Judges: Brunt, Daniels
Filed Date: 12/29/1890
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This action is brought.by the plaintiff, as assignee-of the Glamorgan Iron Company, an incorporation organized and having its place of business in the state of Pennsylvania, to recover money alleged to have been embezzled by one Charles B. Wigton, the treasurer of the company, and lost by him at the gambling houses or rooms of the defendants, at play. The defendant, in his answer, denied each and every allegation of the com
It is urged that the action of the justice in disallowing the interrogatories is in conflict with the order of the justice allowing the commission. This objection is not well taken. There are certain subjects upon which these witnesses may be interrogated, and there are certain interrogatories which have been allowed. The mere fact of allowing a commission to issue does not authorize the propounding of interrogatories which are clearly immaterial to any possible issue which can arise during the progress of the trial, neither is it any objection to the order made that the question as to the relevancy or materiality of the testimony might be reserved until the trial, because, although such is the fact, clearly improper interrogatories should never be allowed to be propouhded. It is urged upon the part of the appellant that, as Charles B. Wigton will be the only witness against the defendants, they have a right to impeach him, and to show “from the whole of his making up and getting up he is not to be believed under oath; that lie is vicious in himself, (so by nature;) and that he is made more vicious by these stockholders,” (referring to the witnesses who are to be examined.) It is clear that if Charles B. Wigton is to be impeached as a witness by the defendants it cannot be by evidence of this character. The only method by which a witness can be impeached is by general testimony 9s to his character, or by direct evidence showing his testimony to be untrue. Proof of the fact that he has been guilty of crimes which ought to have been sufficient to make him an inmate of a state-prison cannot be gone into for the purpose of testing the credibility of a witness. It, of course, would be competent to show in impeachment of Wigton’s testimony a plan or agreement by which his crimes were to be held in terrorem over his head, so that he might be compelled to testify in a certain manner, and that it had been arranged that in case he so testified he should not be punished for his misdeeds. Such a combination would be a conspiracy against the defendant, which he undoubtedly would have a right to prove. But the difficulty with the interrogatories which have been propounded is that few of them tend to support any such proposition. They seem mainly to be directed to the establishment of the utter unreliability of Charles B. Wigton as a witness, because of specific offenses committed by him. The interrogatories tending to show such a conspiracy have not been objected to, and consequently are allowed. There is one interrogatory, however, a portion of which does not seem to fall within any of these categories, and which has been excluded, and which, we think, the defendant had a right to put; and that is the thirteenth interrogatory, in regard to the authority of Charles B. Wigton as treasurer of the company. This was objected to as calling for the conclusion of the witness as matter of law and as calling for hearsay evidence and as incompetent. So far as it asked the witness for his knowledge of the subjects embraced within the interrogatory it was competent. The interrogatory ends with the words, “Speak from your knowl
Brady, J., concurs.