22 N.H. 219 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1850
The defendant was not in fact present at the caption of the deposition of Dustin. But the certificate of the ma
The objection stated in the caption is too general to avail the defendant. It was “ to the foregoing deposition, .both as to the form in which it was taken, and the matter testified to.” If it had been to the leading character of the particular interrogatory, the form might have been changed, and the objection obviated. Such a specification of the ground of objection could alone establish a right in the party to insist upon the same objection at the trial. By the general form in which the objection was taken, the party was left to conjecture upon which of many specific objections that might be embraced in it, the party making it, intended to rely. An exception taken even at the trial, if the ground be not specified, will not avail a party to set aside a verdict ; and particularly so, if it is of a formal character. McConihe v. Sawyer, 12 N. H. Rep. 396. By such omission to specify the particulars of the exception, and to draw the attention of the other party unmistakably to them, it will be regarded as waived. We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion, that the ruling of the Court below, allowing the deposition to be given in evidence to the jury, was correct.
The deposition of Horace Ames was produced by the defendant, and used upon the trial. The second question and answer were objected to, and the objection was sustained by the Court. The ground of the objection was, that they were immaterial and irrelevant, inasmuch as they related wholly to a release given by the defendant to the witness, in order to render him competent to give testimony in the cause ; and it is'to be taken upon this case, that such was the nature of the question and answer, and that the same had no bearing upon the issue to be tried. No doubt exists of the correctness of the ruling rejecting the evidence, and that it can furnish no ground for setting aside the verdict. It is well settled, as a general rule, that the admission of
The effect of the ruling of the Court was, at most, to withhold from the jury evidence which did not tend to prove the issue to be tried. The party was not deprived of the benefit of any competent evidence. Most assuredly, the rejection of incompetent and irrelevant proof, can never form a ground for setting aside a verdict. The mere statement of the case shows that the exception is idle, and cannot therefore be sustained.
A further, and more important and difficult question than either of the others, remains to be decided. The note declared on was the joint note of the defendant and Horace Ames. The defendant was the principal debtor, and Ames his surety. It is to be assumed upon the charge of the Judge, in the court below, and upon the finding of the jury, that in July, or August, 1842, Horace Ames, the surety, out of his own funds, paid a sum of money upon the note, in part payment thereof, in the presence of the defendant, and that the defendant knew and understood what was done, and said nothing in relation thereto. And the question raised upon the case is, whether it was competent for the jury to infer, from those circumstances, a new promise by the defendant to pay the balance of the note. It is well settled that a partial payment of a debt amounts to an acknowledgment of a present subsisting debt, which the party is liable and willing to pay; from which, in the absence of any act, or declaration, on the part of the party making the payment, inconsistent with the idea of a liability and willingness to pay, a jury may and ought to infer a new promise. Sigourney v. Drury, 14 Pick. 387 ; Bell v. Morrison, 1 Peters, 351; Exeter Bank v. Sullivan, 6 N. H. Rep. 124. And it is equally well settled here, that a partial payment by one of two joint debtors, in the absence of the other, is not sufficient to take a case out of the operation of the statute of
The note was dated October 23,1840, and the payment was made in July, or August, 1842 ; and consequently the right of action, at that time, was not barred by the statute. The surety, then, had a clear right to make the payment which he did make upon the note, and thereby entitle himself to an action to recover of the defendant the amount paid. It may then well be regarded as a payment made with the implied assent of the defendant, who was present and had opportunity, but made no objection thereto. This case we regard as clearly distinguishable from those cases in which it has been decided that a partial payment, by one joint debtor, will not take the case out of the statute of limitations as against another, who was not present. In the latter case, no assent can be implied; the party not being present, and having no opportunity to signify his dissent. The payment, in the present case, must be considered as having been made with the full assent of the defendant, implied from his presence and silence ; and we regard such a payment as equivalent to a payment by the party attempted to be charged, and as having, as evidence of a new promise, the same legitimate operation. In this case, Ames was merely surety, and paid the money, it is to be presumed, out of his own funds; and the payment “ upon his own account” could be understood in no other sense, than as a payment in discharge 'of his own liability as such surety, which at the same time operated to discharge, to the same extent, the direct liability of the defendant, to the payee of the note.
Upon tbe whole, we are satisfied that tbe ruling of tbe Court, in this particular, was correct, and that there must be,
Judgment on the verdict.