Gunnison v. Gunnison

41 N.H. 121
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 N.H. 121 (Gunnison v. Gunnison) 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
Gunnison v. Gunnison, 41 N.H. 121 (N.H. 1860).

Opinion

Fowleb., J.

In Hurd v. Fogg, 22 N. H. 98, it was said that a principal defendant who was summoned to appear and answer interrogatories relative to notes disclosed by the trustee, was entitled to a judgment for his fees as a witness, when they had not been paid to him, the order of court, requiring his attendance, being in the nature of'a subpoena or summons to a witness; and that it made no difference in this respect, if he had appeared voluntarily, without service of an order of court upon him.

In Young v. Tilden, 3 N. H. 75, the plaintiff, having been cited- to appear and answer interrogatories before a judge of probate, on a charge of embezzlement, brought his action against the complainants to recover his fees for travel and attendance as a witness. The court held that he could not recover, the law making no provision for his compensation. In delivering the opinion of the court, Richardson, C. J., says, “The case of this plaintiff is not analogous to the case of a witness who has been summoned to give a deposition or to testify in a cause between [125]*125third persons. The witness is called to testify in a canse in which he has no interest, and is not by law compelled to attend until his fees for travel and attendance have been paid to him. As he attends merely for the benefit of others, when he attends without receiving his fees previously, the law will raise a promise, by implication, to pay him, and upon that promise he may maintain an action.”

By the statute of 5 Elizabeth, ch. 9, sec. 12, a party subpoenaing a witness is required to tender to him, “ according to his countenance or calling, such reasonable sums for his costs and charges as, having regard to the distance of the places, are necessary to be allowed in that behalf.” In Hallett v. Mears, 13 East 15, the plaintiff had been summoned by the defendants to attend as a witness in a cause to which they were parties, but his expenses were not paid him. The plaintiff' attended at the trial in pursuance of the summons, but refused to be examined as a witness, unless he was paid his expenses. This was not done, and he was not examined. He afterward brought his action of assumpsit for work and labor, expense of journeys and attendance, in consequence of the subpoena, and upon proof of these facts, and also upon slight evidence of a promise by the defendants to pay his expenses when he was served with the subpoena,'he recovered a verdict at the assizes. Afterward, in the King’s Bench, Yates moved to enter a nonsuit, contending that there was no foundation for maintaining the action, either upon the express or an implied promise; not upon the evidence of the promise in fact, because he had waived it by refusing to be examined at the trial, Tinless his expenses were then paid, and therefore the consideration of the promise, if any, namely, the attending and giving evidence, was not complied with; nor upon an implied promise, for there was no tender of his expenses when he was served with the subpoena, and therefore he could not [126]*126have been attached for non-attendance at the trial; nor was there any remedy against him under the statute, as where a guinea was paid to and accepted by the party subpoenaed at the time, with a promise to pay the residue. But the court held that the action well lay; that the witness obeyed the subpoena and attended the trial, and was ready and willing to have been examined, if the defendants who subpoenaed him would have paid him his expenses, and it was the defendants’ own fault, that the witness was not examined. They therefore refused the rule.

In Bentall v. Sydney, 10 Ad. & El. 162, it was holden that a clerk, subpoenaed to produce the roll of attorneys in the court of chancery, as evidence on a trial in the King’s Bench, might recover for attendance on the trial with said roll, upon an implied assumpsit, such fees as were proved to have been usually paid for fifty years, to clerks attending with records from the Petty Bag office, although he did not, when summoned, inform the party that he should demand remuneration as a clerk and not as an ordinary wfitness, and although he did not produce the roll himself, but sent it by his own clerk.

In Pell v. Danbury, 5 Exch. 955, 1 E. L. & E. 450, it was holden that a party served with a subpoena in a civil action, receiving a sum of money therewith, and making no further demand, might maintain an action against the party on whose behalf he had been subpoenaed, for additional expenses incurred by him in attending - the trial, but not for loss of time.

In the course of the discussion by counsel, Mr. Baron Parke said : “In a civil case, a contract with the witness is implied by serving him with a subpoena. Is there not an implied contract that the witness shall not be bound to defray his own expenses ? A party who serves a subpoena may be considered to say, ‘ Go to the trial, and I will pay your expenses, either now, or at some future time.’ ”

[127]*127Upon the counsel for the defendant referring to Goodwin v. West, Cro. Car. 522, 540, and saying that in that case there was a special contract, Platt, Baron, inquired, “Is not the serving the subpoena a contract?” Upon further discussion, Baron Parke remarked, that “ the giving a subpoena is a common law contract, under a sort of regulation.”

It finally appeared that, upon the trial, the defendant had not taken the position then assumed, that there was not any implied promise or contract to pay the partyls expenses, and therefore that the question did not properly arise.

In giving the opinion of the court, Bai’on Parke, among other things, says: “My own opinion is, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, and that he may maintain an action for his expenses, even although no express contract be proved to have been made between the parties. On that point, however, I need not deliver any opinion. If a witness, in a civil action, goes to an assize town without his expenses being paid, or tendered, or asked for, there is some evidence for the jury, of a mutual understanding, that if he goes he is to be paid for his expenses.”

Baron Anderson said, “I am of the same opinion. 1 think the plaintiff in the present case was entitled to maintain the action, and that there wras some evidence in support of his claim. The question is, whether there need be an express contract, or whether an implied one arises out of the circumstances. I think a contract, in this case, might be implied. One party í'eeeived a benefit, and it must have been understood between them that the party conferring it was to receive compensation. If one party goes to another, and, by a subpoena, requests him to attend a trial, it being known personally that the party requested may refuse to attend unless his expenses are paid, and the latter, without saying any thing, goes to the trial, he certainly does so on the faith that he will be paid. [128]*128That is tbe reasonable conclusion to be drawn by tbe jury from tbe facts, and tbey would be authorized to find that the party was promised a reasonable remuneration. I need not say if such a promise is implied by law, but tbe jury would be right in inferring it.” See, also, Collins v. Godefray, 1 B. & Ad. 905; Robins v. Bridge, 3 M. & W. 114 ; Goodwin v. West, Cro. Car. 522, 540 ; Amey v. Long, 1 Camp. 16, and 180, a; Willis v. Beckham, 1 B. & B. 515.

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Related

State v. Wilson
333 A.2d 459 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1975)
State v. A. B. C.
40 A. 1065 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.H. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunnison-v-gunnison-nh-1860.