Cote v. Company

166 A. 279, 86 N.H. 238, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 2, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 166 A. 279 (Cote v. Company) 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
Cote v. Company, 166 A. 279, 86 N.H. 238, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 34 (N.H. 1933).

Opinion

1. The motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict were properly denied. Upon the evidence submitted to the jury the following facts were findable. December 10, 1930, the plaintiff Francis, then a boy twelve years old, purchased at the defendant's store in Manchester a box of twenty-two caliber "short" cartridges. Later in the same day he loaded a revolver belonging to a playmate with one of these cartridges, and shoved the loaded gun inside his belt. Thereafter when he attempted to pull it out the cartridge exploded inflicting the injuries complained of. The shooting took place in a vacant lot in the city of Manchester. A rule of the defendant's store forbade the sale of ammunition to minors. No warnings or instructions were given to the plaintiff when he made the purchase.

The defendant denied that the cartridges were bought at its store.

In this state of the proof the court submitted to the jury the following issue: "Is the sale of shells to a young man of plaintiff's age and intelligence without warning of dangers attendant to their use, if there are such dangers, and without proper instructions as to their use, if instructions are necessary, a negligent thing to do?" If there was any inaccuracy in this statement of the decisive issue in the case it did not operate to the detriment of the defendant. The likelihood that explosives placed in the hands of children will result in injury to them or to third persons is so obvious that negligence might well be *Page 240 predicated upon the sale of cartridges to a twelve year old boy even if an attempt to give instructions and warnings had been made. This seems like a self evident proposition, but if proof were considered necessary it was furnished by the evidence above referred to that a rule of the defendant's store forbade the sale of ammunition to minors; and by the testimony of the defendant's local manager that a minor should not have ammunition "because you can't tell what he is going to do with it"; and that it is "reasonable to expect that a twelve and a half year old boy may accidentally discharge a revolver and hurt either himself or a companion."

In the defendant's brief we read that "as a matter of law . . . a merchant would be justified in assuming that a boy in the plaintiff's position, who purchased cartridges, would have a knowledge of their properties and proper use." The negative of this statement would be nearer the truth. In the handling of firearms judgment, skill and experience are factors of safety quite as important as mere knowledge of danger and it cannot be assumed that boys twelve years old have these qualifications.

Since the defendant might be found at fault for placing the cartridges in the hands of the plaintiff even if warnings and instructions had been given, the argument that the plaintiff's own testimony leaves no room for doubt "that he was fully cognizant of all that defendants are charged with failure to tell him," would be wholly inconclusive if otherwise well founded in fact and in law. It should be pointed out, however, that this argument involves two misconceptions as to the law and has no sound basis in fact.

The defendant erroneously assumes that the rule laid down in Harlow v. Leclair, 82 N.H. 506, to the effect that a party is bound by his testimony in court, requires that all the conflicting assertions which experienced counsel may elicit from a twelve year old boy in regard to his knowledge at a particular time shall be taken as conclusively establishing the facts most unfavorable to him which are stated therein. The case of Harlow v. Leclair stands for no such principle. That case had to do with "a man of mature years" who was assumed to have "average intelligence" and whose testimony was "clear and unequivocal." The rule there enunciated applies to such persons and to such testimony. It has no application to children of immature mentality whose testimony abounds in equivocations and qualifications.

In support of its argument the defendant refers to numerous statements contained in the deposition of the plaintiff which were read to *Page 241 the jury "as evidence of the facts" stated therein upon the theory that they were "the admissions of a party." The defendant seems to assume that for the purpose of determining whether a party has "sworn himself out of court" (Harlow v. Leclair, supra, 511) depositions taken before trial are to be taken as conclusively establishing the truth of any admissions contained therein. This is not the law. When the deponent is present in court and testifies, his deposition becomes inadmissible as testimony. It is "incompetent as substantive evidence." Profile c. Co. v. Bickford,72 N.H. 73, 75; Phoenix c. Co. v. Clark, 58 N.H. 164; Hayward v. Barron,38 N.H. 366; Clough v. Bowman, 15 N.H. 504, 515. The theory of the deposition statutes has always been that a deposition was "never to be used if the witness were produced in court. . . by the opposite party." Hayward v. Barron, supra, 370. Depositions belong to the "class of secondary evidence" (Taylor v. Thomas, 77 N.H. 410, 412) which is admissible only when the viva voce testimony of the deponent is not available. Hayward v. Barron, supra.

When the deponent testifies, his deposition may be used (1) as evidence of contradictions, and (2) when the deponent is a party, as evidence of extra-judicial declarations or admissions, (profile c. Co. v. Bickford, supra; Phoenix c. Co. v. Clark, supra) but they gain no added dignity because of their character as depositions. It is held to be "immaterial whether such declarations were proved by oral testimony of one who heard them, or by the defendant's signed statement in the form of a deposition." The rule of Harlow v. Leclair, supra, is in effect that a party must generally "stand or fall by his own testimony," but it has never been suggested that parties are irrevocably bound by the force of their extra-judicial declarations or admissions.

Finally it should be stated that an impartial reading of the plaintiff's testimony leaves much room for doubt as to how far he really comprehended the dangers incident to the use of a revolver, particularly in regard to the possibility of an accidental or premature discharge, while at the same time it demonstrates his total lack of experience, skill and judgment in the use of such a weapon.

The defendant's exceptions to the allowance of the plaintiff's argument and to the charge remain to be considered.

2. The first witness called by the defendant was a police officer of Manchester who testified that he investigated the shooting of the Cote boy and took possession of the gun and cartridges, which he later disposed of by throwing them into the Merrimack river. He *Page 242 testified that at the time of the shooting and at the time of the trial, plaintiff's counsel, Mr. Sullivan, was county solicitor for Hillsborough county. Mr. Sullivan thereupon inquired, "What is the difference if I am County Solicitor?" and the court ruled as follows: "It may be stricken out of the record; the jury will pay no attention to that." No exception was taken to this ruling and no further reference to the matter appears in the testimony. A previous witness had testified that he signed a deposition at "the County Solicitor's office."

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 279, 86 N.H. 238, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cote-v-company-nh-1933.