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Carroll v. Hodges

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Sep 1, 1887
4 S.E. 199 (N.C. 1887)

Summary

In Carroll v. Hodges, 98 N.C. 418, 4 S.E. 199, objection was made to the competency of the questions and answers in a deposition at the trial.

Summary of this case from Pratt v. Bishop

Opinion

(September Term, 1887.)

Deposition, Objection to, When Made.

A deposition of file in the clerk's office two or three month before the trial, and opened by the clerk in presence of counsel of both parties, cannot be quashed on oral objection made at the trial. The Code, sec. 1361.

CIVIL ACTION to recover land, tried at Fall Term, 1887, of WATAUGA. before Boykin, J.,

J. F. Morphew of plaintiff.

Folk Councill for defendants.


So much of the case stated on appeal as is necessary to a proper understanding of the opinion of the court, is as follows: (419)

"Upon the trial the defendants introduced the deposition of one David Simmons. The plaintiffs objected to the question marked 6 and 7 and the answer thereto.

The court, upon the admission of the parties, found the following facts:

The deposition was filed in the cause in the clerk's office in June, 1886. No objection thereto has been filed or entered by the plaintiffs. The attorneys of both parties were duly notified by the clerk to appear on a day named, when the deposition would be opened and passed upon by him. Said attorneys appeared; the deposition in the cause. There upon by him. Said attorney appeared; the deposition opened and passed was no exception to the adjudication of the clerk and no appeal by the plaintiffs. There was no notice in writing or otherwise filed or give by plaintiffs prior to the trial to suppose the deposition or parts thereof. Upon these facts the court admitted the deposition and the plaintiffs excepted and appealed."


It is well settled that a deposition will not be quashed or rejected in whole or in part on objection first made after a trial has begun, because of irregularity in taking the same, if the objecting party had notice and it appears that the position had been taken and was on file long enough before the trial to enable him to present his objection. The Code, sec. 1360; Carson v. Mills, 69 N.C. 32; Kerchner v. Reilly, 72 N.C. 171; Katzenstein v. R. R., 78 N.C. 286; Wasson v. Linster, 83 N.C. 575.

Here the deposition must have been on file two or three months before the trial, the appellants made no objection to it, there (420) counsel had notice, were present when it was opened by the clerk and ordered by him to be read in evidence on the trial, and they made no objection to it then or at any time before the trial.

It seems that the objection may have been to the competency of the questions and answer to them designated. Granting that they were incompetent, objection should have been made before the judge or clerk of the court and before the trial, and as there was fair and just opportunity afforded the appellant to make objection and he did not, it must be taken that he waived his right to object on any account, except as to the competency of the witness, The statute (The Code, sec. 1361), provides that any party to an action or proceeding may at any time before the trial or hearing "make a motion to the judge or court to reject a deposition for irregularity in the taking of it, either in whole or in part, for scandal, impertinence, the incompetency of the testimony, for insufficient notice, or for any other good cause. The objecting party shall state his exception in writing," the purpose being to settle the depositions as evidence before the trial or hearing, and thus prevent surprise, misapprehension, confusion and delay on the trial. Such provision is expedient, convenient, and not at all unjust. Fair opportunity is afforded every litigant to make objection to the deposition in every aspect of it, not in the hurry of a trial or hearing, but upon deliberation and scrutiny. Unless such objection is made in apt time the statute makes the deposition evidence, and provides (The Code, sec. 1357) among other things, that "all such depositions, when passed upon and allowed by the clerk, without appeal, or by the judge upon appeal from the clerk's ordered, shall be deemed legal evidence, if the witness be competent."

It will be observed that such objections are required to be put in writing, and any error in the rulings of the judge in respect to the deposition, in any view of it, may be corrected upon appeal to (421) this Court, just as erroneous rulings in respect to other questions arising in the course of the trial may be. For this purpose the rulings in respect to the exceptions and the exceptions themselves pass into and become a part of the record. Thus the party excepting will have opportunity to have such errors corrected.

No error in other respected is assigned in the record, and we are not at liberty to consider other questions that might possibly have been presented. It is will settled that error must be assigned in the record, else it cannot be considered and corrected here. Judgment affirmed.

No error. Affirmed.

Cited: Glover v. Flowers, 101 N.C. 144; Bank v. Burgwyn, 116 N.C. 124; Womack v. Gross, 135 N.C. 379; Ivey v. Cotton Mills, 143 N.C. 197; Steel Co. v. Ford, 173 N.C. 196.


Summaries of

Carroll v. Hodges

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Sep 1, 1887
4 S.E. 199 (N.C. 1887)

In Carroll v. Hodges, 98 N.C. 418, 4 S.E. 199, objection was made to the competency of the questions and answers in a deposition at the trial.

Summary of this case from Pratt v. Bishop

In Carroll v. Hodges, 98 N.C. 419, it was held that a deposition will not be quashed or rejected either in whole or in part on motion made for the first time at the trial, when it has been on file long enough before the trial for the objection to be made.

Summary of this case from Steel Co. v. Ford
Case details for

Carroll v. Hodges

Case Details

Full title:L. W. CARROLL ET AL. v. J. B. HODGES ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Sep 1, 1887

Citations

4 S.E. 199 (N.C. 1887)
98 N.C. 418

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