Citation Numbers: 63 N.H. 226
Judges: Stanley, Blodgett
Filed Date: 6/5/1884
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
If the letter of Boyce, dated Jan. 12, 1873, was competent, the letter to which it was an answer was also competent, and its loss being accounted for, evidence of its contents was admissible. Packard v. Putnam,
The defendant's offer to show what Stalbird told him he said to the plaintiff was hearsay and immaterial. The question which it was proposed to ask the defendant was properly excluded. It appears from the deposition of Stalbird, which is made a part of the case, that the defendant said something to Stalbird about the execution, of which he informed the plaintiff; that some two or three years after, the defendant and Stalbird had some talk about the conversation; that just prior to this suit the defendant and Stalbird had another conversation, in which the defendant asked Stalbird to try to remember what was said about the execution, but Stalbird did not remember what it was. The defendant claims this testimony tended to contradict Stalbird. But the fact that he was requested to remember the conversation did not tend to show that he stated untruly when he said he did not remember it.
Exceptions overruled.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred.