DocketNumber: No. 12
Judges: Bénning
Filed Date: 5/15/1857
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/7/2024
By the Court.
delivering thé opinion.
' The' afiswer to á; bill for discovery cannot be used by defendant in the bill, as a mattér of evidence for himself j a person cannot make his own sayings evidence for himself.
Neither* can'the' answer to-such a bill, be used by either party befóte' the'jury, as'a matter of pleading; such a-bill’ presents to'a jury nothing'for trial: no issue is, or can'be, made on it; no decree, rendered on it.
But it is insisted, that he had the consent of the defendant, to the act of reading the answer to the jury.
This consent, however, had been withdrawn before the reading was begun. The plaintiff in the cross bill, before the answer to that bill was read by the defendant to that bill, objected to its being read. And the consent was such a one as might be withdrawn at any time. It was not a consent that the answer of the defendant might be read by him, as evidence, but as pleading; and the reading of it to the jury as pleading, would have been useless. Any consent that cannot be of use to the person to whom it is given, may be withdrawn at any time; for in such a case, the withdrawal of the consent cannot hurt him.
The defendant then did not, from consent, acquire the right to read his answer to the jury.
It follows that he had no right to read it to the jury.
Did his reading of it to the jury, do the other party any harm ? It is impossible to say that it did' not. True, it seems that he read it as a part of the pleading; but then it was wholly useless as a part of the pleading; and, being before the jury, it might have been treated by them as a part of the evidence. That was the only use to which they could put it It does not appear that they were charged by the Court to disregard it as evidence.
It is therefore the part of safety, to let the case be passed upon by a jury that has not seen this answer. The defendant in the bill has no right to complain. He would read the answer, regardless of the objection of the plaintiff.
There ought to be a new trial.
Judgment reversed