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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Grieve v. Grieve [1885] ScotLR 22_647 (22 May 1885)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1885/22SLR0647.html
Cite as: [1885] SLR 22_647, [1885] ScotLR 22_647

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 647

Court of Session Outer House.

Friday, May 22. 1885.

[ Lord Fraser.

22 SLR 647

Grieve

v.

Grieve

Subject_1Proof
Subject_2Husband and Wife
Subject_3Divorce
Subject_4Photograph — Identification.
Facts:

A photograph being merely secondary evidence cannot be used as a means of identifying a person who can be compelled to attend the trial. Where, therefore, the defender in an action of divorce has disobeyed a warrant to appear for identification, the pursuer cannot proceed to use a photograph, but must move for a warrant to apprehend the defender and bring him up for identification.

Headnote:

This was an action for divorce on the ground of adultery. The pursuer was John Grieve, a flesher in Glasgow, and the defender was his wife Catherine Semple or Grieve. The parties were married in 1880, and lived together as husband and wife till 1883, when they separated. The woman afterwards gave birth to a child, of which her husband could not have been the father, and which she registered as illegitimate. This action was accordingly brought. No defences were lodged. On 14th May the Lord Ordinary found the libel relevant, and fixed a diet of proof, and granted an order ordaining the defender to appear at the proof for identification. This order was served, and the execution of the citation was put into process, but the defender did not appear at the proof. The registrar of births at Glasgow was called as a witness, and exhibited his register, wherein there was recorded an entry of the birth of a child marked “ illegitimate,” and which was said to be the child of the defender. The witness was asked by whom the direction to enter the child as illegitimate was given, and he stated it was by a woman. Whereupon the counsel for the pursuer proposed to prove by the exhibition of a photograph of the defender that she was the person who gave the information; and he referred to the execution of the order on the defender to make appearance for identification, which had not been obeyed.

Judgment:

Lord Fraser—I cannot admit this evidence. There seems to be very loose notions afloat as to how far photographs can be used, and this is a good illustration of them. A photograph is secondary evidence, and secondary evidence of the most unreliable character. Two photographs of the same person very often are very different from each other and even the most skilful individual may mistake the photograph of one person for another. It is only as a last resource, and where justice would otherwise be defeated, that the Courts admit this secondary evidence. Indeed, no secondary evidence is ever received if primary evidence can be obtained at reasonable cost and with available means. Wherever a defender or any other person can be compelled to come to Court for identification, the Court will not receive a photograph in place of the original. If a defender, as in this case, refuses to obey the order of the Court to appear for identification, then the course is to apply for a warrant to apprehend the person so failing to appear, and bring him or her to Court. I long ago printed the form of warrant in use in the Consistorial Courts of Scotland upon the matter (Husband and Wife, p. 1166), and such a warrant ought to have been applied for in the present case, and would at once have been granted by. me. In cases where the person sought to be identified is outwith the jurisdiction of the Court, and where its warrants of apprehension cannot reach him, a photograph may then as a matter of necessity be used, and I have, when counsel, been allowed by Judges in such circumstances—but only in such circumstances of necessity—to use a photograph. The wife in the present case is in Glasgow,

Page: 648

and can be apprehended and brought to Court for identification, and if this case is to depend upon the identification of the woman who instructed the entry to be made in the register that the child was illegitimate, I must delay further procedure in it till that woman is brought here and confronted with the registrar.

Other evidence which did not require the defender's presence for identification being led, the Lord Ordinary gave decree of divorce.

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuer— Steele. Agents— Smith & Mason, S. S.C.

1885


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1885/22SLR0647.html