This is an action on the case pending in Windham County court. The defendant, before trial, preferred its petition to the presiding judge of that court, according to the statute in such case made and provided, praying for a removal of the case to the county court of another county for trial, because of local prejudice against it in Windham County. The prayer of the petition was denied on hearing, and the de
The plaintiff objects that the denial of the prayer of the petition is not such a final judgment as warrants certiorari, as it in no way touched the merits of the case itself, but was in a purely sessions proceeding, preliminary to a trial of the case on its merits. But the objection is not tenable, for the denial did finally determine the question involved in that proceeding, though it did not, and of course could not, touch the merits of the principal case, for it simply supervened upon it.
The petition for removal alleges that the action arose out of an injury to the plaintiff, charged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence while the plaintiff was in its service as a trainman on the West River Branch of its road, extending from Brattleboro to Londonderry,' a distance of thirty-seven miles; that the defendant also operates a railroad running from South Vernon to Brattleboro, on whch the plaintiff also worked to some extent; that said roads extend diagonally through the county from the southeastern corner to the northwestern corner, furnishing exclusive railroad facilities to a considerable portion of the people of the county, and serve to a greater or less extent through connection with stages and otherwise, nearly the whole county; that before July 18, 1910, in its operation of said roads, it employed many trainmen, residing largely in different parts of the county, who, by relationship and acquaintance, were in considerable touch with practically the whole county, and that, taken together, they had an acquaintance covering substantially the entire county, including nearly all the. villages in it; that the town of Brattleboro is the junction of said roads, and was the residence of a large number of the trainmen before and on the 18th of July; that the village of Brattleboro is the largest village in the county and its chief business center, where two newspapers are published, which circulate in every town in the county, and together go into almost every family in the county.
The petition further alleges that on the 18th of July, all of the trainmen on said roads struck,and left the defendant’s employment because it refused their demands as to terms of service and amount of wages; that the strike caused great ex
The presiding judge said in disposing of the petition, that he rejected from consideration in affidavits presented by both parties, all expressions of opinion or judgment of the affiants, and all- statements of fact made on information and belief, and all statements of fact appearing to be hearsay.
He also said that the petitioner urged as a ground for relief that the case could not be impartially tried in the county be
The defendant objected below to the plaintiff’s affidavit of Frank Jones, and to all its contents, as immaterial and irrelevant, and as being only the expression of his opinion, without stating the facts upon which it is based, and as giving the affiant’s judgment rather than stating facts. It also objected to all of the plaintiff’s other affidavits on the same ground.
The defendant selects the affidavit of Jones as a fair sample of all the others, and the plaintiff does not claim that it is not. The substance of'that affidavit is this: He lives in Dover and has for seventy years, and was town clerk twenty-five years; has a large acquaintance in Dover and vicinity; knew of the
The defendant claims that the presiding judge could not have rejected from consideration, as he says he did, all expressions of opinion or judgment of the affiants, and all statements of fact made on information and belief, and all statements of fact appearing to be hearsay, for if he had, no part of Jones’s affidavit, nor of any affidavits of similar import, would have been considered by him, and so he would have been unable to say that the testimony of business men and others throughout the county was such that he was unable to find that any general prejudice existed throughout the county against the defendant. In support of this claim the defendant eliminates from Jones’s affidavit all the judge says he rejected from consideration, and leaves only this, namely, that the affiant had lived in Dover seventy years, and been town clerk twenty-five years; that he had a large acquaintance in Dover and vicinity; knew of the strike; never heard anything said that would show any ill feeling whatever against the defendant nor its officials; and that he knows and talks with many people. As to the remaining part of the affidavit, namely, that if such a feeling was common in Dover and vicinity, the affiant would have known it, as he knows and talks with so many people there, the defendant says it is only an. expression of opinion without stating any facts on which to base it; that he does not state with whom he talked, nor with how many, nor whether the strike or the defendant was mentioned in any of the talks he had. Such affidavits, the defendant says, are immaterial and irrelevant, without probative force, and merely negative at best; that they in fact seek in themselves to determine the precise point that the presiding judge was to determine, but contain no legal evidence on which the judge could properly make a finding, because, stripped of hearsay and opinion, they contain no facts relevant to the issue before him.
This criticism of the plaintiff’s affidavits is largely just.
In respect of changing venue, the statute provides that “when it appears to a presiding judge of the county court that there is reason to believe that a civil action pending in such court can not be impartially tried in the county where it is pending, such judge shall, on petition of either party, order the cause removed to the county court in another county for trial.” P. S. 1492. The defendant claims that the presiding judge erred in the construction of this statute, and in holding the test to be, not whether there is such a feeling in some locality within the county as to be inimical to an impartial trial, but
But these claims can not be sustained. The rule stated by the presiding judge is substantially correct, as will .more clearly appear when we read the statute in the light of the common law, and construe it with reference thereto, as we must. In re Allen, 82 Vt. 365, 73 Atl. 1078, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 232; Black, Int. Laws, 232, and it does not materially differ from the Wisconsin rule, which the defendant says is correct, for the judge’s rule means, of course, what the Wisconsin rule expressly says, namely, “by the means provided by law”, and here the law provides the means by which the judge’s rule can be administered, for the statute declares that the judges of the county court shall from time to time direct the clerk of the court from what towns the grand and petit jurors shall be summoned, and the number from each town. P. S. 1467. This statute may well be availed of in such a case as this, to secure a jury away from the prejudiced part of the county, for it is certain enough that a party has not a right to the whole county from which to select his jury. Thus, in Cochecho Railroad v. Farrington, 26 N. H. 428, which, in the absence of a statute, was ruled under the common law, there were thirteen towns in the county in which the action was pending. It would have been difficult to organize an impartial jury from four of the towns through which the
In People v. Baker, 1 Cal. 403, the prisoner moved for a change of venue on the ground of prejudice in a certain town in the county. But as it did not appear that an impartial jury could not be selected from other parts of the county, the motion was denied. So in State v. Perigo, 70 Iowa 658, the prisoner petitioned for a change of venue on the ground of excitement and prejudice against him in the county. The court said that it was undoubtedly true that a very considerable excitement was created by the killing, and that some prejudice arose against the prisoner soon after the occurrence, but that this in a great measure was confined to the portion of the county in which it took place, and that it did not believe that the people of the county .generally were affected by it, and that it was reasonable to suppose that the excitement had largely subsided, and the petition was denied.
It can not be said, therefore, that the judge did not exercise according to law that reasonable measure of discretion accorded to him, and so
The writ is denied with costs.