Crosby v. Wells

67 A. 295, 73 N.J.L. 790, 1907 N.J. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 67 A. 295 (Crosby v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosby v. Wells, 67 A. 295, 73 N.J.L. 790, 1907 N.J. LEXIS 140 (N.J. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the court (the foregoing statement having been made) was delivered by

Green, J.

I. a. Counsel for the plaintiff in error first objects to the question addressed to the witness Davis, that it was not proper cross-examination, the gist of the objection being that the question did not relate to matters brought out on the examination-in-chief, but tended to establish the defendant’s ease substantively by cross-examining the plaintiff’s witness, and that this course is not allowed by our practice. See Donnelly v. State (1857), 2 Dutcher 601, 610; Dennis v. Van Voy (1864), 2 Vroom 38, 40, 41. Without casting the slightest doubt upon the value of these cases, we may be permitted to think that they are not now controlling.

(1) It must be borne in mind that Davis was originally examined as a witness in the action of Shreve v. Crosby; was produced on the part of Crosby, and was cross-examined on behalf of Crosby’s adversary. In order to save time and expense, it was agreed (the same aitones being employed) that the testimony “might be used” in three other pending actions, one of which is that now under investigation. In this action Davis was the witness of Crosby’s adversary, the defendant, Wells, and the question addressed to Davis and the answer given by him are naturally and legitimately to be regarded as part of his examination-in-chief. They would have plainly appeared in that light if they had been taken down in writing in this action.

(2) If, however, it be preferable to regard the question [797]*797and answer in their original aspect, then it is to be borne in mind that the examination of Davis was not taken viva voce in open court, or under a commission with interrogatories and cross-interrogatories annexed, but by virtue of a notice given agreeably to “An act concerning evidence.” Revision of 1900; Pamph. L. 1900, pp. 362, 375. The words in the statute of present importance are:

“Provided that notice in writing of the time and place of such examination and the names of the witnesses to be examined be given to the adverse party, his attorney or solicitor, that he may be present and put interrogatories, if he shall see fit.”

A provision of similar import appeared in section 1 of the act of March .17th, 1862 (Pamph. L., p. 226); was amended and carried into section 38 of “An act concerning evidence,” approved March 27th, 1874, and now, as part of section 45 of the act of 1900, above quoted, affects the practice of taking the testimony of a witffess out of this state otherwise than by commission. It accords with the language of the act and of the customary notice (Bess. L. Prec. 248), and with the practice of the bar, that the attorney of the adverse party, in questioning the witness, should not be bound by the strict rules of cross-examination, but may put such questions as may legitimately tend to. establish his cause of action or defence.

The matter inquired into in the present case was admissible. The question was meant to bring out a fact which would be a link in the chain of proofs tending to maintain the position of the defence. The chain would be this: Knowledge by Davis of the actual productiveness and value of the oil land in question; meeting of Davis and the plaintiff, Crosby, when the latter visited the oil land; the acquiring by the plaintiff of the true facts as to the land and its productiveness, which bore, upon the value and profitableness of the stock; representations by the plaintiff to the defendant contrary to known facts; fraudulent character of such representations; propriety of the .rescission of the cpntract based on such rep re[798]*798sentations; the consequent failure of consideration of the note sued upon.

I. b. The counsel for the plaintiff in error again objects to the question addressed to Davis that the subject-matter was not one for expert testimony. It may be that the matter was not to be settled by expert testimony, if we give to that phrase a strict and scientific meaning. Nevertheless, we incline to the view that it was one for the offer of opinion evidence under another exception to the so-called opinion rule. It is not now needful for us to adopt a perfect and all-embracing definition of the phrase “opinion evidence.” There is, for example, one kind of such evidence discussed in Koccis v. State (1893), 27 Vroom 44, 47, and illustrated in Castner v. Sliker (1869), 4 Id. 507 (at p. 509). But with-this we have now no concern. For present purposes, opinion evidence is that which is given.-by a person of ordinary capacity, who has, by opportunity for practice, acquired a special knowledge which is outside of the limits of common observation, and which may be of value in elucidating a matter under consideration. The experiential qualifications of the witness — including his opportunity to- observe the very thing under inquiry — being first shown, his special knowledge may be imparted in aid of the jurors at the trial, under questions in ordinary form. The definition above given is supported by Wigm. Evid., §§ 556, 558, 1917 (4), 1918, 1925; 17 Cycl. L. & Pro. 37, 41, 123; Best Ev. (10th Eng. ed.), § 513; Tayl. Ev. (9th Am. & Eng. ed.), §§ 1416, 1420; New Jersey Traction Co. v. Brabban (1895), 28 Vroom 691, 694; Wheeler & Wilson Co. v. Buckhout (1897), 31 Id. 102, 105; Elvins v. Delaware and Atlantic Telegraph and Telephone Co. (1899), 34 Id. 243, 247; State v. Arthur (1904), 41 Id. 425, 427; State v. Laster (1904), 42 Id. 586, 588. The inquiry preliminary to the giving of opinion evifierce is indicated in Wigm. Ev., §§ 560, 1928; 17 Cycl. L. & Pro. 123; Tayl. Ev. (9th ed.), § 1417; New Jersey Traction Co. v. Brabban, supra; Wheeler & Wilson Co. v. Buckhout, supra (at p. 104); State v. Arthur, supra.

[799]*799In harmony with the definition and the preliminary inquiry, the following cases illustrate our use of the kind of opinion evidence now under our notice. In Schenck v. Mercer County Mutual Insurance Co. (1854), 1 Zab. 447, 451, an experienced and practical fireman, who had seen the building in question, was permitted to testify that certain alterations therein did not increase the risk of fire. In Read v. Barker (1863), 1 Vroom 378, 379; affirmed, 3 Id. 477, it was held that millers and millwrights, as practical men, the extent of their knowledge being first shown, might testify as to the quantity of grain a certain mill could grind, and the value of the waterpower for milling. In Wheeler & Wilson Co. v. Buckhout (1897), 31 Id. 102, 104, a witness whose calling had required him, during twenty-five years, to examine and compare signatures with a view to determining their genuineness, was allowed to testify, by comparison with á signature made in his presence, as to the genuineness, in his opinion, of a disputed signature; although he had not made a special study of ehirography.

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Bluebook (online)
67 A. 295, 73 N.J.L. 790, 1907 N.J. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-v-wells-nj-1907.