Opinion
November 21, 1923.
Pitcher O'Brien [ F.B. Pitcher of counsel], for the appellant.
Conboy Hendricks [ Thomas Burns and John Conboy of counsel], for the respondents.
Ordinarily an order granting a commission to take the testimony of a witness without the jurisdiction rests in the sound discretion of the court at Special Term. In this case the order sending the issues arising under the contested probate to the Supreme Court for jury trial was made June 11, 1923. The cause was on the calendar of the Jefferson county Trial Term commencing October first. On that day it was properly on the day calendar for trial. It was then that the contestants moved to take the deposition of an alleged material witness in the State of Washington.
The moving affidavit makes no satisfactory explanation why this application was not made at an earlier Special Term, nor does it in fact show substantial grounds for taking the deposition at all. We might, under ordinary circumstances, apply a liberal rule in such case; but here the indications that the application was made for an ulterior purpose, to wit, to prevent the trial of the case at that term, are very strong. Courts should not lend their authority to aid parties in a manifest purpose of delaying the trial of an action beyond the term where it may be tried. ( Powell v. Schoellkopf, 197 App. Div. 471.)
The order in so far as it continued the cause and provided for the issuance of a commission should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, without prejudice to contestants' right to make a new application at Special Term, with due diligence; but the contestants should not be relieved from the conditions stated in the order requiring them to be ready for trial at the next Trial Term.
All concur.
The order, in so far as it continued the cause and provided for the issuance of a commission is reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, without prejudice to contestants' right to make a new application at Special Term with due diligence.