57 Conn. 473 | Conn. | 1889
Each of the errors assigned in this case is a portion of the charge of the judge to the jury. It is claimed that each was improper and erroneous.
The charge consisted wholly of a discussion and comments upon the evidence which was before the jury. The account books of the plaintiffs’ decedent had been laid in and were evidently in the presence of the judge and the jury at the time he was speaking. The case turned upon their correctness, and in reference to these books and to the evidence which had been offered by the parties the judge used the language which is complained of. “ It is competent in all cases, and in some highly expedient, for the court not only to discuss but to express its opinion upon the weight of the evidence, without however directing the jury how to find the facts ; and' this is a right necessarily limited only by its own discretion.” Storrs, J., in First Baptist Church v. Rouse, 21 Conn., 167.
All the expressions of the charge contained in the several assignments of error fall clearly within the rule so laid down by Judge Stores, except the second one, which requires a somewhat more careful examination. It is that “in the absence of contradiction, explanation, or some suspicion cast upon their accuracy by the books themselves, or from extraneous circumstances, entries of this sort, made in the ordinary course of business, are presumptively correct.” The account books of Mr. Goon had been put in evidence, The entries therein were in his handwriting. He was dead, They were admissible therefore, not because they were proved by the oath of the person who made them, but because they were the written entries of a deceased person and so admissible under section 1094 of the Gen. Statutes, If from the language quoted the court could have been un
We think the court could not have been misunderstood, and that there is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except Carpenter, J., who dissented.