52 N.H. 467 | N.H. | 1872
We think there was no error in admitting the testimony of Nutting as to what he paid for the Thomas Nutting farm in 1867, and the sale of it at auction in 1870. The objection is, that it was too remote as to locality, and the first sale as to time. We are of the opinion, however, that neither objection can be sustained as matter of law, but that it was competent for the judge who tried the cause, in his discretion, to admit the evidence ; nor do we understand that the question of discretion was reserved. If such had been intended, we
In respect to the matter of distance from the property in question, we think there can be no doubt. As to real estate in cities or villages, the value of such property at a distance of one or two miles might furnish little or no aid to a jury, while in respect to farms, farming land, and wood land, sales at a much greater distance, in the rural or sparsely inhabited parts of our State, would afford valuable, and, in some instances, the only aid that could be had in such investigations.
In respect to remoteness of time, it appears that the insurance was October 20, 1870, and the loss, November 11, 1870. The sale of the Nutting farm was in 1867, but as the time of the year is not stated, it may have been several months more, or a month or two less, than three years before the insurance.
In Thornton v. Campton, 18 N. H. 20, a sale of the real estate in question, in the spring of 1816, was held to be admissible as bearing on the value of the same estate during the four years ending in the spring of 1814; and the court, by Gilchrist, J., say that the causes which produce changes in the value of land and in the value of money are, commonly, so gradual in their operation, that very safe inferences may be formed from the present value of a particular estate, as to what it was two, four, or six years ago, by persons conversant with the business of the neighborhood.
This would be especially true of the cultivated farms in our State, and we think it would clearly be within the discretion of the court to receive the testimony offered in this case.
"Whether the evidence offered is too remote in point of time must necessarily be left very much to the discretion of the judge who tries the cause, and ordinarily that discretion will not be revised unless it be clearly reserved for that purpose.
That the question of remoteness in respect to time is left to the discretion of the judge who tries the cause, is too well settled in this State to need the citation of authorities, and it is not questioned by counsel.
The testimony of Reuben Hobbs, as to the price paid for other wood land in Wentworth, was, we think, admissible, in the discretion of the judge, although several miles from the lots conveyed to Capen. It is quite obvious that there might be such similarity, in respect to character and' location in relation to a market, as to furnish great aid in fixing the value of the Oapen lots.
As to his opinion of the value of stumpage on the Oapen lots, it was for the court to judge whether he was qualified to give an opinion. It is made competent by statute, and we cannot revise the decision of the judge on the qualification of the witness.
In regard to the testimony of Pervear and Mitchell, the same remarks that were made in respect to the opinion of Hobbs apply, —
The course allowed to be taken in the cross-examination of witnesses on the stand, in reference to their depositions, was not in accordance with our approved and settled practice. Witnesses should not ordinarily be asked to read to the jury passages in their depositions. Such a proceeding is generally useless, and calculated to annoy the witness. There might be a case where it would be proper, after the deposition had been read to the jury by counsel, to recall the witness, and give him an opportunity to explain the whole or some part of it. There might be a case where it would be proper to ask him what he meant by certain answers in the deposition ; but generally it would be unnecessary, and therefore improper, to put the question in that form. All that would generally be necessary or proper would be to give him an-opportunity to.explain anything in his deposition that might seem to be inconsistent with his oral testimony on the stand. And the offer of such an opportunity should, of course, be made in mild and brief terms, and in a civil manner. The plaintiff’s counsel contended, at the trial, “ that the witness should not be badgered on the stand with the deposition ; ” and that claim is sustained to the full extent of the appropriate and significant language in which it was presented.
At the first trial of Kendall v. Brownson (in Grafton, September term, 1863), “ on the cross-examination of the defendant, his deposition, previously taken by the plaintiff, was shown to him, and the court permitted the plaintiff, against the objection of the defendant, to ask him the question, ‘ Is that your deposition, and did you swear to it? ’ Also, while the witness still held the deposition in his hand, the court permitted the other question to be put, ‘ Did you state, in that deposition, that you received anything out of the Rutherford notes?”’ On a case reserved,'it was held that a question, asked only to identify the deposition or the deponent, or to prove the signature if it was denied, for the purpose of using the writing as an admission of the party, and not as a deposition of a witness, might be proper; but that it would seem that the question, “ Is that your deposition, and did you swear to it ? ” was asked for the purpose of intimidating the witness, rather than for the purpose of obtaining information ; that it would seem also that the question, “ Did you state, in that deposition, that you received anything out of the Rutherford notes ? ” should not have been asked; that if it called for parol'evidence of the contents of the deposition, it would be inadmissible, and if it was asked to embarrass the witness, and produce an effect upon the jury which should have been postponed till the argument, it was equally improper; that it was a matter of discretion, and that ordinarily it would be proper not to allow such questions as were put to the defendant at the trial. The verdict was set aside on another point.
At the second trial of that case (March term, 1866), “ on his [the defendant’s] cross-examination, the plaintiff’s counsel produced a deposition admitted to be a deposition given by the defendant in this case,
There can hardly be any occcasion to identify a deposition, or to prove the signature of it, by the deponent on the stand, or to ask him any question in regard to it, until he is recalled after it has been regularly put in evidence at the proper time, which is not during his examination or cross-examination. Such matters as the identity of the paper and of the witness, and the genuineness of the signature, are not usually in dispute, and it would be well not to anticipate any controversy on those points, but to wait and see what objections will be made to the introduction of the deposition when it is offered at the proper time. The subject is one on which no absolute rule can be laid down, because it is a matter of fact and of reasonableness (Darling v. Westmoreland, 52 N. H. 408). In this case, there is no error in law for which a new trial should be granted.
Judgment on the verdict.