delivered the opinion of the Court:
The supreme court of the Distinct of Columbia holding sessions for the trial of the caveat to the probate of a will is a court of common law, and not of equity. Craighead v. Alexander, 39 App. D. C. 229, 234, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 847; and eases there cited.
The mode of trial at common law is by the production of witnesses and their oral examination in open court. Depositions of .witnesses can only be substituted therefor by statutory authority. Bell v. Morrison, 1 Pet. 351, 355, 7 L. ed. 174, 176. As early as 1773, a statute of Maryland authorized the taking of depositions upon commissions issued therefor, with interrogatories to the witnesses. Acts 1773, chap. 7, sec. 7; D. C. Comp. Stat. 568, sec. 19. .-This act continued to govern in the *371District of Columbia, after its cession by Maryland under tbe act of Congress of 1801, though it seems to have been treated as obsolete. Anacostia & P. River R. Co. v. Klein, 8 App. D. C. 75, 79. It seems to have been the practice of the earlv eircuit court of the District of Columbia to take depositions da bene esse, and under a dedimus poiestaiem as provided in the judiciary act of 1789. See U. S. Rev. Stat. secs. 863 and 866, U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, pp. 661, 663. Sec. 863 authorized a commission to take the depositions of witnesses de bene esse who lived more than 100 miles from the place of trial, or were bound on a voyage' at sea, or were about to go out of the United States, or the district of trial, or when ancient or infirm. Such depositions were intended to be taken upon oral examination of witnesses before the officer to whom the commission might be issued. The section does not apply to witnesses residing in a foreign county. Sec. 866 authorized a dedimus poleslatem. to “take depositions according to common usage.” It is general in its terms, and does not designate the places to which the dedimus poleslatem shall issue. Upon the change in the organization of the courts of the District of Columbia, the supreme court of the District, under power conferred by Congress to make rules of practice, made a rule for the taking of depositions in proceedings at law and in equity; but the rule for the eoTirts of law does not seem to have been continued in the revision of the rules in March, 1894. Anacostia & P. River R. Co. v. Klein, 8 App. D. C. 75, 81. The Revised Statutes of the District of Columbia, approved Tune 22, 1874, conferred the power to take depositions, under certain conditions, in criminal cases (sec. 881), and provided in sec. 894 for the taking of depositions of witnesses to a will offered for probate, “in such manner as the court may prescribe, touching tbe execution of said will or codicil, and the competency of the testator at tbe time of tbe execution thereof.”
The latest legislation relating to this subject is found in the Code of the District of Columbia which vrnnt into effect January 1, 1902. Sec. 26 [31 Stat. at L. 1194, chap. 854) relates to depositions to be used in the municipal court, and provides *372tliat depositions of nonresident witnesses shall be taken on written interrogatories and cross interrogatories. Sec. 132 [31 Stat. at L. 1211, chap. 854] provides for taking the depositions of attesting witnesses to wills offered for probate. Sec. 144 provides that commissions may issue to take the depositions of nonresident witnesses. Sec. 922 [31 Stat. at L. 1339, chap. 854] relates to criminal cases, and is substantially a re-enactment of sec. 881, Revised Statutes D. 0. Sec. 1058 provides for depositions cle bene esse of witnesses, among others, who live beyond the District of Columbia; but they can only be taken in a place “under the sovereignty of the United States.” The examination is oral. After elaborate provision for the foregoing, the section concludes as follows: “In any case where the interests of justice may require, the supreme court of the District of Columbia may grant a dedimus poteslatem to take depositions according to common usage, and may, according to the usages of chancery, direct depositions to be taken in perpetuam rei memoriam, if they relate to any matters that might be cognizable in any court of the United States. When the testimony of any witness residing in any place not within the sovereignty of the United States is desired in any cause pending-in any court of the District of Columbia, the same may be taken upon interrogatories and cross interrogatories filed in the said court, and transmitted by said court under letters rogatory, addressed to some court of record in the foreign state in which said witness is then to be found.” [31 Stat. at L. 1354, chap. 854.]
Another section (1060) provides that, on motion made in any common-law action, the court may order a commission to take the deposition of “any witness residing or being out of the District [orally or], on interrogatories and cross interrogatories” to accompany the commission. _ Such depositions are not to be admitted if at the time of the trial the attendance of the witness can be obtained by the process of the court. The sections of the Code supersede all former legislation upon the subject,, and govern the practice in the courts of the District. The' question presented depends upon their construction. To as*373certain tlie meaning of secs. 1058 and 1060 they must be considered together. So considered, we are of the opinion that it was intended to make a distinction between nonresidents of the District, residing at the time in some state or country under the sovereignty of the United States, and those residing in countries not within such sovereignty. Otherwise the clause of 1058 relating to witnesses in the countries not within the sovereignty would be practically ignored. As this distinction is made in 1058 it seems to us that other clauses of the two sections must be construed as applying to those witnesses outside of the District who, at the same time, are within the sovereignty of the United States. The distinction made between the two classes of witnesses in the matter of depositions was probably due to the fact that some foreign nations have regarded the execution of a commission by a person named by a foreign tribunal as an assumption of sovereign power that was not permissible, and hence -would recognize no other form of commission but letters rogatory. Be this as it may, the clause of 1058 expressly provides that to take the testimony of a witness in a foreign country, letters rogatory shall issue, addressed to some court of record therein, accompanied by the interrogatories and cross interrogatories propounded to the witness.
The expediency of this distinction was one for the exclusive consideration and determination of Congress; we are concerned only with the ascertainment of its intention.
Our conclusion is that there was error in directing the commission to issue over the objection of the caveator, to take the depositions in the manner prescribed. For that reason the order is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Reversed'.