Hoxie v. Walker

74 A. 183, 75 N.H. 308, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 74 A. 183 (Hoxie v. Walker) 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
Hoxie v. Walker, 74 A. 183, 75 N.H. 308, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 44 (N.H. 1909).

Opinion

Walker, J.

1. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that Mrs. Lawrence had been an intimate friend of the plaintiff for eleven years, and took much interest in the preparation of th& case for the plaintiff and assisted her in procuring evidence. One inference that might be legitimately drawn from this testimony was that Mrs. Lawrence was not a disinterested witness; it bore directly on her credibility. The statement of the defendant’s counsel, therefore, that Mrs. Lawrence was urging the plaintiff on in this suit, or was “ egging her on,” was the assertion, not of a-fact of which there was no evidence, but of a fact or a conclusion which counsel was justified in saying he would demonstrate; and clearly he would be entitled to demonstrate it by additional evidence, or by argument from the plaintiff’s evidence. The suggestion that counsel was thus attempting to argue the case in his opening statement dues not appear to be in accordance with the: fact, for he was not allowed to finish the sentence. What he-intended to say to the jury is not apparent and consequently no-error was committed, even if it is error for counsel to indulge in argument when opening his case.

2. The remarks of the defendant’s counsel caused by the plaintiff’s taking exceptions to some of the defendant’s testimony do-not appear to have been made with the purpose of influencing the jury against the plaintiff, or to have had that effect. They were made during the course of a heated trial; and if for any reason they were improper, or were spoken in an offensive manner, the presiding justice in the exercise of his discretionary power could have corrected any unfair influence they were calculated to produce in the minds of the jury. No question of law is presented, by this exception.

3. The bill which the defendant paid Hoxie was submitted to- *311 the inspection of the jury, to show that the items were not dated; and the only materiality of that fact was that it furnished some reason for the defendant to hesitate about paying it, as she had testified. It was in evidence that she and Hoxie had some business relations soon after the death of her husband and that the bill in question related thereto. If her testimony was true, it might be inferred that Hoxie’s visits to her were in part, at least, for the transaction of business with her and the presentation of his bill for services rendered to her husband. It is conceded that the bill bore no dates, and she testified that she 'took advice about paying it made out in that way. From this it could be argued that her relations with Hoxie were not particularly intimate, for if they were she would not be likely to question his account. The point thus presented was whether the items of the bill were in fact dated. The bill itself was the best evidence upon that subject, and its inspection by the jury for the purpose of determining that fact was proper. While this evidence may not have been of great materiality, its admission under the circumstances was not error. Upon the point then in issue it was not in the nature of hearsay evidence, but original evidence in proof of a physical fact.

4. The plaintiff claimed that the defendant harbored the plaintiff’s husband in her house and encouraged him to come there for improper purposes, and submitted evidence that for a certain period before the date of the writ he was frequently there. In explanation of these visits, the defendant’s evidence tended to show that the plaintiff’s husband was at her house upon business relating to the repair of her house, and that for that reason alone she allowed her servant to admit him; and to prove that she allowed him to be there only on matters of business, — that such was her course of conduct toward him (Kenney v. Hampton, 7 3 N. H. 45), — -she was allowed to introduce evidence that some two months after the suit was brought her servant, presumably under her direction, ejected the plaintiff’s husband from the defendant’s premises. It is conceded by the plaintiff that if this evidence had related to a time before the date of the writ, and within the period during which the plaintiff claimed Hoxie was frequently at the defendant’s house, it would be competent and relevant as tending to support the defendant’s claim in regard to the significance of his visits at her house. But it is insisted that the mere fact that the suit was pending at the time of Hoxie’s exclusion deprived the evidence of the probative value it might have had if it had related to a time before the date of the writ. While it may be conceded that the bringing of the suit would have a tendency to cause the defendant to avoid actions of a compromising character and even to exclude Hoxie from her premises, the rea *312 son for excluding him may have been in accordance with her theory that she had no business to transact with him, and not because she was seeking to conceal her guilt in view of the pending suit. It cannot be held as a matter of law that the evidence was not relevant. Its weight would undoubtedly be affected by the circumstance that she had been sued. The jury might find that for that reason it was entitled to little or no consideration in explanation of her intercourse with Hoxie; but it would still be logically and legally relevant as testimony proper for the consideration of the jury upon that question. It could not be excluded as irrelevant for the reason suggested. 1 Wig. Ev., s. 437. Nor are there any controling reasons of policy in the conduct of trials that require the exclusion of evidence of this character. Whether the evidence might have been excluded by the trial justice, in the exercise of a reasonable discretion, is a question not presented. So far as its admissibility depended upon his discretion, he found that justice required its submission to the jury. And as it appears in a legal sense to be- relevant, and as there is no suggestion that for any other reason the law requires its exclusion, the exception to its admission must be overruled. The difficulty with the plaintiff’s argument upon this point seems to be that the objection relates to the admission of the evidence by the court in the exercise of its discretion, rather than to its relevancy or competency as a matter of law. Chamberlain v. Enfield, 43 N. H. 356, 360; Kelsea v. Fletcher, 48 N. H. 282, 284; Curtice v. Dixon, 74 N. H. 386, 397.

5. Although Mrs. Sise testified that she did not have the conversation with the defendant, by telephone, which the plaintiff’s evidence tended to show she did have, no error of law was committed in permitting her to testify that, upon the assumption that she did use the language imputed to her, it .had no reference to the relations existing between Hoxie and the defendant. The jury might believe that she did use the language the plaintiff’s witnesses testified she did, and, without other evidence of the persons referred to by such language, that she was talking about Hoxie and the defendant. It was therefore proper for her to testify that if she did use such language it did not relate to those parties. The case does not show what the alleged conversation was; but it is assumed it was somewhat indefinite in its application to particular persons.

6. One of the defendant’s witnesses had been allowed to testify that he told the defendant he had heard a rumor that her house was being watched.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 183, 75 N.H. 308, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoxie-v-walker-nh-1909.