Salvas v. Cantin

160 A. 727, 85 N.H. 489, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 3, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 160 A. 727 (Salvas v. Cantin) 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
Salvas v. Cantin, 160 A. 727, 85 N.H. 489, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 111 (N.H. 1932).

Opinion

Branch, J.

1. During the argument of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury, exception was taken as follows:

“Mr. Ryan: ... He (Mr. Powers) told him (the defendant) he was representing an insurance company; but after the tactics they displayed during this trial I don’t know what tactics Mr. Powers performed over there before Mr. Cantin. For all we know, — altho it isn’t in evidence,- — he might have told him that ‘If you fell asleep or if you were going fast you’re liable to criminal prosecution, and the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles in the state of Maine can write to the Commissioner of Concord and have your license revoked. ’
“Mr. James: I object to that argument. There’s no such evidence.
“The Court: Exception noted.
“Mr. Ryan: I say there’s no evidence of it, but I say such a conversation might have been possible. I won’t say that it took place, because we have no evidence; but he told him the same story about the dog...”

*491 Reference was here made to a statement given by the defendant a few days after the accident in which he said that the collision with the tree resulted from his efforts to avoid running over a dog. There was much evidence tending to show that the “story about the dog” was invented by the defendant because he feared criminal prosecution and the loss of his driver’s license. Therefore the only objection which can be urged against the foregoing argument is that the jury was asked to infer from the “tactics” of the defendant’s counsel during the trial that this danger was suggested by counsel to the defendant. We find in the record no evidence of any conduct or “tactics” on the part of counsel which would justify a specific inference of this kind, and it was conceded that there was no other evidence upon which it could be based. We, therefore, have to deal with a case in which an inference of fact unwarranted by evidence was urged upon the jury.

It has sometimes been stated without qualification that a verdict will not be set aside on account of such an argument. Potter v. Moody, 79 N. H. 87, 88; Voullgaris v. Gianaris, 79 N. H. 408; Gosselin v. Company, 78 N. H. 149; Turner v. Company, 75 N. H. 521; Mitchell v. Railroad, 68 N. H. 96. But the true rule is now well settled that the assertion of an inference unwarranted by evidence will compel the setting aside of a verdict if it receives the express or tacit sanction of the court. Maravas v. Corporation, 82 N. H. 533, 536; Lafferty v. Houlihan, 81 N. H. 67, 77; State v. Ketchen, 80 N. H. 112; Tuttle v. Dodge, 80 N. H. 304, 314; State v. Small, 78 N. H. 525, 530.

Exceptions of this kind, although commonly called exceptions to argument, in reality involve not the conduct of counsel in making the argument, but the action of the court in permitting it to stand, (State v. Ketchen, supra) and in the absence of differentiating circumstances the allowance of an exception must be regarded as an implied sanction of the argument. State v. Wargo, 83 N. H. 532, 535. Differentiating circumstances which may justify a contrary conclusion are illustrated in Maravas v. Corporation, supra, where the court ordered an exception to be noted but expressly postponed ruling upon the propriety of the argument; in Lafferty v. Houlihan, supra, where the court allowed an exception but expressed emphatic disapproval of the argument; and in cases like Tuttle v. Dodge, supra, where an exception was claimed but not expressly allowed by the presiding justice.

No circumstances of this character are present in the case at bar. The definite objection of the defendant was plainly overruled by the order that an exception be noted, and by permitting the argument to stand the court impliedly sanctioned the inference which counsel *492 urged upon the attention of the jury. Plaintiff’s counsel, in making this argument, must have intended to accomplish some result favorable to his client. The fact which the jury was thus asked to infer was of that class which has a general tendency to discredit the opponent’s case, although not logically material to any of the essential issues involved. Stocker v. Railroad, 84 N. H. 377, 379; Doe v. Lucy, 83 N. H. 160, 162; Duval v. Insurance Co., 82 N. H. 543, 546; Masterson v. Railway, 83 N. H. 190, 194; Login v. Waisman, 82 N. H. 500, 502. •For this reason it was prejudicial and, since counsel sought to establish this fact by unlawful means, the verdict must be set aside. Zogoplos v. Brown, 84 N. H. 134, 139, 140.

2. Argument is advanced in the defendant’s brief that the motion to set aside the verdict as against the law should have been granted because, under the law of Maine, it must be found that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in going to sleep.

No motion for a nonsuit or a directed verdict was made at the trial nor was the above question directly raised in any other manner. Consequently the defendant is in no position to insist upon its consideration at this time. “A motion to set aside a verdict ‘because it was against the law’ raises no question of law which has not previously been saved by exception.” Bennett v. Larose, 82 N. H. 443, and cases cited. Nevertheless, since the question is bound to arise at another trial and since the denial of the defendant’s request for instructions may be thought to raise the question of what the Maine law is, the contention of the defendant has been considered.

The argument is based wholly upon the case of Humphrey v. Hoppe, 128 Me. 92, in which approval was given to the following instruction: “ One riding as a passenger or guest may not place his or her safety entirely in the keeping of the driver, but he or she must exercise due and reasonable care for his or her protection.” The contention is that since one riding as a passenger or guest may not place his safety entirely in the keeping of the driver, it follows as a matter of law that the plaintiff cannot recover “because, being asleep, he was incapable of exercising ‘due and reasonable care’ for his protection.”

We are told that the Maine court in announcing the above principle “followed the rule laid down by the Massachusetts Supreme Court” in Lambert v. Railway, 240 Mass. 495, and that when the present question arises in Maine the courts of that state will probably follow the later Massachusetts case of Oppenheim v. Barkin, 262 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 727, 85 N.H. 489, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvas-v-cantin-nh-1932.