
    Eugene S. Van Riper, Plaintiff, v. Frank H. Ray, Minnie Ray and Thomas M. Boyd, Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    November, 1914.)
    Depositions — when entitled to examine defendant before trial — what testimony is material and necessary for prosecution of action. Motions and orders — in action for alienation of wife’s affections — when order for examination of defendants set aside.
    To entitle' a plaintiff to examine a defendant before trial it must affirmatively appear, specifying facts and circumstances, that the testimony to be taken is material and necessary for plaintiff or the prosecution of the action.
    Where the answer in an action for alienation of a wife’s affections denied the allegations of the complaint that defendants, the father, mother and stepfather of the wife, conspired to and did alienate her affections, an order for the examination of two of said defendants based on plaintiff’s affidavit that his grounds for believing, and the sources of his information as to his belief, that said defendants conspired, etc., are conversations and correspondence which would indicate such conspiracy but what they were does not appear, must be set aside but without prejudice to another application for a like order.
    Motion to set aside an order for examination before trial of two defendants.
    
      Thomas J. Meehan, for plaintiff.
    Davies, Auerbach & Cornell (Charles H. Tuttle and Andrew Macrery, of counsel), for defendants.
   Pendleton, J.

This is a motion to set aside an order for the examination before trial of two of the defendants. The action is for the recovery of damages for the alienation of a wife’s affections, and the defendants are the father, mother and stepfather of the wife; and the complaint alleges that they conspired together to, and did, alienate her affections. The answers, made part of the papers, categorically deny all the charges. It is elementary (as true in one cause of action as another) thát to entitle a plaintiff to examine a defendant before trial it must affirmatively appear, specifying facts and circumstances, that the testimony to be taken is material and necessary for the plaintiff Or the prosecution of the action. Code Civ. Pro. § 872; General Rules of Practice, Rule 82. The papers here fail entirely to show by any legal evidence that the testimony directed to be taken is material or necessary for the plaintiff. For example: Plaintiff’s affidavit alleges that the grounds for believing and the sources of Ms information as to the belief that the defendants conspired, etc., are conversations and correspondence which would indicate such conspiracy. What they were does not appear. That they would indicate something is a mere conclusion of affiants. It is for. the court, not plaintiff, to determine the necessity and materiality. If part or the substance of such conversations and correspondence were set out so that the court could see what they indicated and thus determine whether the testimony as to them of the persons to be examined was or would be material and necessary for plaintiff or the prosecution of the action, a very different question would be presented. In a somewhat analogous case (Ladenburg v. Commercial Bank, 87 Hun, 269), the court says: The judge granting the attachment must be satisfied by the evidence presented, and he cannot be satisfied by the satisfaction of the affiant. It is not the plaintiff that is to be satisfied, but the judge granting the attachment ; and there is no judicial reason for the judge’s satisfaction simply because the plaintiff is satisfied. * * * The affiant is satisfied of the fact because of the cable; but what is in the cable the court is not informed, and it is impossible for it to tell whether the affiant’s satisfaction is justified by the cable or not. * * * The court is entitled to know what the writings are in order to see whether the affiant is justified in his belief or not.” The most that can be said of these papers, taking them all together, is that plaintiff desires to examine these two defendants to see whether or not their testimony will be material and necessary for him and whether he can extract something which may possibly in some way, directly or indirectly, be useful. Such is not the purpose or scope of these provisions of the Code. In Vogel Co. v. Backer Construction Co., 148 App. Div. 639, the court says: It seems to us manifest that the examination was not applied for in good faith in the expectation that material and necessary testimony for the plaintiff would be elicited, and the rule is now definitely settled that an examination of an adverse party before trial is only allowed to enable the party applying for the examination to obtain testimony to establish his case or defense, as the ease may be, or to meet and overcome the case or defense of the other party. The purpose of the examination is not to enable one party to pry into the case or defense of his adversary. No reasonable ground is shown to believe that the defendant’s president will swear directly, to the contrary of what he has sworn in the answer.” In Weeks v. Whitney, 146 App. Div. 621, an order for the examination of a defendant was set aside on the ground that it did not appear that the plaintiff had any good ground for believing that the testimony of defendant would establish the falsity of his own allegations of fraud contained in his verified answer. While the tendency of late decisions is to liberality in the matter of allowing the examination of parties before trial when it is apparent the testimony to be taken is or will be material and necessary for the party applying, it was never intended to countenance mere fishing expeditions to see whether or not evidence of a cause of action could be found. Motion granted, without prejudice to another application.

Motion granted, without prejudice to another application.  