Davis v. Dyer

62 N.H. 231
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 N.H. 231 (Davis v. Dyer) 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
Davis v. Dyer, 62 N.H. 231 (N.H. 1882).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The leading ground on which the defendants claim the privilege of a jury trial for the purpose of changing the auditor’s report, is the right of trial by jury given by the constitution. Art. 20 of the Bill of .Rights provides “that in all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between two or more persons, except in cases in which it has been heretofore otherwise used and practised, the parties have a right to trial by jury, and this method shall be held sacred.” The exception in the provision shows that there were cases in which it had been “ otherwise used and practised,” and that the right, however protective, beneficent, and sacred it might be, was not extended to these. It was a preservation of a mode of judicial determination, in the form and manner as it was then “ used and practised,” and for a class of cases to which the method had been commonly applied. It was not an extension of the right to cases not before within its operation. It did not create or establish a right not before existing. It was a recognition of an existing right, guaranteeing it as it then stood and was practised, guarding it against repeal, infringement, or undue trammel by legislative action, but not extending it so as to include what had not before been within its benefits. Wooster v. Plymouth, 193, 203, ante.

Cases involving the investigation of accounts, particularly where the accounts are mutual or complicated, are within the equity jurisdiction of the court. 1 Sto. Eq. Jur., ss. 441, 442, 442 a, and notes. Although such cases are made the subjects of suits at law, in the trial equitable principles are applied, and equity jurisdiction is not lost. Wells v. Pierce, 27 N. H. 503, 511-513. It is the inconvenience and difficulty of properly and accurately adjusting and settling accounts of a complex nature in suits at law that have brought them within the equity jurisdiction of the court. “It is not improbable that originally, in cases of account which might be cognizable at law, courts of equity interfered upon the special ground of accident, mistake, or fraud. If so, the ground was very soon enlarged, and embraced mixed cases not governed by these matters. The courts soon arrived at the conclusion that the true principle upon which they should entertain suits for an account in matters cognizable at law was, that either a court at law could not give any remedy at all, or not so complete a remedy as courts of equity. And the moment this principle was adopted in its just extent, the concurrent jurisdiction became almost universal, *236 and reached almost instantaneously its present boundaries.” 1 Sto. Eq. Jur., s. 452. In Massachusetts equity jurisdiction is given by statute in “suits upon accounts, when the nature of the account is such that it cannot conveniently and properly be adjusted and settled in an action at law.” Mass. Gen. Sts., c. 118, s. 2; Hallett v. Cumston, 110 Mass. 32. That statute is a reenactment of the common law as applied to cases of complicated accounts. Bartlett v. Parks, 1 Cush. 82, 85, 86; 1 Sto. Eq. Jur., s. 451; O’Connor v. Spaight, 1 Sch. & Lef. 305, 309; White v. Williams, 8 Ves. 193; Taffvale Ry. Co. v. Nixon, 14 H. & C. 111; Southampton Dock Co. v. Southampton Harbor & Pier Board, L. R. 11 Eq. 254; Hargis v. Campbell, 14 Fla. 27; Lafever v. Billmyer, 5 W. Va. 33; Adams Eq., s. 220, n. 1.

It must be considered as settled in this state that cases within the equity jurisdiction of the court were, previous to and at the time of the adoption of the constitution, a class which it had not been the practice to try by jury, and to which the right guaranteed by the bill of rights was not extended and did not apply. There is not and never has been any absolute constitutional right of trial by jury for equity causes. Perkins v. Seott, 57 N. H. 55, 81-84; Doyle v. Doyle, 56 N. H. 567, 569; Bellows v. Bellows, 58 N. H. 60; Sargent v. Putnam, 58 N. H. 182; Effingham v. Milliken (Carroll, June T., 1878); Wooster v. Plymouth, ante. And the subject-matter of this suit requiring an investigation of accounts, both mutual and complicated, to which must be applied equitable principles, and lying within the equity jurisdiction of the court, the defendants have 'no absolute right to such a jury trial as is guaranteed' by the bill of rights.

The decision of the precise point was made emphatic in Perkins v. Scott, supra. In Copp v. Henniker, 55 N. H. 179, it was decided that the statute of 1874, making the reports of referees evidence in jury trials, was unconstitutional, because the introduction of that evidence did not leave the trial free and untrammelled, as had been guaranteed to such a case by the bill of rights, in which that method was held sacred. The same objection was made to the use of the auditor’s report in Perkins v. Scott, as had been made to the use of the referee’s report in Copp v. Henniker. But it was decided in the former case, that, though the hearing before an auditor did not differ in form, substance, or value from that before a referee, matters of account, for the investigation of which an auditor might be appointed, were subject to the equity jurisdiction of the court, and not within the benefits of a jury trial by absolute right, and for such cases the legislature might adopt a more restricted trial than that given by the bill of rights. No other ground appears for holding the auditor’s report admissible in evidence in a jury trial, nor for reconciling the decision with that in Copp v. Henniker, and none has been suggested. Doyle v. Doyle was decided at the same term with Perkins v. Scott, and simply affirms *237 and follows it. The other cases before cited all decided, citing Perkins v. Scott with approval, that there was no absolute constitutional right of jury trial in canses within the equity jurisdiction of the court. Bellows v. Bellows was a bill in equity. All the others were suits at law upon matters of account, and the decision of all was put upon the same ground as Perkins v. Scott, that at and before the time of the adoption of the constitution it had not been commonly “ used and practised ” to try cases involving matters of account by a jury, and that the right of a jury trial was not extended to nor saved for that class of cases by the constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 N.H. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-dyer-nh-1882.