100 A. 671 | N.H. | 1917
When a court before whom a proceeding in equity is pending finds that it will aid it in its search for the truth to submit *353
the determination of a disputed question of fact to a jury, it is its duty to frame the proper issue. P.S., c. 227, s. 21. The office of an issue, therefore, is to enable a jury to aid the court in determining the rights of the parties. Since this is so, the question of law raised by the defendants' exception to the issue in question is whether a verdict on that issue may aid the court, — not whether it will be determinative of the rights of the parties. The test to decide whether a determination of Charles' motive for making the gift in question may, — not will, — aid the court is to inquire whether his motive is a matter in issue within the meaning of Darling v. Westmoreland,
It is elementary that there can be no recovery in any action unless the plaintiff shows both that she has been injured or damaged and that the act of which she complains was illegal. In other words, it is not enough for the plaintiff to show that the effect of the gift in question was to defeat her obtaining her distributive share of the property. To recover, she must go further and show that the gift was illegal. The gift was illegal if Charles' purpose in making it was to prevent his wife's obtaining her distributive share of the property (Walker v. Walker,
The test to determine whether Charles' purpose in making the gift was to prevent his wife's obtaining her distributive share of the property is to inquire whether but for that purpose he would have made the gift. The test to determine whether making the gift when, as, and for the purpose he did, was an unreasonable thing to do, is to *354 inquire whether the ordinary man in Charles' situation would have made it. If, therefore, the court thinks it will aid it in determining the rights of the parties to have a jury pass on the validity of the plaintiff's contention that the gift in question is illegal because Charles made it to prevent her obtaining her distributive share of his property, it should submit two questions to the jury: (1) Was Charles' motive for making the gift in question a purpose to prevent his wife's obtaining her distributive share of his estate? (2) Would the ordinary man in Charles' situation have made the gift in question?
Exception overruled.
All concurred.