Stetson v. Wolcott
Stetson v. Wolcott
Opinion of the Court
1. The answers of Cotton, one of the defendants, to interrogatories filed in the case pursuant to the provisions of St. of 1852, c. 312, § 61, were properly admitted in
2. The ledger of the defendants appeared to the court, upon the examination of the parties, when it was produced, not to be a book of original entries. It was not therefore competent evidence of the fact respecting the credit to be given to the defendants for which it was offered; and, as it was not called for by them, it was properly excluded.
3. There is no ground of objection to the instructions given to the jury. The presiding judge did not perceive that there was any evidence in the case to prove the payment to the plaintiff of the sum of f> 850, with which the defendants claimed that they ougnt to be credited. When the two books which were ruled to be competent were put into the case, no entry upon or item contained in them was read or exhibited to the court or jury, although the attention of the counsel for the defendants was directed by the court to this subject. Instead of conforming to the request of the plaintiff’s counsel, that the jury should be instructed that there was no evidence in the case to show such payment, they were advised that, although the court perceived no such evidence, if they found any in the testimony and proofs which had been submitted to them, • it was their duty to consider and give all due weight and influence to it. This certainly was sufficiently favorable to the defendants, and can afford them no ground of exception. We may feel full confidence in this conclusion, since upon the hearing of the parties on the questions of law presented in the bill of exceptions, nothing which appeared upon the trial has been pointed out or adverted to as a fact or circumstance tending to afford such proof.
Exceptions overruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.