81 A. 1081 | N.H. | 1911
The questions of law arising upon the defendants' demurrer are transferred to this court without ruling. The plaintiff moves to remand the case without consideration of the questions presented. This motion is not based upon the ground that as matter of convenience the facts should be found before any attempt is made to settle the law, but upon the claim in the brief that as matter of law the superior court, against the objection of either party, has no power under existing law to transfer, and this court no jurisdiction to determine, questions of law, except after final trial and settlement by the superior court of all questions involved. Upon argument, the claim appeared to be reduced to the contention that, against the objection of a party, questions of law could not be considered here except upon exception to rulings made in the superior court.
The administration of the law is probably as little hampered here by subservience to form in procedure as in any common-law jurisdiction. Here, in the vindication of "contested rights in civil cases, each party has such remedy, including form, method, and order of procedure, as justice and convenience require." Owen v. Weston,
It has been the practice here, as far back as the memory of any member of the bar can go, when important questions of law were involved in a controversy the decision of which might shorten the trial of the facts, to settle such questions first. Whether this should *263 be done if the parties did not agree has been determined by the trial court. Their settlement has been effected by a transfer of the questions to the law court for determination. As the ruling of the trial court was of no importance, the case being held without further action until the settlement of the questions by the law court, it has not been usual to waste time or energy in argument and decision in the trial court. By this method the parties may be saved a prolonged struggle over facts which in the end might be found entirely useless. The theory that questions of law could be finally determined only by a writ of error after final judgment has been so long abandoned as to be practically unknown to practitioners at this bar. The convenience and advantages of the existing system appear from its statement. It is as well known in practice as it is useful in doing justice. But it is said that the procedure is peculiar to this jurisdiction; and it seems to be urged that the plaintiff has been deprived of some rights because, at the expenditure of much time and labor of counsel on both sides and of the trial court, that court has not elaborately heard, Considered, and decided the questions raised, although there is no possibility that the party against whom the decision might run would abide by it. It may therefore be useful to examine the origin and growth of the practice.
"Until 1813 there were no `law terms' as contradistinguished from `trial terms.' Each session of the court was required to be held by a majority of the judges, and questions of law and fact were `blended together on the docket.' By the statute of June 24, 1813 (which remained in force until June 27, 1816), all the terms, except those commencing in November and December, were permitted to be held by a single judge; and all actions in which exceptions were allowed to his rulings were to be continued to the November and December terms in the respective counties, there to be determined by a majority of the judges. This statute also provided that `all motions and petitions for new trials, and all appeals from judgments or decrees of judges of probate, and all questions of divorce and alimony, questions of law on statement of facts agreed by the parties, or special verdicts, and all issues in law,' should be `heard, tried, and determined, exclusively' at the terms to be holden in November and December. Sects. 2, 3, 5, and 6. In the subsequent statute of November 5, 1813, sections 3 and 4, the expression `law term' is applied to these November and December terms, as it is also in the index of the edition of New Hampshire Laws printed in 1815." Smith N.H., prefatory note, p. vii. The act of *264 June 27, 1816 (Laws 1816, c. 34), repealed the act of 1813 which established the supreme judicial court, revived the superior court of judicature, and restored the former practice under which law terms were unknown.
The act of December 29, 1832 (Laws 1832, Nov. Sess., c. 89), made a great and radical change in procedure. It was adopted, it is said, upon the written approval of Richardson, then chief justice, while its authorship is ascribed to Parker, almost immediately thereafter a judge of the court and later its chief justice. Shirley, Reporter's Note,
Under this section the questions which the presiding justice may reserve, assign, and refer include those of which under the act of 1813 the "law terms" were given exclusive jurisdiction to hear, try, and determine. If under the law of 1832 he had been expected to hear and determine them before assigning and referring them to the superior court, his conclusion thereon would have constituted an opinion, direction, or judgment open to exception, and the whole matter would have been covered by the provisions as to exceptions. The whole of the section, after the subject of exceptions is disposed *265 of, is unnecessary, useless, and absurd, except upon the theory that questions which the presiding judge thought fit to reserve, assign, and transfer to the superior court were those upon which he did not think fit to rule. The section provides for the two classes of cases: one in which the judge ruled — then the party had his exception; and those upon which he did not rule, but which he reserved and referred. This result would be reached without considering all the terms employed, but the word "reserve" cannot be rejected. It must have been understood to have some meaning. To reserve an "issue of law, motion for a new trial," or "any other question" is not to decide such issue, motion, or question, but the contrary; it is "to defer the discussion or determination of" such matter. Webster's New Int. Dict., Reserve, 2. The synonyms of the word "reserve" are "to keep, hold, retain, withhold." It is not synonymous with "determine, conclude, make a decision." Soule Eng. Syn. 102, 336.
At the December term, 1833, the superior court, when Richardson and Parker were both members, under authority of the statute adopted rules for the conduct of business in the two courts, one of which (Rule 34) prescribed procedure in the superior court applicable "whenever any question of law shall be raised in the common pleas . . . by demurrer, . . . and the cause shall be transferred."
Section 7 of the act of 1832 is a substantial statement of the provisions to be found in the Public Statutes (c. 204, ss. 11, 12, 13), as modified by section 8, chapter 172, Revised Statutes, which provided for the transfer of the questions of law raised instead of the action itself (Wingate v. Haywood,
Doubtless the facts that at first all questions both of law and fact were determined at the same terms by the same court, that the first provision in 1813 merely continued questions of law to a single term, and that in 1832 the action itself was transferred where the determination of a question of law was desired, may have influenced the practice when, after 1842, only the question raised was transferred. After the change in 1842, the statute enacted in 1855 enumerated with great detail the questions that might be reserved, and recognized the existing practice by providing that the supreme judicial court (the law court then established) should upon consideration of questions reserved and assigned by the presiding justice "render or order such judgment, or make and certify such decisions as they think required by the circumstances of the case." Laws 1855, c. 1659, s. 17. This section is a trifle more extended in form, but the effect of the language is precisely that found in the Public Statutes, chapter 204. Section 11 of that chapter provides for the taking of exceptions and their preservation as part of the record; section 12, for filing such exceptions in the law term by the party taking them, there to be considered and determined as upon writ of error or other proper process. Section 13 is: "Questions arising upon such exceptions, upon a special verdict, an issue of law, motion for a new trial or in arrest of judgment, or other motion or proceeding, or upon a statement of facts agreed to and signed by the parties, may be reserved and assigned by the presiding justice or by any justice of the court in vacation, if he think fit, to the determination of the court at the next law term." The substance of the language used by Judge Parker in 1832 and approved by Richardson, then chief justice, still survives in the statute.
Not only is the trial judge not required to decide questions reserved, but he never does so. The question arising upon exceptions which he reserves is the validity of the exceptions — whether in spite of them there is to be judgment on the verdict, or whether *267 because of them the verdict should be set aside. The question decided at the law term reserved upon exception is whether the exception should be sustained or overruled. This question the presiding judge is no more required to rule upon than upon other questions which he is also authorized to reserve, and in practice he does not rule upon it.
It is true that no decision upon argument is to be found holding that questions of law may be transferred without ruling thereon by the trial justice. This is doubtless due to the fact that since the various statutes expressly give the power to transfer questions of law raised in various ways for the determination of the law court, without limitation of such power by requiring their previous determination by the trial court so as to be subject to exception, no one has hitherto understood such limitation could by construction be inserted in the statute; and in State v. Sawtelle,
Reliance is placed upon Claggett v. Simes,
Fellows v. Fellows,
Whether the facts or the law should first be ascertained is determined by questions of expediency and convenience in each case. In support of the motion, our attention has not been directed to the facts or legal questions involved in this controversy. In the absence of a thorough examination of the record, with the aid of an explanation by counsel of the several claims, the question whether all or some of the questions of law ought not to be determined in advance of a trial of the facts cannot be satisfactorily settled. A cursory examination seems to indicate that the action might be advanced *269 in the superior court by a final decision now of some of the legal questions involved, but no decision upon that point is now intended.
But it is urged that, conceding the transfer made was permissible prior to 1901, the legislation of that year (c. 78) creating two courts abolished the convenient procedure under which the law had been administered for sixty-nine years. The purpose of this act, as declared in its title, was to establish "a judiciary system consisting of two courts." It was plainly modeled on the judiciary acts of 1874 (c. 97) and 1876 (c. 25), the one creating two courts in place of one, and the other restoring one in place of the two. Like the first act, it confers upon the law court all the jurisdiction of the existing court at the law term and upon the trial court all the powers belonging to the court at the trial term. Like both acts, it continues in force all existing legislation not inconsistent with the change, making it applicable to the new courts in their respective capacities. The existence of two courts instead of one in 1874 did not change the procedure under discussion. See Gilman v. Laconia,
There is no difficulty in regarding as finally adjudicated a question of law determined before the facts are found. Veazie v. Wadleigh, 11 Pet. 55. The provision is merely an enactment of the judicial rule repeatedly announced, that a question of law once decided will not be again re-examined in the same case, except upon a motion for rehearing. Olney v. Railroad,
The superior court appears to entertain the opinion that in this case the law should be determined before proceeding to a trial of the facts. To the ruling based upon this conclusion the plaintiff has an exception. This exception will be considered when the case is more fully presented.
Motion denied.
WALKER, J., did not sit: the others concurred.