66 A.2d 148 | N.H. | 1949
In the course of a pre-trial hearing before the Court, the plaintiff offered evidence upon which subject to the exception of the defendant Weeks, the Trial Court ruled that the stop sign on Oak Street, designed to regulate traffic entering North Main Street, was "lawfully erected and maintained." This evidence tended to prove that the sign was erected by the State Highway Commissioner in April, 1937, pursuant to provisions of P.L., c. 91, as amended by Laws 1935, c.
In submitting the cases to the jury, the Court quoted subsections 1 through 4 of part 19, section 1, chapter 188, Laws 1945, and charged that "the stop sign . . . is lawfully erected and maintained and conforms to standards set by the highway commissioner. . . ." The defendant Weeks duly excepted to these instructions, and to the quotation of the statute upon the ground that it was not applicable.
Since the sign was erected in accordance with Laws 1935, dissimilar provisions of the 1945 statute quoted by the Court were not controlling. They merely authorized regulation of the use of highways in towns.
The plaintiff's evidence indicated establishment of the stop sign in 1937, by the Highway Commissioner, in compliance with the provisions of Laws 1935, c.
The absence of evidence of re-erection of this sign by the State Highway Department following the 1941 amendments, suggests that the Commissioner considered his authority to erect stop signs within cities supplanted by that conferred upon city councils. This was the view taken by the Commissioners to Revise the Public Laws. Their revision of Laws 1935, c.
Certain provisions of Laws of 1945, c.
The remaining provisions upon which reliance is placed appear in section 4 of chapter 188. The section is entitled "Effect of Act on Existing Laws." Its pertinent provisions follow. "The repeal by this act of any provision of law, shall not revive any law heretofore repealed or superseded; . . . nor shall such repeal require a new establishment of any stop intersection or the new erection of any stop sign . . . erected and maintained in conformance with the laws prior to the passage of this act, and all such stop signs . . . so erected and maintained shall be deemed lawfully erected and maintained under the provisions of this act . . ."
By virtue of these provisions, it is plain that stop intersections established and stop signs maintained in conformance with the laws in force immediately prior to passage of the act continued to be lawful without re-establishment or "new erection" after passage.
In the view of a majority of the court, the quoted provisions of section 4 operated to legalize any signs erected and maintained in accordance with statutory provisions in force at the time of erection, regardless of their later repeal and regardless of the status of such signs at the time of passage of the act of 1945. It follows that the sign in question must by virtue of the act "be deemed lawfully erected and maintained" at the time of the accident in 1946.
In the view of the minority, the section as a whole indicates no such intention with respect to intersections or signs legal sanction for which was removed by repeal before passage of the act of 1945; and in order to validate the sign involved in this case, it would be necessary to revive the authority vested in the Highway Commissioner in 1935, and divested in 1941 or 1942.
The court is unanimous in the view, however, that the 1945 act did not operate to revive or reestablish the regulation promulgated by the Commissioner in 1937. It follows that while according to the majority view the sign must be deemed lawfully erected and maintained, the agent of the defendant Weeks was under no duty to "yield the right of way" to the defendant Guyer as the Commissioner's regulation would have required. If the defendant's agent were found to have complied with the requirement of the sign that he stop before entering North Main Street, his conduct thereafter, as well as that of the defendant Guyer, was subject to the requirements of R.L., c. 106, s. 3, with respect to the right of way at intersections, provided the vehicles were found to have arrived "at the *458 intersection at approximately the same instant" as therein provided. Legere v. Buinicky, supra, 73.
Since the defendant's request that the jury be so instructed was denied subject to exception, the exception is sustained and a new trial ordered. The exception to incorporation in the charge of subsections 1 through 4, part 19, s. 1, Laws 1945 is also sustained. The authority thereby conferred is limited to stop signs in towns, and has no application to the case. The instruction that the sign was lawfully erected and maintained, in accordance with the majority view stated above, is held to have been proper, and the exception thereto is overruled. Upon retrial the Highway Commissioner's regulation will be receivable in evidence only for the limited purpose of establishing the legality of the original erection of the sign.
By his motion to set aside the verdicts the defendant Weeks seeks an order for new trial in both cases. There is no doubt that errors pertaining to the legality of the stop sign regulation bore upon the duties of the defendants inter se, and that the defendant Guyer benefited from them in the action against him. It does not follow, however, that the defendant Weeks has an interest in the Guyer verdict which entitles him to the relief sought by the motion. The duties of the defendants inter se were in issue only to the extent that the rights of the plaintiff were affected. Neither defendant sought adjudication of his own rights against the other. We may assume that if both had been found causally negligent, both would be under a common liability for the single injury resulting to the plaintiff. See Carpenter v. Company,
While the errors affected the rights of the plaintiff against the defendant Guyer, they affected no rights of the defendant Weeks against Guyer, and judgment for Guyer in the plaintiff's action would not bar an action by Weeks against Guyer. To the judgment for the defendant Guyer the defendant Weeks is no party, and the only cause of action adjudicated thereby is that of the plaintiff. Genest v. Company,
Questions relating to the admissibility of evidence may again arise, and invite consideration. The defendant Weeks excepted to the receipt in evidence of testimony that following the accident his agent stated that he had not stopped at the stop sign. Such statements did not constitute admissions binding upon the defendant. The agent was not a party, and there is no indication that his authority extended to the making of admissions for his employer. Semprini v. Railroad,
The trial produced a number of references to proceedings at "the police station." In opening, plaintiff's counsel stated that the officer told Dutile to report to the police station, "and the rest of them to go up to the police station and there act as witnesses later on . . . which of course Lionel Beaule did." A motion by the defendant Weeks for mistrial following this incident was denied. Other references came from the officer. Upon direct examination he testified that he told Dutile that he "would have to go down to *460 the police station." In an irresponsive answer on cross examination he stated that he "ordered the man into Court for not [sic.] failing to stop at the stop sign." The motion for a mistrial was renewed upon both of these occasions and consistently denied. The fact was that Dutile was charged with failure to stop at the stop sign and convicted upon his plea of nolo.
The jury was at no time instructed to disregard the statements of counsel and the witness. The finding of the Trial Court that no prejudice resulted to the defendant would be difficult to sustain. While the fact of conviction was not disclosed to the jury, the absence of evidence that no conviction resulted left it open to the jury to infer that it did. The only answer available to the defendant, that his agent was convicted upon a plea of nolo, would hardly have cured the prejudice. Such evidence would have been inadmissible if offered by the plaintiff (Public Service Company v. Chancey,
Another exception related to testimony by the plaintiff that before he could obtain employment after the accident, he was required by his prospective employer to submit to a medical examination and to then execute a waiver. The defendant objected upon the ground that the testimony was hearsay. While the evidence was objectionable, it is not perceived that the rule against hearsay could be invoked. The plaintiff did not undertake to relate the contents of medical report if one was made, nor did he repeat any reasons signed for requirement of the waiver. The evidence was objectionable for lack of relevancy, or of any showing by competent proof that either the examination or the waiver in any way related to injuries claimed to have resulted from the accident. Only by speculation could the jury infer that the plaintiff's difficulties in obtaining employment were chargeable to the defendant. See Rancourt v. Railroad,
Other exceptions, not argued or briefed, need not be considered.
*461Judgment for the defendant Guyer; New trial in the action against Weeks.