21 Vt. 437 | Vt. | 1849
This case presents two questions for our consideration; — 1, As to the regularity of permitting the defendant to introduce farther evidence to support his defence, arising under his special pleas, after that defence had been attacked and attempted to be overthrown by evidence of the plaintiff; — 2, As to the correctness of the charge of the court to the jury.
Although there are certain established rules, which have obtained in the process of trying causes before a jury, and in the order of introducing the evidence of witnesses, yet these rules, for the most part, are but rules of practice, and are considered as under the control of the court, and subject to be varied in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion ; so that a departure from the ordinary rules, in the course of a trial, or a refusal to grant such indulgence to a party on request, cannot properly be made a ground of error. Of this class are the rules as to the order of introducing the evidence, and also as to the mode of examining witnesses. See Clayes et al. v. Ferris et al., 10 Vt. 112. Hopkinson, Adm’r, v. Steele, 12 Ib. 582. Indeed, the constantly varying circumstances, under which cases arise, and the haste and confusion, which must frequently be expected in jury trials, (without permitting the exercise of the discretion of the court,) would often lead to most unjust results and disastrous consequences. Perhaps no rule, in relation to proceedings at jury trials, is better established, than that a party calling a witness must not, in examining him, put suggestive or leading questions;— yet it has always been held, that such rule might be relaxed, whenever the court thought justice required it, and that the exercise of such discretion was no ground of error. See Adm’r of Hopkinson v. Steele, ub. sup.
But in the present case we think this discretion was very properly exercised. The defendant had pleaded the general issue, and this, of course, required the plaintiff to take the lead in the testimony, so far as to establish, prima facie, his right of action against the defendant. So far' as the defendant proposed to dispute the plaintiff’s right to recover against him, by directly denying, or rebutting, what the plaintiff had thus proved against him, he was bound to do it, when the plaintiff rested ; after which, the plaintiff would have the right to introduce farther testimony, not ,pnly to rebut what the de
2. As to the ch.arge to the jury; — whether the salt tendered to the plaintiff by the defendant, in fulfilment of his contract, in quantity and quality, was sufficient, or not, was entirely a question of fact, proper to be determined by the jury ; and, under the charge, the jury must have found that the full quantity was tendered, and that the salt, was of a medium quality of the kinds of coarse salt in use at the time and place of the contract, and was as good, for all the ordinary uses of salt, as coarse salt of such medium quality. The charge, though not in the precise language of the plaintiff’s request, seems to us to comply with it substantially. If there is any substantial difference between the plaintiff’s request and the charge as given, it is in respect to the reputation of the kind of salt tendered. We think the tender must depend upon the fact, whether