114 Me. 367 | Me. | 1916
This is an action on the case in which the plaintiff, by his next friend, seeks recovery of damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff while attempting to board a car operated by defendant and alleged to have been occasioned by its negligence. The presiding Justice directed a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff excepts to a ruling excluding evidence offered by him.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that “the plaintiff testified in substance that the car stopped at one of the regular stopping places on Commercial street near its junction with Park street in Portland; that he walked along the side of the car and attempted to board at the rear end while it was at a stop; that while his hand was on the handle provided for that purpose and one foot on the step, the car started and the conductor at that moment pushed him; that he was thrown to the ground; that the head end of the car went a .little way around the corner of Commercial and Park streets where the trade turns up hill into Park street, which intersects Commercial street at a right angle, and stopped with its head end around the comer up the hill; that the rear end of the car was then nearly a car length from him as he lay on the ground before he got up, and that the conductor alighted and came back to him and that he then boarded the car. The defendant introduced the testimony of
“The evidence of these witnesses was excluded by the court upon objection made by defendant for the reason as the court stated that this testimony should have been offered as part of the plaintiff’s case in the first instance, that the testimony merely tended to corroborate the testimony of the plaintiff, and that the testimony was not rebuttal. To the exclusion of this testimony the plaintiff duly excepted which exceptions were at that time allowed.”
In Dana v. Treat, 35 Maine (1853), 198, this court, while recognizing the right of the trial Judge to direct in what stage of a case a party shall introduce his testimony, stated that “it has not been the practice to preclude a party, that has once stopped in the introduction of his evidence, from presenting further evidence of a cumulative character” and it is there held that a party who has rested his case may introduce further, though merely cumulative, evidence, unless, before resting, the court notifies him that such testimony will not subsequently be received. See also Moore v. Holland, 36 Maine (1853), 14, 15; Erskine v. Erskine, 64 Maine (1874), 214; Yeaton v. Chapman, 65 Maine (1876), 126, 127. In the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, however, it was stated in 1848, that the order in which witnesses are to be examined, on a trial at bar, and the number which a party is allowed to call to the same point, are matters within the discretion of the judge. Cushing v. Billings, 2 Cush., 158. In the course of the opinion, Shaw, C. J., says “The orderly course of proceeding requires, that the party,
In 1907 this court adopted as an additional rule the following: A party having rested his case cannot afterwards introduce further evidence except in rebuttal unless by leave of court. 102 Maine, 535. It is now rule XXXIX of the Revised Rules, 103 Maine, 534. It was considered in Hathaway v. Williams, 105 Maine, 565. The effect of that decision is to construe the rule as an enunciation and
The exceptions therefore must be overruled.
So ordered.