SHEPPARD V. GRAVES

Decision Date01 January 1852
Citation55 U. S. 512
CourtU.S. Supreme Court

ERROR TO THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE

UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRICT OF TEXAS

Syllabus

In this case as in the preceding, it is decided that where the plaintiff averred enough to show the jurisdiction of the court and the defendant pleaded in abatement that the plaintiff was disabled from bringing the suit, on account of residence, it was incumbent upon the defendant to sustain the allegation by proof.

Until that was done, it was not necessary for the plaintiff to offer any evidence upon the subject.

The parties to this suit were the same as those in the preceding case, and the point upon which the decision of the court turned was the same as one of those decided in the preceding case.

MR. JUSTICE DANIEL delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit between the parties to the case No. 65, and is in all its features essentially the same with the former case with one exception, which will be pointed out.

In this suit, as in No. 65, the defendants below demurred to the petition, pleaded in abatement to the regularity of the service of process, to the disability of the plaintiff on the score of residence, and then interposed a defense in the nature of the general issue, but tendered no proofs in support of their defenses either in abatement or in bar. The plaintiff, to sustain the jurisdiction of the court upon the question of residence and to meet the pleas in abatement, offered to read the deposition of two witnesses, Rugely and Blair, residents of the City of New Orleans, in the State of Louisiana, taken de bene esse before a commissioner in the City of New Orleans under the act of Congress of 1789. The reading of these depositions was objected to by the defendants because the commissioner did not certify that the witnesses resided at a greater distance than one hundred miles from the place of trial, but stated only that they were residents of the City of New Orleans, within the Eastern District of the State of Louisiana and beyond the jurisdiction of the District Court of Texas. The court permitted the introduction of oral evidence to prove that the City of New Orleans was at a greater distance than one hundred miles from Galveston, the place of trial, and ruling also that the court itself knew judicially the mail routes and distances thereof, and that New Orleans, the place of taking said depositions, was more than one hundred miles from Galveston, the place of trial, permitted the depositions to be read in...

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