Connecticut River Power Co. v. Dickinson

74 A. 585, 75 N.H. 353, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 2, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 74 A. 585 (Connecticut River Power Co. v. Dickinson) 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
Connecticut River Power Co. v. Dickinson, 74 A. 585, 75 N.H. 353, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 54 (N.H. 1909).

Opinion

Walker J.

No error was committed in allowing the witness Dickinson to be asked whether he and his estate have acquired lands so that they are the largest landowners in the vicinity. Although he was one of the defendants, the plaintiff had the right to call him as a witness and subject him to cross-examination upon the issue involved. P. S., c. 224, s. 15. As he had testified that they had dealt largely in lands for many years, it was competent for him to testify as to the extent of his ownership of such property, because that fact would naturally tend to show what his qualifications were, derived from experience, to form an opinion of the value of the real estate in question. The evidence was competent.

It is insisted that serious error was committed by counsel for the plaintiff by including in his- question to the witness the sug *355 gestión or information that the statute authorized the court to add fifty per cent to the amount of the verdict. This occurred upon cross-examination, after the witness had testified that, in hig opinion, under existing conditions the land was worth $20,000. The alleged prejudicial error consisted in stating to the jury the statutory provision, which it is claimed would induce the jury to estimate the value of the land at a less sum than they otherwise would. This claim is fundamentally based upon the proposition that the fairness of the trial required the exclusion of that fact from the jury. But they were explicitly instructed not to consider it. The question is whether a verdict must be set aside when the prevailing party has included in a question to a witness a suggestion of a prejudicial fact which counsel has reason to believe the court will exclude, and which the court does exclude and instructs the jury not to consider.

The defendants contend that counsel for the plaintiff violated what has been termed “ the law of the trial,” and Batchelder v. Railway, 72 N. H. 329, is cited in support of the contention. In that case, after a conference between the court and counsel in the absence of the jury as to the admissibility of certain evidence offered by the plaintiff and a distinct refusal by the court to admit it, the plaintiff’s counsel, upon the resumption of the trial before the jury, asked several questions of a witness which indirectly conveyed to the jury the information which the court had clearly declined to admit in evidence. Although these questions were excluded, it was held that they had a prejudicial effect upon the jury and that they were asked in plain violation of the ruling of the court, which was “ the law of the trial.” The verdict returned for the plaintiff was therefore set aside. It is apparent, however, that that case is’ not an authority for a similar holding in this case. The court had made no ruling in this case excluding the proffered evidence, and consequently no “law of the trial ” upon the subject had been established. The fact that in the preceding trial, for the assessment of damages for other land taken by the plaintiff, the court had refused to allow the plaintiff’s counsel to read the flowage act to the jury was not only not a ruling in this case, but the question did not arise in the same way. While the court might believe that the statute should not be put in evidence in the first case, it does not follow that the question asked of the witness Dickinson in the second case was improper under the decision in Batchelder v. Railway. Indeed, it is not entirely clear that if the ruling excluding the statute had been made in this case, and subsequently the question objected to had been put, “ the law of the trial ” would have been violated. But however that might be, it would be unreasonable *356 to hold that a ruling in one ease excluding certain evidence is in effect a ruling in another case, where similar evidence is offered bearing upon a different issue and tending to prove a different and a dissimilar fact. The question called for information upon the subject of Dickinson’s valuation — a subject not presented in the other case; and whether it was a legally competent question or not, the court had not determined or ruled that it could not be asked, or that the information it contained as to the statute could not be suggested to the witness in order to test the soundness of his valuation.

But it is urged that the sole purpose of counsel was to get before the jury the statutory fact for their consideration in returning their verdict, hoping that the amount of the jury’s valuation would be thereby decreased, and the court has found that such was the controlling purpose of counsel in asking the question. But the legal competency or relevancy of evidence does not depend upon the undisclosed purpose of counsel in' framing questions to witnesses. Its probative value upon the issue raised is determined by its logical bearing thereon; and if it is found to have such a bearing, it is not excluded as inadmissible because the jury may consider it upon another issue to which it is not legally relevant.

Suppose the witness, in reply to a general inquiry as to his method of estimating the value, had volunteered the information that one of the elements he considered was the fact that the statute authorized the court to increase the verdict of the jury fifty per cent. If as a matter of law it was incompetent for him as an expert to take that fact into consideration, it would render his testimony incompetent. His opinion of value would not be such an opinion as the law permits the jury to consider as evidence. But it would not necessarily have the effect of vitiating their verdict after an instruction from the court that they could not consider it. It is the usual practice, when a witness makes statements in testifying that are incompetent and prejudicial, for the court to order them stricken from the record ; and if the jury are instructed not to consider them, their erroneous effect is ordinarily cured. Lee v. Dow, 73 N. H. 101.

In Dow v. Weare, 68 N. H. 345, which was an action for injuries caused by a defective highway, it appeared that gravel had been dumped in the road so that the obstruction was not so apparent at the time of the trial as it was when the accident occurred. The time when the repair was made became material upon .the question of the extent of the alleged defect. The question whén the gravel was put there, and the answer Thursday after the accident,’ upon objection were ruled out.” And the *357 court say: “It is difficult to see how, if the evidence had been admitted, the objection could have been sustained unless the fact shown was used as evidence of an admission of need of repair (Aldrich v. Railroad, 67 N. H. 250), which the case finds was not the fact. . . . Counsel in the trial of a cause must necessarily put many questions which may be held incompetent.” If they are also prejudicial, one means of curing the error is afforded by instructions to the jury, which counsel have ample opportunity to request.

Furthermore, it does not appear that the plaintiff’s counsel understood when he asked the question that it was incompetent. It is certain that its incompetency was not so clear that it could be inferred that he knew that fact.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Potter v. Moody
104 A. 889 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1918)
Fuller v. Maine Central Railroad
100 A. 546 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1917)
Brown v. Hudson, Pelham & Salem Street Railway Co.
99 A. 94 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1916)
Gosselin v. F. M. Hoyt Shoe Co.
97 A. 744 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1916)
Keefe v. Sullivan County Railroad
97 A. 565 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1916)
Palmer v. Dimick
94 A. 268 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1915)
Lemire v. Pilawski
88 A. 702 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1913)
Holman v. Boston & Maine Railroad
84 A. 979 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1912)
Scully v. Manchester Street Railway
83 A. 512 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 585, 75 N.H. 353, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-river-power-co-v-dickinson-nh-1909.