By the act of 1840 the fees of a witness are “ fifty cents for each day while attending any court or officer; and if the witness resides more than three miles from the place of attendance, travelling fees at the rate of four cents per mile, going and returning.” (Laws 1840, p. 331, § 8.) A witness is not bound, in any case, to attend unless duly subpoenaed, for which purpose the statute declares, amongst other things, that “ the fees allowed by law to such witness for travelling to and returning from the place where he is required to attend, and the fees allowed for one day’s attendance, shall be paid or tendered to such witness.” (2 R. S. 400, § 42, sub. 3.) If the witness, when duly subpoenaed, refuse or neglect to attend, he is responsible to the aggrieved party for all damages, and may be proceeded against in various ways.
1. By action on the case at common law. It is the duty of the witness to obey the subpoena, and in this action, the injured party may recover such damages as result from this violation of duty by the witness. (1 Ch. PL 159, 7th Amer. ed.; 1 Stark. Ev. 80, Phil. ed. 1842; 1 Phil. Ev. 7; Hasbrouck v. Baker, 10 John. 248; Pearson v. Iles, Doug. 561.) This remedy is recognized by the statute, which, so far, is in affirmance of the common law. (2 R. S. 400, § 43. See also 5 Eliz. c. 9, § 12, in Doug. 556, and 1 Phil. Ev. 3.)
2. By attachment, and this at common law as well as by the statutes last referred to. (See also 2 R. S. 535; and 540, § 34; Pearson v. Iles, supra ; Amey v. Long, 9 East 483; 1 Phil Ev. 7 ; 2 Tidd's Pr. 8, 8th Phil. ed. 1840.)
*303. By an action for the penalty of fifty dollars. The revised statutes declare that “every person who shall be duly subpoenaed to attend as a witness” “ shall be bound to attend, according to the command of such subpoena, and for every failure so to attend, without a reasonable excuse,” “shall forfeit to the aggrieved party the sum of fifty dollars.” (§ 43, supra.) The English statute of 5 Eliz. already referred to, is to the same effect; it imposes a penalty of ten pounds on any witness who makes default and refuses to appear, “ having not a lawful or reasonable let or impediment to the contrary,” the said penalty “ to be recovered by the party so grieved.”
This penalty is given to the “ aggrieved party,” and the action can be sustained by no one else. Hence, as in an action on the case at common law for disobeying a subpoena, the plaintiff can only recover the penalty by showing he was damnified by the lache of the witness; if no loss followed, the penalty was not incurred. A party does not acquire a right to this penalty by the mere refusal of a witness to attend when duly subpoenaed. Something more is required: it must be shown that the witness was material, and that damages resulted from his non-attendance. In Goodwin v. West, which was an action on the statute of 5 Eliz. to recover the penalty of ten pounds, it was moved in arrest of judgment that the declaration was not good, and the third exception taken by counsel was, that the plaintiff did not show that he was endamaged by the non-appearance of the witness ; to which it was “ answered, that the action being brought only for the ten pounds and not for further damages, it is well enough, and the ten pounds is due for her non-appearance to the king and the party. But all the justices held, that the declaration was ill for this cause; for there ought to be a party grieved by the non-appearance, otherwise there is no cause of forfeiture; and so is the express scope and words of the statute.” (In B. R. 15 Car. 1, Cro. Car. 522, 540, Sir Wm. Jones, 430.) The same point was adjudged in the common pleas, which judgment was affirmed on writ of error, in the case of Madison v. Shore, 9 Wm. 3, though this was admitted to be “ contrary to a judgment in the like case, anno 30 Eliz. where the like exception *31was taken and overruled.” (5 Mod. 355; 1 Salk. 206; 1 Comb. 449,458. See also 3 Bac. Ab. Evidence D.; Pearson v. Iles, supra; Heermans v. Williams, 11 Wend. 636; McKeon v. Lane, 1 Hall, 319; Masterman v. Judson, 8 Bing. 224.) A precedent for a declaration for the penalty on 5 Eliz. is given in 7 Wentworth's Pl. 243 It alleges that the evidence the witness could have given, would have been material, and that it was necessary for the party. The declaration in Pearson v. lies, [supra,) contains a similar averment. I regard the principle as sound and entirely settled by authority.
If a defaulting witness was wholly unable to give material evidence in the case, it is manifest that no injury could have arisen from his non-attendance, and consequently he could not have incurred the penalty. In this case, the defendants offered to prove a direct and unqualified admission by the plaintiff, that he was aware the witness knew nothing about the matter in question in the cause wherein she had been subpoenaed, followed by a declaration that she had been talking about him, and therefore should attend the court. This evidence was pertinent to the issue, and should not have been rejected. It would have tended to prove that the witness was in no respect material to the plaintiff, and might have satisfied the jury that he had sustained no injury by her non-attendance. This was an essential point in the case, and the court clearly erred in excluding the evidence. I will add, that if, in truth, the witness was subpoenaed for the purpose of annoyance, and not because she was regarded as material, it was a gross abuse of the process of the court, and as such deserved to be punished as a palpable contempt of its authority.
But this is not all, for no forfeiture occurs unless the failure of the witness to attend is “ without a reasonable excuse.” (§ 43, supra.) Now let it be granted, which is all the plaintiff could claim, that but for what I am about to state, the witness would have been bound to attend the court from the fifteenth of April, the day named in the subpoena, to the twenty-third, when the cause was tried. The witness had been paid for one day’s attendance and no more, and it was offered, by the defendants, to *32prove that she attended on the fifteenth, as the subpoena required, and for three or four days thereafter; that the plaintiff was then called upon to pay her fees, and was informed that she would not remain at court unless they were paid, and that he refused to make any further payment. This evidence the plaintiff objected to, and it was excluded by the court. Upon what principle it was rejected, I confess I do not see. If such was the fact, the plaintiff alone was in fault, and the witness had a most “ reasonable excuse” for leaving the court. She was entitled to the daily sum of fifty cents, and it was the plaintiff’s duty to see it paid to her. The witness was not bound to trust the party, and rely on him for future payment. The allowance to witnesses is for their daily sustenance, and a refusal to pay is a virtual discharge of the witness, and a very sufficient excuse for omitting further attendance in the cause. If this plaintiff was thus endamaged, it was his own fault, and he must bear the consequences whatever they may be. No right of action could accrue in his favor under such circumstances, and no penalty was incurred by the witness. A party who would seek redress against a witness, must see that he is not himself in fault, and that everything has been done which the witness had a right to exact.
The court erred in rejecting the evidence offered on these points, and the' judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.