Oliver v. Phelps

20 N.J.L. 180
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 N.J.L. 180 (Oliver v. Phelps) 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
Oliver v. Phelps, 20 N.J.L. 180 (N.J. 1843).

Opinion

Hojss'blowjee, C. J.

No less than twenty-one errors have been assigned upon the record in this cause; three of them upon objections to evidence, taken at the trial, which were overruled by the judge before whom the cause was tried ; and the remaining eighteen upon the charge delivered by him to the jury. Before I proceed to examine the alleged errors, I must enter my solemn protest against the manner in which the bills of exceptions in this case have been drawn, and in ■ which errors have been assigned on the charge of the court.

The judge, before signing the bills, ought to have seen that the exceptions, and the grounds of their exceptions, were precisely and only such as had been taken and stated at the trial of the cause; whereas, upon looking into the bills, no grounds or reasons for the exceptions, are stated; nor does it appear that the attention of the court was called to any specific point in the charge. The bills simply state the evidence offered ; that it was objected to, that the court sustained or overruled the objection, and that thereupon an exception was taken ; without stating in any way, what was the ground of the objection. So too as to the charge. The whole of it is excepted to in gross, without stating the ground of such exception. I do not now recollect whether I perused the bills in this case, or not before I ’sealed them. If I did not, it was because I took it for granted, that nothing would be assigned for error, but such matters as had been presented to my consideration in the court below, and iu relation to which I had specifically expressed an opinion.

Surely it will not be pretended, that it is sufficient for a party to say, “I object,” and then, if the judge overrules the objection, to take a bill of exceptions; and thereupon to assign and maintain error for reasons, which, if they had been presented to the judge, might have changed his opinion; or the ground of which objection might have been obviated at the moment. Such a doctrine would imply omniscience in a judge; or at least an [182]*182instant and intuitive perception of the law in every case. So too in relation to a charge. It is not sufficient for a party to say, I except to the charge;” and then, to assign error upon every clause and sentence of the charge. The exceptant must point out and sail the attention of the judge to the part or parts of the charge to which he excepts; and thus give him an opportunity of correcting himself, or of explaining and obviating the objections.

If such were not the rule of law, there would be no end of litigation; and a judge would never know how to charge a Jury. In a cause involving a variety of legal points, the force and operation of one depending upon the decision of another, and all to be settled in reference to the evidence, the Judge’s charge must be taken as an entire thing; it must be understood as a whole; his meaning must be collected from the whole charge taken together. But if a party may take sentence by sentence, separating them from each other, and assign error upon each of them in their abstract and disconnected meaning, as was done in this case, a Judge may be made to stultify and contradict himself. A clause or sentence, in relation to one point in a cause, taken by itself, and as if it constituted the whole charge, may be easily shown to be erroneous; but when read in connection with the rest of the charge, and explained and qualified by what precedes and follows, may be perfectly correct and complete as a whole.

To require a Judge, in stating every different aspect in which a case may be viewed, and all the different results that may be contingent on certain hypotheses, to repeat the “ ifs,” “ if this,” and “ if that,” would impose upon him an onerous and interminable task, and after all would leave him probably more unintelligible than if he put the case before the Jury upon a plain statement of the law of the whole case in a charge, which taken and considered as a whole, could not fail to be understood by the Jury.

These latter remarks have been made, because, errors have been assigned, in this case upon different clauses of the charge, treating them as separate and distinct annunciations of law, independent of the context, and unexplained and unqualified by what preceded and followed such clauses.

In Allen v. Smith, 7 Halst. 168, Chief Justice Ewing said, the ground taken on the motion for a nonsuit in the court be[183]*183low are specifically stated in the bill of Exceptions, and this, (the point then before the court) is not among them f and he adds, “ it is not competent for a plaintiff in error to draw into question, on a bill of exceptions, points not raised, nor objected to on the trial. Every motive of policy and convenience forbids.”

Mr. Justice Ford, in Coxe v. Field, 1 Green 218 speaks to the same effect; and he adds, a bill of exceptions is a statement of the point on which the oourt below gave an opinion,” so, 3 Bl. Com. 372. If the judge mistake the law, counsel may require him to seal a bill of exceptions, stating the point wherein he is suppose to err.”

This same doctrine was reiterated by this court in Williams v. Sheppard, 1 Green 78, and in Ludlam v. Broderick, 3 Green 275.

In Blinde’s lessee v. Longworth, 11 Wheat. R. 209, the law apon this subject, and the reasons of it are plainly indicated by Mr. Justice Thompson by whom the opinion of the court was delivered.

If a witness is called, or books of account, or any other matter is offered in evidence, and the adverse party interposes an objection, he must assign a specific reason why the witness or evidence ought not to be admitted and his bill of exceptions, if the evidence is received, ought to state the specific grounds of objection ; and on argument in error, he should be confined to that particular ground of objection, and not be at liberty to discuss other reasons for rejecting the evidence, which, if they had been assigned in the court below, might have been deemed sufficient by the judge, or obviated by the party offering the evidence. A contrary practice would be calculated to mislead the judge, and ensnare the opposite party.

In Van Gorden v. Jackson, 5 Johns. 440, 467 in error, the Chancellor says, “a bill of exceptions was given, not to draw the whole matter into examination again, but only the points tc which it was taken; and the party must lay his finger on those points.

In Fries v. Jackson, 8 Johns. 495, the same language is repeated, and the same chancellor, after stating the four exceptions that had been taken in that case, goes on to say, these points have been precisely stated in the court below, as reasons against [184]*184maintaining the action ; and on those points, in exclusion of all others, the opinion of the court is required.” In a subsequent part of that case, (page 575,) the chancellor says, that the review of a cause in error, upon a .bill of exceptions, is rigidly confined to the precise objections in the bill, and extends to no other. The same doctrine is strongly inculcated in Whiteside v. Jackson, 1 Wend. 418; Mann v. Eckford’s Exrs., 15 Wend. 511; and Willard v. Warren, 17 Wend. 259.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.J.L. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-phelps-nj-1843.