Willey v. Portsmouth

35 N.H. 303
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 N.H. 303 (Willey v. Portsmouth) 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
Willey v. Portsmouth, 35 N.H. 303 (N.H. 1857).

Opinion

Bell, J.

Several questions relative to evidence may be first disposed of.

A witness was asked, “ Did you see Willey on the day of the accident ? ” It is said the question assumes there was an accident ; but we cannot infer from the case that there was any controversy as to the fact that an accident had occurred. The whole assumes that there was conclusive proof of it; the contest being whether the accident happened at such a place, and under such circumstances that the defendants were responsible. The question assumes no hypothetical case, no controverted fact, but alludes to a fact not in question, as it necessarily must if any inquiry must be made about it. At the time the deposition of this witness was taken the defendant’s counsel was present, and made no objection. It is now too late to object.

Another witness was asked, “ What were the limits of the road on the West side, as to fences ? ” It is objected that this question assumes that there was a road, and that it had fences on its [308]*308sides, which were its limits. But it was not controverted that there was a road, nor that there were fences which were the limits of the uninclosed land along the road, which is in common speech the road. The question merely referred to undisputed matters of fact, upon which the rights of the public might depend.

Are you acquainted with the highway where the accident happened ? ” was the question to another witness. This, it is objected, assumed there was an accident, and a highway where it happened. Neither of these facts was in dispute, unless where is taken, to imply that the accident happened in the highway; but where does not necessarily mean wherein. It may as well mean whereabout, that is, near which. If the defendant thought the ambiguous phrase might mislead the jury, they could make it clear by a question.

“ If you were going up by Woodbury’s from the place where Willey left you, what would have been your direct way; where Willey went, or elsewhere ? ” is objected to as supposing a hypothetical case. In terms it does so; but it is merely a clumsy mode of asking, “ What is the direct way by Woodbury’s,” &c.

A physician who attended the plaintiff was asked, What ■would be the natural result of a sprain of the back, and a bruise of the side, as to duration, soreness,” &c. It is evident from the case that this question, though hypothetical in terms, in fact related to the injury for which the action was brought. The opinions of this witness were admissible as those of an expert.

A witness testified that he was acquainted with the highway where the accident happened, for thirty years. It was open as a highway as long as he can remember. He saw the place the next Sunday after Mr. Willey fell; it was within the limits of the highway as fenced out. He was not present when Willey sustained any accident.” The answers were objected to as hearsay, and not founded on the witness’ own knowledge. If the defendant doubted the witness’ knowledge of the place of the accident, it was his duty to make that clear by proper inquiries. The court cannot assume he did not know the facts he states, because he was not present at the time of the accident. He [309]*309might know the place otherwise than by being present. The parties might haye formally admitted it in his presence, or they might have assumed it in taking the testimony as a place well known, and not in dispute. Information acquired in this and in other ways would be sufficient to justify the witness’ answer. Indeed the whole case shows that no question was made as to the place.

It was contended that certain copies from the records of Portsmouth were improperly admitted. 1. Because the originals should have been produced; but “ the contents of any record of any judicial court, and of entries in any other public books or registers, may be proved by an examined copy. This [rule] extends to all records and entries of a public nature, in books required by law to be kept.” 1 Greenl. Ev., see. 91; 2 Phill. Ev. 168 ; 2 Cowen & Hill’s Notes 348.

2. One copy contained blank spaces in the lines, which were designated by an asterisk, referring to a note at the bottom: “words defaced or worn out.” It was objected that the copy was defective, and that it was improperly explained by the clerk. It was the duty of the clerk to certify the record as it was. He could not fill up the blanks by conjecture; neither could he properly leave merely blanks where words were worn out or obliterated, because that would be calculated to give the impression that the record was originally defective, contrary to the fact. And there seems, therefore, no course to be taken, but to note on the paper that a missing word was worn out, or the like. We therefore think this objection not well founded.

3. It is objected that they did not relate to the case. If there was a doubt as to their applying to the place in dispute, that was a matter for the jury. It was not evident they did not relate to the case.

4. It is said they were not votes of a legal meeting, because it did not appear that a town meeting was legally called. But .every presumption is to be made in favor of the regularity of the proceedings of towns at that early date. The records of that day usually contained only the votes passed, and it is not to be pre[310]*310sumed that the meeting is not both legal and regular, because there is now no record showing that it was so.

5. It is said the votes exceeded the powers of a town, whether regarded as grants of land or layings out of highways. This is the record of a meeting held only one year after Portsmouth was incorporated under the Massachusetts government, and more than two hundred years ago. It is matter of history that the towns of this province at that time claimed the fee of the lands within their limits, which were not granted to individuals. Some portions of the lands in Portsmouth were held under grants by Mason and his agents, but the titles generally were not under Mason, but under grants of the town. It was nearly a century after this that the distinction began to be made between the town and the proprietary. The town exercised the rights of owner, and whether well or ill-founded, it was acquiesced in and not disputed. It was competent for them to grant their possessory right by vote, subject to a condition to leave six rods in breadth for a highway, if they thought fit, and such a vote might well account for the unusual breadth of the road at this place.

This matter of the highway was a matter of general and public interest, in relation to which evidence of reputation was competent. 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 128; 1 Phill. Ev. 238. Recitals in any ancient writings, as well as the declarations of parties now deceased, would be evidence, and for this purpose it would not be material that the document which contained the recital, if genuine, was legal or well executed.

A record of the laying out of a highway, terminating at the fence on the side of the highway in question, was offered and admitted as evidence tending to show that all the land between the fences was highway. It was admissible on the ground of reputation. It was an implied declaration that the highway extended to the fence.

A witness, for the purpose of showing the culvert defectively constructed, and that the town had notice of the deficiency, testified that the culvert had previously given way. The case of Collins v. Dorchester, 6 Cush.

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56 N.H. 428 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.H. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willey-v-portsmouth-nh-1857.