Riordon v. Davis

Bullard, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit is brought to recover the value of carpenters* work alleged to have been done for the defendant. He pleaded the general issue and some offsets; and judgment having been rendered against him, for a balance of three hundred and fifty-four dollars, he appealed.

The case appears to have been tried several times, and the record is encumbered with documents, interlocutory orders and exceptions, which we cannot notice, but shall confine ourselves to the proceedings had on the last trial, which was followed by the judgment appealed from.

The correctness of the judgment below," depends mainly on matters of fact, and the evidence in the record abundantly shows that the defendant was indebted, in some amount, for work done as alleged. The quantum depends upon estimates made by carpenters who were examined as witnesses.

The appellant'has not favored, us with any arguments on points of law, on which he relies for a reversal of the judgment; but there are two bills of exception in the record, which we proceed to notice.

By the first, it appears that while a witness was under examination, the plaintiffs counsel offered him a summary of his testimony, taken on á former trial, for the purpose of refreshing his recollection of what he had testified previously. This was objected to, on the gound that the estimate of the value of work, was not matter which could require or justify his reference to a memorandum to refresh his memory. The court having permitted the witness to recur to the summary of evidence, the defendant took a bill of exceptions.

It is now considered a settled rule of evidence, that a witness may refer to a memorandum in order to refresh his *242memory of facts. The rule, according to the authority of Starkie, does not require that the memorandum should be cotemporary with the facts; it suffices that it was made by the witness, or,another with his privity, when the facts were fresh in the recollection of the witness, and that the reading 0f pjjg memorandum restores the recollection of the fact which had faded in his memory. 1 Starkie, 128, 129.

A witness-will be permitted to rexer to a summary of his tes-a^ormer^triaq iue°hofS certain worit, which he examinedV1°and approved. This is not for the purpose of reviving' his faded recollection of the facts themselves, but to remind him of what he liad sworn to on a former trial. If a witness dies before the last trial, his testimony taken on a former trial of the same cause, is admissible in evidence. So, the adverse party is authori-sed to produce the testimony of a witness taken down on the first trial, with a view of showing that it differed from his statements given on the second trial. A witness will he allowed to refer to a report of experts, of whom he was one, which has been set aside, to refresh his memory, when the fact to be whaTestimateíié had put on the •work done, the reference being-as to^a memorandum deliberately made at the. time.

*242But in this case, the witness was permitted to refer to his ^ormer testimony, given when the facts themselves were more fresh in his mind, not directly for the purpose of reviving his faded recollection of the facts themselves, but to remind him of what he had sworn to on a former trial, touching the value of certain work which he had previously examined and appraised. If the witness had died previously to the last trial, his testimony taken on a former trial, would have been admissible. It is clear, also, that when the same witness testifies on a second trial, the adverse party would be authorised to produce bis first testimony, with a view of showing (hat it differed from his statements given on the second trial. Every witness is presumed to have sworn to the truth, until the contrary be shown, and is at liberty to correct his statements during the progress of the trial. We see no impropriety, therefore, in a witness referring to his statements on oath made on a former trial, with a view indirectly of reviving his recollection of facts within his knowledge.

The second bill of exception shows that another witness was permitted to refer to an estimate of the work, made by him and another person, which had been reduced to writing at the time, in order to enable hiiruto refresh his memory. He was permitted to refer to the paper for that purpose, the judge observing that his evidence would be good, if he could afterwards depose from recollection, and not from the memorandum alone. It appears by the record, that the witness had been appointed one of two experts to examine and value the work done, but their report had been set aside. The ^act to Provec4 was what estimate he had put upon the work done. The report might well, in our opinion, be referred *243to by the witness as a memorandum deliberately made at the time,

A careful examination of the evidence in the record, does not enable us to say that injustice has been done to the defendant.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs. •