The Act of June 25, 1895, P. L. 279, only authorizes the taking of depositions of witnesses residing outside of the Commonwealth on a rule instead of upon a commission and interrogatories, with the special consent of the court or of a judge thereof, for sufficient cause shown. The testimony intended to be taken should, therefore, be made known to the court, that its nature and its relevancy to the issue involved in the case may appear and so that the opposite party may admit the same if the facts alleged are not disputed: Carter v. Blair, 10 Dist. R. 749; Force’s Petition, 265 Pa. 228-230.
It should also appear that the witnesses are out of the Commonwealth and cannot be produced at the trial of the case. In this application it is only stated generally that the single witness whose deposition is to be taken will testify to matters material to the defendant’s case, and his testimony will be difficult and unsatisfactory to take on interrogatories and cross-interrogatories. This is not sufficient ground under the decisions for the granting of this petition.
It is also objected that it would be an unwarranted hardship to the plaintiff to require her to come from Florida to Ohio to take the testimony of a single witness, or even to send her counsel from here to appear for her and cross-examine the witnesses of the defendant in the State of Ohio: Com. v. Miller, 16 Pa. C. C. Reps. 656.
For these reasons, we think this application should not be granted.
And now, Aug. 25, 1924, the plaintiff’s petition is refused.
From Richard E. Cochran- York Fa-