104 A. 345 | N.H. | 1918
The exception to the admission of the photograph as evidence does not raise a question of law. Pritchard v. Austin,
The plaintiff met an automobile upon the highway and turned out to pass. In so doing the wheels of his wagon went over the edge of the road where it had been built up with stones to hold the shoulder. The vertical drop was 10.8 inches and the edge of the wall was about one foot from the traveled path. The plaintiff was thrown from his wagon and struck on a stone wall beside the road. At the time, the space between the traveled part of the way and the wall was filled with vegetation and apparently safe for travel. The defendant's motions for a nonsuit and a verdict were upon the ground that the evidence did not disclose, as the cause of the injury, a dangerous embankment defectively railed within the meaning of the statute. Laws 1893, c. 59, s. 1. The road supported by the vertical wall of stones substantially eleven inches high could be found to be an embankment. Wilder v. Concord,
The exceptions to argument are not well founded. Whether the inference which counsel asked the jury to draw from the defendant's failure to offer experimental evidence of the capacity of the highway *56 at the place of accident for the passage of meeting automobiles and teams could be drawn, was a question of law. Counsel stated no fact not in evidence.
The statement, "They criticised us for not having Mrs. Parker in here when she is at home with three children," was, counsel making it claim, so far as it involves an assertion as to Mrs. Parker's location, an inference from the evidence that plaintiff lived with his wife and had three children at home. But if it be assumed the assertion was testimony as to a fact not in evidence, the error does not require the destruction of the verdict. The three children were boys between eight and thirteen years of age. There was nothing in the case tending to show, and counsel did not claim, there was anything in the mother's care of children of this maturity which would necessarily prevent her attendance at the trial. The statement that Mrs. Parker was at home under such circumstances had no tendency to explain her non-attendance. It was entirely immaterial upon the. issue upon which counsel offered it, had no tendency to confuse or prejudice the jury, and was in effect an admission that she could have been produced, as the defendant appears to have claimed she should have been. A verdict will not be set aside for the admission of immaterial evidence unless it is clear it must have influenced the jury. Cook v. Brown,
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred. *57