American Employers Insurance v. Wentworth

5 A.2d 265, 90 N.H. 112, 1939 N.H. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 7, 1939
Docket3028
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 265 (American Employers Insurance v. Wentworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Employers Insurance v. Wentworth, 5 A.2d 265, 90 N.H. 112, 1939 N.H. LEXIS 25 (N.H. 1939).

Opinion

Branch, J.

It is not perceived how the correctness of the jury’s answer to the question submitted to it could have been affected by the refusal of the court to submit at the same time the issue of prompt notice of the accident to the insurance company. This issue, having been reserved for future determination, the plaintiff’s rights in re *115 spect thereto have not been affected and it, therefore, takes nothing by its exception to the refusal of the court to submit this' issue to the jury.

The plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict upon the issue of permitted use does not invite extended consideration. It is sufficient to say that the record discloses ample evidence to justify the conclusion that upon the day of the accident Pelczar took the car in question from the defendant Wentworth’s garage in accordance with a continuing arrangement which had been in effect for several weeks, by the terms of which he was allowed to use garage cars “to run back and forth to work with and do errands.”

The plaintiff excepted repeatedly to the admission of testimony that the defendant, Wentworth, had never objected, prior to the accident, to the use of his cars by Pelczar for the purpose of doing errands and requested the court to charge the jury that this testimony was “no evidence of consent, express or implied, to the use or operation on the night of the accident.” We think that this evidence was clearly relevant and admissible as indicating the extent of the use to which the defendant Wentworth gave his consent, and the plaintiff’s exceptions with reference thereto are, therefore, overruled.

A more serious question is presented by the plaintiff’s exception to the admission of testimony as to a statement alleged to have been made by Wentworth with reference to Pelczar’s authority to use the car. Leon K. Dudley, a witness called by the defendants was permitted to testify as follows: “Q. Did you ever hear Mr. Wentworth say anything, Mr. Dudley, about the use of either the Nash car or any of the other cars when Mr. Pelczar was not present? Mr. Burns: To that we object, if the court please. Court: Admitted. Mr. Burns: Exception to the allowance of it. A. Mr. Wentworth told me one day when Mr. Pelczar was in the garage but not present and his wife had the car that he allowed Mr. Pelczar to have the car to use but he did wish the family would not drive it. Mr. Burns: We move' that be stricken out as not being competent or admissible or binding in this case. Court: I will allow it to stand. Mr. Burns: Exception please. Court: Yes.”

By this exception the plaintiff sought to invoke the rule laid down in Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Chandler, 89 N. H. 95, 100, and Morin v. Insurance Co., 85 N. H. 471, as follows: “Statements of the insured, not testified to by him as true, are not evidence of the insurer’s liability if the insurer is sought to be held liable without regard to the insured’s liability. In this respect the insurer stands as a stranger; *116 and as to it the admissions are only hearsay . ...” This position was subsequently made clear by three requests for instructions, the substance of which appears in the request numbered 19, as follows: “Any alleged extrajudicial statements of Wentworth, not admitted by him on the stand, are hearsay as to the petitioner and are not evidence of its liability in this proceeding.” The plaintiff now argues that both the admission of the foregoing testimony and the denial of its requests were erroneous and require the granting of a new trial.

The answer to this contention is that the rule above quoted is inapplicable to the facts of the present case. In the Chandler case it is definitely stated that the requests there considered had reference to the testimony “as to Mrs. Chandler’s statements and conduct after the accident had occurred.” Supra, 99. It appears from the record in the Morin case that the statements there considered were also made after the accident occurred. 419 Briefs & Cases, 562. As to statements of that kind, the language above quoted was obviously correct as an application of the rule against hearsay. In the present case, however, the question of Wentworth’s consent to the use actually made of his cars by Pelczar was essentially one concerning Wentworth’s mental attitude during the period of such use. Upon this point evidence of his conduct during that time was clearly relevant and admissible. 1 Wig., Ev. s. 300; 3 Wig., Ev. s. 1725. For similar reasons, evidence of his declarations during the same period indicating his consent to such use, was admissible under a well established exception to the hearsay rule which takes the form of “a broad doctrine admitting contemporary declarations of a mental or emotional condition in general.” 3 Wig., Ev. s. 1714. This doctrine has so frequently been stated and applied in the decisions of this court (see Hening, N. H. Dig. Tit., Evidence, 620-623) that an extended discussion of the basis upon which it rests seems superfluous. It is sufficient to repeat here the conclusion of the author above quoted that, “For the use of such statements, then, made ouj; of court and under certain circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness, there is a fair necessity, in the sense that there is no other equally satisfactory source of evidence either from the same person or elsewhere,” (3 Wig., Ev. 1714) plus that of Mr. Justice Holmes, in Elmer v. Fessenden, 151 Mass. 359, “Such declarations made with no apparent motive for misstatement may be better evidence of the maker’s state of mind at the time than the subsequent testimony of the same persons.”

Under this doctrine two things aré plain, (1) that the declaration *117 must concern the mental state of the declarant, and (2) must have reference to the time at which the declaration was made. It is in this sense that the word “contemporary” is often used in discussing this exception to the hearsay rule. Declarations as to past mental conditions are pure hearsay and are not within the exception.

Wentworth’s statement as reported by the witness Dudley, was to this effect: “I allow Pelczar to have the use of the car but I do wish the family would not drive it.” This was clearly a statement of Wentworth’s own mental state at the time it was made and as such was properly admitted under the doctrine above stated. “That the mental state of a given individual at a particular time was that of assent may be proved by his extrajudicial statements fairly indicative of such a feeling. Dissent, where relevant, may be proved in the same way.” 4 Chamberlayne, Ev. 2648. “A person’s statement of a present mental condition, including design, intent, motive, emotion, and the like, is admissible, where no special circumstances make it likely to have been untrustworthy.” Wig., Pocket Code of Ev. 1207.

The testimony was equally admissible, however, upon another ground. As pointed out by Professor Wigmore, “The 'res gestae’ phrase, ... is frequently invoked as the source and test of admissibility for declarations of a mental condition.

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Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 265, 90 N.H. 112, 1939 N.H. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-employers-insurance-v-wentworth-nh-1939.