Hogan v. Town of Northfield

56 Vt. 721 | Vt. | 1883

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ross, J.

I. The habits and disposition of a horse are, in their nature, more or less continuing. They, become confirmed and strengthened by age. Disposition, as well as habits, is -largely influenced by training. Training affects both, in the horse, as in other animals, for good or evil, much more in youth than in advanced years. These are facts open to the observation of all men. When, therefore, the plaintiff, in his opening-*722testimony, “ attempted to prove” — by which must be meant, introduced testimony tending to prove — that the horse since, as well as at the time of, and before, the accident, was tractable, gentle, and kind,” he introduced testimony, — whether strictly legally admissible or not — which had a moral tendency to show that the horse was possessed of such disposition and habits at the time of the accident, and so laid- the foundation for the defendant to rebut this testimony, by introducing testimony to show that the horse was possessed of habits of unkindness, and of running away. It could show the horse possessed of such habits at any time during the period in which the plaintiff, by his testimony, had attempted to show the horse was “ tractable, gentle, and kind.”

Lytle v. Bond's Est. 40 Vt. 618; Gotleib v. Leach, 40 Vt. 278.

Hence, without deciding whether the testimony of Ilaniman would, standing alone, itself, be admissible, it was admissible to rebut the testimony already introduced by the plaintiff. The issue was the habits and character of the horse at the time of the accident; and the nearer to that time- the testimony referred, the greater force it would have. The exceptions do not show that the defendant, by its testimony, was allowed to depart from this time farther than the plaintiff had already done in his opening testimony. Hence, there is no error apparent upon the exceptions, in this respect. ■

II. If the ruling of the County Court compelling the production of the deposition of Cornelius Splaid for the inspection of the defendant while cross-examining the witness, was erroneous under the decisions— Wait v. Brewster, 31 Vt. 516; Wing v. Hall, 47 Vt. 182 — it was ' evidently harmless error. The fact that the defendant’s counsel found nothing in the deposition tending to contradict the deponent’s testimony, as given upon the stand, tended to strengthen rather than Aveaken that testimony. The failure to offer, or use the deposition to contradict the testimony of the deponent given from the witness stand, would certainly leave the impression upon the minds of the jurors, that there aves nothing in the deposition *723which would avail to that end. We do not decide, whether under the decisions cited, and the rule of court referred to, the court had the right to compel the production of the deposition for any purpose ; but simply, that if such ruling was error,' it was to the plaintiff a harmless error.

The judgment, is affirmed.

midpage