Graves v. Jacobs
Graves v. Jacobs
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of contract to recover $>750 alleged to have been due to the plaintiff’s intestate, Walter G. Graves, at the time of his decease, for labor performed by him during six years next preceding March 1st 1859 for the defendant upon his farm in Groton.
It is stated in the bill of exceptions that at the trial the plaintiff produced and read in evidence the report of an auditor, to
The plaintiff then called Asher Jewett, and proposed to ask him whether said Walter performed for him labor of the same general character in the year 1852 and earlier; and to show how he worked, and the value of his labor before he began to work on the defendant’s farm ; proposing also to show that there had been no visible change for the worse in his health and habits. The court ruled that the proposed evidence was inadmissible, and the testimony of the witness was excluded. To this ruling the plaintiff excepted.
In support of his exceptions he insists that this evidence was competent and should have been admitted to rebut that which, as above stated, had been produced on the part of the defendant and submitted to the jury. But it does not appear from anything set forth or reported in the bill of exceptions that the testimony of Jewett, if it had been admitted, would have been in conflict with any part of the evidence which the defendant had introduced. He had endeavored to show that the habitual intemperance of the said Walter, and the chronic disease to which he was subject, had essentially impaired his capacity to render valuable services as a laborer upon a farm. This seems not to have been in any degree contested or denied by the
As the bill of exceptions does not show that the testimony of Jewett was erroneously excluded, the objection taken thereto by the plaintiff cannot be sustained. Parmenter v. Coburn, 6 Gray, 509. The other objections taken at the trial were not relied upon or brought to the attention of the court upon the argument upon the bill of exceptions, and are, therefore, considered as having been intentionally waived.
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Asa Graves v. Charles Jacobs
- Status
- Published