court, ready and able to
testify when his testimony was needed at the trial. His deposition
therefore was not admissible. The rulings of the circuit courts
have uniformly been the same way, so far as we know. While some
have gone beyond the decision in
Patapsco Ins. Co. v.
Southgate, none has fallen short of it.
Lessee of Penns v.
Ingraham, 2 Wash.C.C. 487 (decided in 1811);
Lessee of
Brown v. Galloway, Pet.C.C. 294 (decided in 1816);
Pettibone v. Derringer, 4 Wash.C.C. 219 (decided in 1818);
Russell v. Ashley, Hemp. 546, 549;
Ward v.
Armstrong, 6 McLean 44.
As to depositions taken under a
dedimus potestatem in
accordance with § 866 of the Revised Statutes, this provision of §
865 does not apply, for it is expressly so enacted in that section.
When the statutes of the United States make special provisions as
to the competency or admissibility of testimony, they must be
followed in the courts of the United States, and not the laws or
the practice of the state in which the court is held when they are
different.
Potter v. National Bank, 102
U. S. 165;
King v. Worthington, 104 U.
S. 50;
Bradley v. United States, 104
U. S. 443;
Ex Parte Fisk, 113
U. S. 721.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with
directions for a new trial.