84 A. 979 | N.H. | 1912
In consequence of the accident the plaintiff claimed she was suffering from neurasthenia. In the course of the cross-examination of a physician who had testified that she was not suffering from that disease, he stated that after an examination of the plaintiff he had given his affidavit that in his opinion she was in a good condition of health, and that the affidavit was taken to be used upon the defendant's application to the court to take her deposition in term time. Thereupon the plaintiff's counsel asked the witness the following question: "Did you know Judge Plummer denied that motion?" The witness replied that he knew nothing about it. The defendant's counsel took an exception to the question, upon the ground that it was incompetent and prejudicial. The plaintiff's counsel offered to withdraw the question, when, upon the objection of the defendant, the court ordered it to stand on the record.
The question was clearly incompetent. Whether the witness knew what disposition the court made of the application to take the plaintiff's deposition had no conceivable bearing upon the *497
question of damages, which was the issue on trial. That it was prejudicial is equally apparent. The interrogatory assumed as a fact that the application was denied. It was the unsworn statement of a fact by counsel, and although it was contained in an interrogatory it was no less improper than it would have been if it had occurred in a declarative sentence. Demars v. Company,
In answer to the argument that the decision in Conn. River Power Co. v. Dickinson,
Nor was the prejudicial character of the question obviated, as perhaps it might have been (Hallock v. Young,
Exception sustained: verdict set aside.
All concurred.