104 A. 254 | N.H. | 1918
The gist of the plaintiff's complaint is that the defendants knowing that Mrs. Border was mentally unbalanced with suicidal tendencies induced or permitted her to enter Mrs. Bordet's employ without informing her of that fact. The defendants' answer before the jury was that they did tell the plaintiff all they knew. This issue was there tried and this court has no jurisdiction to revise the finding of the jury or to set it aside as against the weight of the evidence. The only question here is whether there was any evidence in support of the conclusion reached by the jury. The plaintiff's statement that she was not told was some evidence, and if a wrong result has been reached the defendants have no remedy here.
The defendants contend in support of their motion for a directed verdict that upon the evidence their failure to inform the plaintiff was not a breach of any legal duty owed by them to her. If it be assumed that the defendants, knowing Mrs. Benoit was proposing to enter Mrs. Bordet's employ, were under no legal obligation to the plaintiff to act at all in the matter, to give her any information, still there was no error in the denial of the motions for a nonsuit and a general verdict for the defendants. "Where one voluntarily undertakes to do a thing, whether that be by representation or by positive act, a duty is imposed upon the party making the representation or doing the act of exercising care." Conway Bank v. Pease,
As reported in the case, the motions for a nonsuit and verdict are general, in behalf of all the defendants collectively. Exceptions to such motions are overruled when it appears there was evidence which prevents the allowance of the motions as made. Moody v. Perley,
The ground upon which the denial of the motion for a verdict has been placed was recognized in the defendants' second request for instructions which was: "If you find the defendants undertook to disclose to the plaintiff, Mrs. Benoit, the mental condition of Mrs. Border and that the defendants told the plaintiff the facts as they were, or as they, the defendants, believed them to be, then the defendants are not liable." This instruction was given and a verdict based thereon would be legally sound, and in any event irrevisable here, the law being stated as the defendants requested. The fact that the case contained evidence from which could be found a *15 breach of a duty assumed by at least one of the defendants, requires the overruling of the contention that there was nothing for the jury. This conclusion is reached without considering whether upon this or upon other grounds the evidence would sustain a verdict against, all of the defendants.
The exceptions to the instructions refused and given are next to be considered.
As the jury were told in the charge, the evidence did not disclose, false statements made to the plaintiff as to Mrs. Bordet's condition but there was some evidence that the plaintiff was not told of Mrs. Bordet's occasional mental instability and suicidal attempts. Fraud may consist in the intentional concealment of a material fact as well as in a false statement of a fact. Hanson v. Edgerly,
The defendants requested the court to charge the jury, "If you find that there was no relation existing between this plaintiff, Mrs. Benoit, and the defendants, or either or, any of them by reason of which said defendants were under any legal obligation to disclose to the plaintiff, Mrs. Benoit, any facts tending to establish the sanity or insanity of Mrs. Border, Mrs. Benoit having asked for no information respecting Mrs. Bordet's mental condition then your verdict must be for the defendants," and excepted to the refusal to instruct as requested. There was no evidence that Mrs. Benoit made any inquiries of the defendants as to Mrs. Border or the nature of the employment she proposed to undertake. It does not appear that she trusted anything to them. In fact she appears to have resented their interest in the matter. For she testified she did not see at the time why she should see Mr. Berry when she was going to work for Mrs. Border and was making the trade with her. It is not claimed that this request does not correctly state the law or was inapplicable to the evidence, but the contention is that the request was substantially covered by the instructions given. This position is well taken. The necessity of legal obligation to speak as the foundation of a charge of fraud from failure to do so was recognized when it was said: "In order to be a material misrepresentation there must be some relations existing between the parties in the way of contracts, of employment, of dealings in some form where there is a duty on the part of the person knowing an event or a matter which might be important to state." As to what would constitute such a relation in this case the jury were further instructed: "The allegation in the writ is that these defendants assumed to act for Mrs. Border, whom they knew was an insane person. . . . If they were acting for Mrs. Border and Mrs. Border was competent to authorize them to *17 act, or ratify their acts, they would be her agents. If they were acting as next friends, as it is stated in the writ, if they assumed to act for her and take care of her in her condition, which they knew and understood, as far as the evidence disclosed, then they were bound to act in good faith and honesty. It was their duty to disclose to this plaintiff at that time, before she engaged there, any information which as honest and reasonable men and women they should disclose there to enable her to protect herself. . . . In other words, you must find, before you can find a verdict, for the plaintiff, that they assumed to act for her, for Mrs. Border, in some capacity." To this instruction the defendants excepted upon the ground that there was no evidence that the defendants assumed to act for Mrs. Bordet. If there was no evidence that the defendants assumed to act for Mrs. Border in some capacity, the jury could not find they did so assume, and under the law laid down in the instructions the issue should not have been submitted to the jury. The preliminary question in consideration of this exception is, what was understood at the trial to be meant by the expression "acting for Mrs. Border in some capacity," — what from the charge must the jury have understood thereby? The plaintiff's claim was that she was injured because she entered Mrs. Bordet's employ without understanding its dangers. If she made her contract of employment with Mrs. Border, it was Mrs. Bordet's duty to warn her. If she made it with some one else acting for Mrs. Border, the duty of information rested with them. "Acting for Mrs. Border in some capacity" must therefore have been intended to mean representing her in relation to the proposed employment. The charge expressly so implies, for after stating as before quoted that the duty to speak must arise from some relation existing between the parties by way of contracts or employment, the abstract statement is illustrated by the case of one employing another to work in his barn without informing him of a defect in its floor or to care for a vicious horse without giving notice of the character of the horse. From this language the jury could have inferred that they were at liberty to find that the defendants acted or assumed to act for Mrs. Border in making the contract of employment and that if they did so act they were legally bound to disclose what they knew. As a legal proposition, if these facts could be found, the statement may be unexceptionable. The case would then be of parties dealing together, one being in possession of facts material to the treaty, which the other did not know and could not learn. The case would be within Hanson v. Edgerly and Page v. Parker, supra, *18 but, as the defendants contend, the rule was inapplicable because there was no evidence in the case authorizing the conclusion that the defendants acted or assumed to act for Mrs. Border in the dealing which resulted in the contract. If the defendants or either of them had anything to do with the means by which information of the situation which Mrs. Benoit accepted reached her, the plaintiff failed to establish the fact by proof. Mrs. Benoit, learning of the opportunity by means, so far as the case goes, entirely independent of the defendants, came to Jackson and made her contract with Mrs. Border and not with or through any of the defendants, acting or assuming to act for Mrs. Border. Much stress has been laid in the argument upon the defendants' interest in Mrs. Border and the subject was referred to in the charge. Long acquaintance with and friendship for Mrs. Border doubtless placed upon the defendants a moral if not a legal duty to care for her and to see that whoever took charge of her was a suitable person and was instructed as to the care necessary for her protection, but this duty whether legal or moral was owed Mrs. Border and not to the plaintiff.
If in performance of a duty they owed Mrs. Border, the defendants employed the plaintiff to care for her, the legal duty to Mrs. Benoit of informing her of the nature and perils of the service required would have been imposed; but, in the absence of evidence that acting for themselves or for Mrs. Border they took some part in the employment of the plaintiff, the case was improperly made to turn upon such employment by the defendants, of which there was no evidence. It is not error to refuse to give an instruction unobjectionable as matter of, law, if there is no evidence to which the legal proposition is applicable. Kuba v. Devonshire Mills,
One of the defendants, Miss Perkins, testified that after Mrs. Bordet's death she took possession of her money and jewelry and turned it over to her executor. Subject to exception, the plaintiff was permitted to ask her upon cross-examination if she did not have trouble with the executor. The question was competent upon the witness' credibility. The extent to which an examination of this nature should be carried is settled at the trial. Gutterson v. Morse,
The remaining exceptions necessary to be considered are to the *19
argument of counsel. One is to a reference to the testimony just referred to as admitted subject to exception. The evidence was in the case and counsel could use it for the purpose for which it was competent. Use for a purpose for which it was incompetent would be error, and, if permitted by the court subject to exception, would destroy the verdict. Burnham v. Stillings,
The remaining exceptions relate to misstatements of the evidence made in the course of the argument. "While a verdict may be set aside for the introduction in argument of facts not contained in the evidence, and a persistent misstatement of the evidence may amount to such introduction so as to render the trial unfair, a mere misrecollection or accidental misstatement of the evidence does not render the trial unfair as matter of law." State v. Wren,
Exceptions sustained in part: verdict set aside.
WALKER and PLUMMER, JJ., concurred: PEASLEE, J., concurred in the result: YOUNG, J., dissented.