State v. Hause

130 A. 743, 82 N.H. 133, 1925 N.H. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 130 A. 743 (State v. Hause) 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
State v. Hause, 130 A. 743, 82 N.H. 133, 1925 N.H. LEXIS 16 (N.H. 1925).

Opinion

Allen, J.

Exception was taken to testimony of the murdered man’s widow that he usually did about three hundred dollars of business Saturdays at his store and took the money home with him on closing at night. The murder was committed on a Saturday night and, according to the state’s theory, in the course of robbery. This madé the evidence relevant as explanatory of the reason the crime was perpetrated.

The defendant concedes the competency of evidence of habit or custom to show conduct on a particular occasion, and such competency is now well established. Daley v. Company, 81 N. H. 502, and cases cited. The claims are now made that if evidence of custom was here admissible, the evidence received showed no established or regular custom and was hearsay in character.

At the trial these claims were not brought to the court’s attention, and the only ground then stated in objection to the testimony was that it was of custom. In this situation the only ruling to which exception was taken was that evidence of custom was admissible. St. Laurent v. Railway, 77 N. H. 460, 463. This ruling being correctly made, the exception is to be overruled.

It may, however, be said that the grounds on which the exception is now sought to be supported appear to be without merit. The testimony of the witness justified a finding of a custom from her personal knowledge about it. The extent and regularity of repetition *135 necessary to give an act the character of a custom is a matter of fact. The witness testified to a “usual” course of her husband’s business. She did not testify definitely how she knew about it or to the extent and regularity of the practice.

The law is not so strict or finical as to require that a witness should first testify to the details either of extent and regularity of the course of conduct, to show whether it could be found to be customary or habitual, or of personal knowledge about it. There is no rule of evidence that a witness shall testify to the basic items from which his general knowledge of a matter is derived before testifying to the matter itself. A witness may be asked what his knowledge of a custom is, without preliminary tests either of his knowledge or of the custom. It is largely within the trier’s discretion to have the witness’s source and extent of knowledge inquired into before permitting testimony of what the witness asserts he knows. Cross-examination is available to undertake to weaken or destroy the force of the testimony, and a motion to strike out testimony later shown to be incompetent is always in order. Here there was no cross-examination of the witness and no such motion. The objections now made, if not an afterthought, were then regarded as too trivial to warrant them. Whatever the fact, the record shows no evidence to which the objections relate to have been erroneously received.

The defendant also excepted to the admission of photographs of the head of the murdered man taken after he was killed. At the trial the only ground of objection stated was that they were distorted. The claim that the exception saved all grounds of objection is not supported by the record. While the objection with the statement of its ground, the court’s ruling, and the exception took place at intervals, they were all correlated so as to be connected and dependent. The objection now for the first time made that they were not relevant to any issue in dispute is a shift from the one made at the trial and is therefore not covered by the exception, similarly as in the case of the previous exception. The result follows that the exception does not apply to the present ground of irrelevancy.

Respecting the relevancy of the photographs, it may be said that they would seem relevant for their bearing on the nature and degree of the crime and on the defendant’s purpose and mental state, as well as to aid in making clear the oral testimony about the injuries. The manner in which the murdered man was killed was explained with considerable detail by one of the witnesses. No objection was made to this oral testimony, and it is a curious argument that the *136 real evidence of the photographs showing the injuries could not be received, when no suggestion was made that the oral description of the injuries was irrelevant.

The photographs were enlargements. This did not make them distortions, and the original ground of objection in that specific regard is based on the unsupported assertion of counsel and requires no attention.

If the stated ground of distortion implied a general ground of prejudice, whether they were unduly prejudicial or not was a question of fact to be determined in the court’s discretion. Pope v. Railroad, 79 N. H. 52; Rogers v. Rogers, 80 N. H. 96; State v. Braley, 81 N. H. 323. If it can be said that discretion might have reached a different result, it cannot be held that it necessarily ought to have. It is not to be assumed that the photographs were red flags necessarily arousing the jury’s passions and a will to avenge. Since they were relevant, their probable importance was to be compared with their probable prejudicial effect on the inquiry whether they would do more good than harm, and the finding that they would is a reasonable one.

A witness testifying to certain conduct of the defendant which he had. observed was permitted to state what he thought it meant. The exception to the testimony of such inference fails to recognize the present state of the law regarding opinion evidence. The dissenting opinion relative thereto in State v. Pike, 49 N. H. 399, now prevails as authority. If a witness has such knowledge about a matter as to make his opinion about it helpful to the trier in his duty to find the facts, his opinion is to be received. State v. Killeen, 79 N. H. 201; Kelsea v. Stratford, 80 N. H. 148. Whether it is thus helpful is an inquiry of fact, and the only question of law presented is whether there is any evidence to support the finding.

The defendant underwent an examination of his mental condition by medical experts. During the examination he looked up from a test and winked at the witness, the officer who had him in custody. The incidental issue was whether his inability or difficulty to meet the test was pretended or real. That an observer might form an opinion of special value by reason of being on the watch, must be a possible finding. The question whether the defendant was feigning or not related to a state of mind, and was to be determined by what he said and did and the way he acted. The manner of his conduct may well have registered in the mind of the observer some indication of the significance of the conduct which would not be imparted to *137 others by a mere statement of the conduct stripped of its apparent-cause and purpose, and the jury may well have gained more useful information on the issue from the witness’s observations and accompanying conclusion than from a statement only of a physical occurrence isolated from its motivating spirit. The court’s finding that the opinion would help the jury is therefore a reasonable one,, and the exception fails.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 A. 743, 82 N.H. 133, 1925 N.H. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hause-nh-1925.