Eastman v. Gould

63 N.H. 89 | N.H. | 1884

The burden of proof in the trial of the cause, with the general issue pleaded in defence, was upon the plaintiff throughout, and was not shifted by the defendant's claiming a conditional promise, a promise different from that alleged by the plaintiff. Shepardson v. Perkins, 60 N.H. 76, 82, 83; Blodgett v. Cummings, 60 N.H. 115. The finding of no balance of evidence for the defendant on the question of a conditional promise, and a finding therefore for the plaintiff, was, in effect, a finding that a preponderance of evidence on a question material to the issue was necessary to defeat the plaintiff's case; and that, as matter of law, the burden of proof was shifted from the plaintiff to the defendant. For the defendant to succeed, it was not necessary for him to show by a preponderance of evidence that the promise alleged by the plaintiff was not made, but only to meet the plaintiff's case by an even weight of evidence. As a matter of law, the burden of proof was not shifted from the plaintiff to the defendant in the trial; and for error in the ruling upon this subject, the verdict is set aside and a

New trial granted.

SMITH, J., did not sit: the others concurred.

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