Nawn v. Boston & Maine Railroad

91 A. 181, 77 N.H. 299, 1914 N.H. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 91 A. 181 (Nawn v. Boston & Maine Railroad) 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
Nawn v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 91 A. 181, 77 N.H. 299, 1914 N.H. LEXIS 148 (N.H. 1914).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

1. There was no error of law in the conclusion of the trial court that under the circumstances the declaration offered was so connected with the fact of injury as to be admissible. Dorr v. Railway, 76 N. H. 160; Robinson v. Stahl, 74 N. H. 310.

“When a person receives a sudden injury, it is natural for him, if in the possession of his faculties, to state at once how it happened. . . . This view of the common experience of mankind shows that, if the declaration has that character, it possesses an important element of reliability and significance which is foreign to narrative remarks made so long after the event as to derive directly no probative force from it.” Murray v. Railroad, 72 N. H. 32, 37, 38.

Whether the declarations offered are spontaneous, the result of the transaction, or are made after an opportunity for reflection— whether their weight as evidence is found in the circumstances under which they were made, or in the credibility of the declarant— are considerations which govern the admissibility of evidence of *301 this character. Murray v. Railroad, supra, and cases cited, p. 37; 3 Wig. Ev., ss. 1747, 1748. If, as the evidence tended to show, the declaration was made with the declarant’s first consciousness after the accident, it could be found to result spontaneously from the injury and to be a part of what took place so far as the declarant was concerned, and not to have been the result of reflection and consideration by him. So made, the declaration was admissible.

Whether the declarant was or was not unconscious, as the evidence tended to prove, is a question of fact to be decided by the court in ruling upon the admissibility of the evidence. “When the determination of the competency of a proposed piece of evidence involves a preliminary decision of any questions of fact by the presiding judge, his decision on such matters of fact is final and not subject to exception.” Hurlburt v. Bellows, 50 N. H. 105, 115, 116. In this case, decided in 1870, comment is made upon the fact that the presiding judge reserved no question of fact or of discretion for the consideration of the law court. In the present case, the justice of the superior court presiding at the trial reserved “the discretion of the court whether the evidence warranted the finding that the declaration was near enough in time, considering the mental condition of the deceased, to be properly admitted.” If this reservation was intended merely to present the question whether the unconsciousness of the declarant from the time of the accident to the time of the declaration was a fact competent for consideration upon the question of remoteness, and whether upon the evidence it could be found the declaration was not too remote, the reservation presents questions of law which have been considered.

“ Judicial discretion, in its technical legal sense, is the name of the decision of certain questions of fact by the court,” Darling v. Westmoreland, 52 N. H. 401, 408; Bundy v. Hyde, 50 N. H. 116, 120; Jaques v. Chandler, 73 N. H. 376. In Glover v. Baker, 76 N. H. 261, it was held that the justices of the superior court might reserve and transfer to this court for determination questions of law arising before them, without prior decision in that court. The question now appears to be presented whether they may send to this court for revision their conclusions upon matters of fact which are questions of law only because passed upon by the court and not by the jury.

In the case Bundy v. Hyde, cited above, in which the definition of “discretion” was formulated, it was said: “It is quite proper at *302 any time, and certainly expedient, in a case of considerable doubt and difficulty, for the presiding justice to reserve the question of discretion for the revision of the whole court.” Since that time very many cases have been decided in which it has been held that matters arising in the conduct of the trial term, in which the question is what ought to be done, what does justice require in the particular instance, are questions of fact determinable at the trial term, not open to exception. The cases are very numerous. See Jaques v. Chandler, 73 N. H. 376, 381; 66 N. H. 683; 67 N. H. 616; 68 N. H. 626; 69 N. H. 688; 70 N. H. 660; 71 N. H. 638; 72 N. H. 626; 73 N. H. 646; 74 N. H. 621; 75 N. H. 643; 76 N. H. 632.

In many cases, in ruling that no question was presented by an exception to such findings, it has been remarked that no question of discretion had been reserved. These expressions tend to show an understanding that the finding of fact involved in determining a motion for a new trial, limiting costs, permitting leading questions, excluding evidence for remoteness, and the like, might be reserved and transferred to the law court, but the jurisdiction does not appear to have been recently examined with particular reference to this class of questions. In Kent v. Hutchins, 50 N. H. 92, 94, decided in July, 1870, it is said: “In matters of discretion, no exception lies to the ruling as matter of right. But in this case the court reserved the question as to the proper exercise of the discretion, and our opinion is that the discretion was properly and wisely exercised.” In Paul v. Reed, 52 N. H. 136, decided in June, 1872, the question was when the title passed upon a sale of chattels. The court say (p. 138): “This is a question of fact, but it is submitted to the court for decision. Ordinarily it should be passed upon at the trial term; but where the question is a mixed one of law and fact, as it is here, it may not be irregular, if the judge thinks it best, to reserve the entire question for the whole court.” The court then proceed to dispose of the case upon the assumption that questions both of law and fact are reserved. If, as this case tends to show, it was understood, as the court was organized in 1872, that the court at the law terms had jurisdiction of questions of fact which might be pending at the trial terms, that view was entirely abandoned under the later acts which declared the jurisdiction to be “of questions of law arising at a trial term, reserved or assigned for decision.” P. S., c. 204, s. 3.

In Metcalf v. Weed, 66 N. H. 176, the question was whether a search warrant sufficiently described the place to be searched. It *303 was said that a description which identifies with reasonable certainty the place or places to be searched was legally sufficient. All the facts were found, and it was plainly the intent of the reservation to transfer to the law term the determination of the sufficiency of the description.

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Bluebook (online)
91 A. 181, 77 N.H. 299, 1914 N.H. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nawn-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1914.