Grant v. Libby

Barrows, J.

To sustain exceptions to the admission or exclusion of testimony, there must be enough of the context and of the history of the case to enable the full court to determine that, in the position presented, when the testimony was offered, the ruling was -wrong — not merely that it might be wrong'if the testimony were offered with some supposable accompanying evidence, or under some possible phase of the ease which may or may not have existed.

"They are not to prevail merely because they do not show that it was rightly admitted or excluded.” Parmenter v. Coburn, 6 Gray, 510, and cases there cited. That the exception here urged, must fail for this, if there -were no other reason, is obvious. It could not be supposed that the insolvency of the plaintiff’s husband and agent could have any possible connection near or remote -with the question, whether the plaintiff purchased these goods in fraud of Overlock’s creditors, until we come to the wholesale offer by defendant’s counsel to prove, if permitted to pursue his cross examination of the plaintiff, "that whenever Grant has failed, lie has got Overlook to cover his property, and when Overlook has failed, if Grant was in position, he would get Grant to cover it, but under the circumstances then existing, he got the -wife to cover it, and that there had been a sort of interchange of transactions between these parties, to cover up property in order to effect an easy settlement with their creditors.”

It would have been a perfect answer to the plaintiff’s case, to show that this transaction was of the character spoken of, and the judge may -well be excused for declining to go into the proposed collateral inquiries, upon the ground that if settled, they would add nothing to the defence. But, confining our remarks now' to the first point, the exceptions state that " the plaintiff was asked on cross examination,- about previous dealings within her knowledge of her husband and Overlook, and whether her husband failed two or three years ago.” What her answers were or whether the ruling forbidding the defendant further to pursue this course of cross examination was predicated on them, does not appear. Previous answ'ers may have demonstrated that it was futile for the defendant to "pursue this testimony.” The ruling *430may have been made to save a waste of time, or to prevent the reiteration of imputations which had no foundation in the proof. In any event the exceptions do not show that the ruling ivas wrong, and hence they cannot avail according to the cases above referred to. Much must be trusted to the discretion of the judge presiding at the trial, in the regulation of cross examinations, upon collateral topics; otherwise they would be well nigh endless. Seldom do they subserve a just and legitimate purpose; and parties forbidden to protract them, have ordinarily more cause for thankfulness, than complaint.

The limits of collateral cross examination, are to be determined by the presiding judge, and his determination is not subject to revision or exceptions. State v. Benner, 64 Maine, 288; Com. v. Shaw, 4 Cush. 593; Morrissey v. Ingham, 111 Mass. 66. But aside from simple technical considerations, the evidence which the defendant proposed to draw out (to say nothing of the fact that it concerned the doings, not of the plaintiff, but of her agent at times when he was not acting for her), seems to fall within the scope of the decisions of this court in the cases of Flagg v. Willington, 6 Maine, 386; and Blake v. Howard, 11 Maine, 203. See also remarks of Jackson, J., in Somes v. Skinner, 16 Mass. 360, to the effect that "it is not competent to a party imputing fraud to another, to offer evidence to prove that the other has'dealt fraudulently at other times and in transactions wholly disconnected with that which is on trial. This would tend to prejudice the minds of the jury by impeaching the general character of the party charged with the fraud, when he had no right to expect such an attack, and could not be prepared to defend himself, however unimpeachable his conduct might have been.” The above cited cases are but practical applications in civil suits of the rule, which relieves a man charged with some particular offence, from being" subjected to imputations which might often be fatal to him, without requiring him at his peril, to come prepared to defend or explain every action of his life. See Rex v. Cole, Per. Cur. Mich. Term, 1810, cited in 1 Phil. Evid. 137; State v. Lapage, 57 N. H. 245. It does not establish the quality of the beer sold by a brewer to a particular publican, to *431show that be sold beer of the quality alleged to others about the same time. Holcombe v. Hewson, Camp. 391. Nothing short of proof, that it was of the same brewing, and put up in the same manner would suffice to make it relevant.

It is quite true that proof of fraud must ordinarily be made by circumstantial evidence, and that the party upon whom rests the burden of proof, should be allowed to show all the circumstances connected with the case from which a fair presumption may be deduced.

But we think no sáfe or legitimate inference can be drawn as to the character of this transaction between the plaintiff and Overlook, from the evidence offered by the defendant, and excluded by the court, (so far as its probable tenor can be guessed), while it would doubtless have tended to prejudice her case in the minds of the jury, and to raise collateral issues to confuse them. It was rightly rejected.

Defendant does not insist in argument upon the exceptions to the instructions to the jury. The refusal of the requested instruction, is justified by .the absence of any testimony on which it could be based, and because it relates rather to a question of fact than one of law.

Exceptions overruled.

Appleton, C. J., Walton, Virgin, Libbey and Symonds, JJ., concurred.