62 N.H. 80 | N.H. | 1882
It was decided, in Walker v. Sawyer,
The special finding of fact was conclusive (Walker v. Sawyer supra, 196, 197, Willard v. Stevens, supra, 277), and, being a material fact upon which the general result depends, it must control the general verdict. The court having given specific and correct instructions to the jury upon the subject, and that their general verdict must be for the defendants, if they should answer the question in the affirmative, the plaintiff could not have been prejudiced nor the jury embarrassed by the question. Johnson v. Haverhill,
Exceptions overruled.
STANLEY, J., did not sit: the others concurred.