Copp v. Henniker

55 N.H. 179
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 5, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 55 N.H. 179 (Copp v. Henniker) 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
Copp v. Henniker, 55 N.H. 179 (N.H. 1875).

Opinions

Trial by jury. Referee law of 1874. I. The plaintiff claims that in an action against a town for damages caused by a defect in a highway, neither party has a constitutional right to trial by jury; that such a case is specially excepted from the general rule by the constitution when it guarantees the right "except in cases in which it has been heretofore otherwise used and practised;" and to bring his case within the constitutional exception, he relies on the sixth section of the provincial act of 1719. Province Laws, ed. 1771, pp. 154, 155.

1. But it is by no means clear that the true construction of that section did not give a right to trial by jury. The court of quarter sessions, to which that section gave jurisdiction in this class of cases, was reestablished by the judiciary act of 1692. 3 N.H. Prov. Papers 183. That act provided, — 1. That in the most trifling causes before a justice of the peace, either party might have a jury (as it was in the laws of 1682, on appeal — 1 Prov. Pap. 450 — and as it is on appeal to this day). 2. That in the quarter sessions, common pleas, and supreme court, "no person's right of property" should be determined, except by confession or default, "unless the fault be found by the verdict of twelve men of the neighborhood, as it ought of right to be by law." (P. 186.) 3. That there should be a separate court of chancery, in which no provision was made for trial by jury. *Page 186

Judge BELL (the highest authority on all matters of our provincial judicial history) says that it is not known that this law was ever repealed, and that it is supposed the court of chancery continued to exercise its powers till the revolution. Wells v. Pierce, 27 N.H. 512. This act of 1692 was, in language and effect, substantially reenacted by the judiciary act of 1699, which contained no repealing clause, and remained in force till the revolution, and was substantially reenacted in 1776, and again in 1785. 3 Prov. Pap. 218; Province Laws, ed. 1771, p. 5. The act of 1692 was modified, in a few particulars of little comparative importance, by the act of 1699, and only so far as the latter was inconsistent with it. The judges serving under the act of 1699 were removed, not by a repeal of the act, but by the governor, on petition, on the thirty-first day of July; the act of 1699 was passed Aug. 17. 2 Prov. Pap. 315, 316, 320, 321; 2 id. 86; Belknap's Hist. N.H., ch. XI, p. 156, ed. 1831. The act of 1699, being published in the editions of 1716 and 1771, was, of course, well known to Judge BELL; and when he says that it is not known that the act of 1692 was ever repealed, his meaning evidently is, that it is not known to have been repealed in express terms, or by implication, except to the slight extent to which its provisions were incompatible with those subsequently adopted. There was, in the act of 1699, no modification of the provision requiring the fault to be found by a jury in the quarter sessions, common pleas, and superior court.

The history of the province, in the light of which the legislation must be viewed, renders it absolutely certain that no abandonment of the existing right of trial by jury, in the general jurisdiction of the quarter sessions, and other courts, was intended by the act of 1699. The courts were remodelled at that time for the express purpose of enabling the people to defend themselves against Allen claiming under Mason, and against such oppression as that which Moodey suffered at the hands of Cranfield a few years before. New Hampshire was given away by the crown before it was settled. The first settlers came as the servants of the foreign proprietors. In 1629 Mason became sole proprietor; and the remnant of his title is recognized in the fifth section of the act of Feb. 27, 1786, for mending highways, the act of Jan. 16, 1787, about waste lands, and in the Rev. Stats. of 1842, ch. 143. The history of the Masonian controversy is a very large part of the civil history of the province. When Bancroft says that Mason's patent was pregnant with nothing so signally as suits at law — 1 Bancroft's Hist. U.S. 329; that the civil history of the colony for a quarter of a century is a series of lawsuits about land; that in 1699, and for years afterwards, followed scenes of confusion — trials in the colonial courts, resulting always in verdicts against the pretended proprietary, appeals to the English monarch in council, papers withheld, records of the court under Cranfield destroyed, orders from the lords of trade and the crown disregarded by a succession of inflexible juries, — he gives but a faint picture of that memorable controversy. 3 Bancroft's Hist. U.S. 82; 2 id. 116, 120. *Page 187

The prosecution of Thomas Wiggins for throwing Barefoot, the "deputy governor," and Mason, the "proprietor," into the fire, whereby two of the deputy governor's ribs were broken, and one of his teeth knocked out, and Mason's foot was much scorched, and his periwig and clothes were burned; and for endeavoring to strangle Mason by grasping his windpipe, in high contempt of his majesty's royal authority; and a great variety of other turbulent transactions and popular outbreaks, — give a more lively and adequate representation of the universality and bitterness of the great controversy, which resembled the anti-rent war of New York — 1 New Am. Cycl. 668 — and kept the province in a constant state of irritation, with intermittent, violent convulsions, for a hundred years. 1 Prov. Pap. 578-582, 325, 381, 441, 442, 451, 476, 503, 509-576; 2 id. 351-355, 414-462; 3 id. 102; Belknap's Hist. N.H., chaps. 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 18, 21; 18 M. Law. Rep. 310. It was finally owing to juries, composed of parties in interest, that the people became owners of their homes, instead of being tenants of the Masonian proprietor. Twice they attempted to have jurors chosen by popular election. 1 Prov. Pap. 393, 449; 3 id. 73. Under Cranfield, juries, packed by officers in the interest of Mason, found verdicts for Mason. Afterwards, juries, packed by officers in the interest of the people, found verdicts for the people. The provincial legislators could not forget that Moodey was illegally convicted, in New Hampshire, by a servile and corrupt court; and that the seven bishops were acquitted, in London, by an independent jury. They were full of the English passion for trial by jury, intensified, if possible, by their experience in this country, and well illustrated by the code of 1680, which secured the right of trial by jury in trials of every kind, even in proceedings in admiralty — 1 Prov. Pap. 395 — chancery practice under the act of 1692 being a remarkable and conspicuous exception to the general rule of laws made by the people of the province.

The act of 1692 required that "the fault be found by the verdict of twelve men" before any person's "right of property" should be determined "by any of the aforesaid courts," of which the quarter sessions was one. "Right of property" there spoken of corresponds to "deprived of his property" in art. 15 of the bill of rights, and "controversies concerning property" in art. 20. Such expressions cannot be limited to suits in which the title of certain specific real or personal property is the question in issue; for in such litigation there is not necessarily any "fault," in the literal sense of the word, to be found by the jury. "A refusal to pay a debt is an injury to the property of the creditor," within the meaning of the constitution. 25 N.H. 540. A controversy concerning the amount of compensation to be paid for land taken for a public use, is a controversy "concerning property." 35 N.H. 143.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.H. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copp-v-henniker-nh-1875.