Opinion
No. 4369.
Argued February 1, 1955.
Decided February 25, 1955.
In an action for personal injuries resulting to the plaintiff while tobogganing on defendant's premises in the nighttime during a stay as guest at defendant's inn, testimony of witnesses as to the conversations they overheard relative to permission to toboggan that night between the defendant and the plaintiff or in the latter's presence was not hearsay but bore directly on the material issues of invitation and contributory negligence and properly admitted.
ACTIONS OF CASE, brought by Arnold A. Goodwin, individually and as father and next friend of his son Reade, to recover for consequential damages and for personal injuries to said Reade resulting from an accident on a ski slope on premises of the defendants in Waterville.
Trial by jury with a view resulted in verdicts for the defendants.
During the course of the trial plaintiffs excepted to witnesses Marr and Bartlett being allowed to testify to statements of the defendant Ralph Bean pertaining to his denial of a request for permission to use a toboggan on the night in question, the details of which will appear hereinafter. Plaintiffs also excepted to the denial of their motion, made at the close of all the evidence, to strike that same evidence, to the denial of their request that the Court instruct the jury to disregard it and to the denial of their motion, to set aside the verdicts because this evidence "unquestionably strongly influenced the jury in reaching its verdict, and deprived the plaintiff of a fair trial."
These exceptions and those of the, defendants to the denial of their motions for nonsuits and directed verdicts were reserved and transferred by Wheeler, C. J.
Sulloway, Jones, Hollis Godfrey and Irving H. Soden (Mr. Soden orally), for the plaintiffs.
Sheehan, Phinney Bass, Robert A. Jones and Maynard Batchelder (Mr. Phinney orally), for the defendants.
Reade Goodwin, 15 years of age at the time, sustained serious personal injuries when a toboggan on which he and two other boys were riding, on a slope to the rear and east of the inn operated by the defendants, went into a hole at the foot of the slope at about its southwest corner. Plaintiff accompanied by four high school friends had arrived at the inn as guest for a weekend of winter sports at about 10 P.M. on February 1. The accident happened about midnight.
An important issue in the case is whether the accident happened part of defendants' premises which they should have foreseen that the plaintiff as an invitee would understand was for his use. Holmes v. Stores, 95 N.H. 478, 481; Rau v. Stores, 97 N.H. 490, 495. On this issue of the scope of the invitation Reade testified that before he and his friend Elliott went out tobogganing for a second time that night before the accident the following took place. "First I asked him [Ralph Bean] if it was all right if we went out tobogganing, and he said `yes, but don't ski.' Then we said, `Well, we'd like the lights put on' and he said `All right,' and they were put on."
When Bean was asked if he remembered this conversation he said that he did not, also that he did not deny what Reade and Elliott (who corroborated Reade's testimony) said was true but that he did not remember.
Marr testified, over plaintiffs' objection, that before the accident two of the boys, but he is not sure if Reade was one of them, talked with Bean and one of them asked the defendant "if they could use the toboggan, and he [Bean] said `Definitely, no. It's too late.'" Another witness named Bartlett testified, also over objection, that before the accident a young fellow came through the door to the ski room where she was, "inquiring for the use of a toboggan" and "he [Bean] said they couldn't take the toboggan out at that hour."
What if any conversation took place between Reade and Bean relative to permission to toboggan pertained to major issues under the substantive law of the case, that is, invitation and contributory negligence. If a bystander who heard the conversation testifies to it his testimony is not hearsay because he is giving the facts directly upon his own credit. His testimony would be hearsay only if he were giving an account of what another told him did transpire and was offering it to evidence the truth of the other's report. Caplan v. Caplan, 83 N.H. 318, 325; 5 Wig. Ev. (3rd ed.), s. 1361; McCormick, Evidence, 462.
On the evidence it could be found that the conversations testified to by Marr and Bartlett took place between Bean and Reade or in the latter's presence. The record shows that with the exception of a dishwasher employed there, the only high school age boys at the inn that evening were the five in Reade's party. Reade and Elliott testified directly to having or being present at a conversation with Bean relative to the use of a toboggan while the other three, also witnesses at the trial, made no mention of such a conversation. Marr testified that the conversation he heard was in the lobby and was between Bean and two boys in ski clothes. They were boys in Reade's group but he is not sure whether Reade was one of them. Miss Bartlett, who was in the ski room which opened immediately off the lobby, did not identify the party with whom Bean conversed except to say that "A young fellow came through the door from the outside, the door which leads out onto the back porch and the skating rink, inquiring for the use of a toboggan." Since there was evidence from which it could be found that the conversation took place in Reade's presence, evidence concerning it was properly admitted and it was for the jury to say on all the evidence whether permission to toboggan was given. See Sherburne v. Brown, 43 N.H. 80.
Since there was a verdict for the defendants there is no occasion to consider their exceptions to the denial of their motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict.
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.