Court Opinion

ID: 3552757
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:04:52.137163+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:24:34.472238
License: Public Domain

The offer of testimony given in a former suit against third party was put upon the ground that the heir is the real party in interest. Its admissibility is now urged upon the further ground that the present defendant is a privy of the former one. It is evident that this defendant's decedent was in no way connected with the prior litigation. If she were still alive the present claims would clearly be without foundation. It is not perceived how the facts of her death and the consequent defense by her administrator in a suit against her estate affect the situation. No rights are claimed either through or from the former defendant. Dickinson v. Lovell, 35 N.H. 9; Weir v. Allen, 51 N.H. 177; Flanders v. Greeley,64 N.H. 357.
The question of who is a party in interest has arisen when it has been sought to use the contributory fault of one to whom damages for wrongfully causing death are to be ultimately paid as a defense to the suit brought by an administrator. The holding in that case was that the interest of the beneficiary is "only an incident to the suit" and does not make him a party. Warren v. Railway, 70 N.H. 352, 362. The distributee is not the party in interest. A like conclusion has been reached where attempts have been made to use the admissions of legatees as evidence against an executor. Carpenter v. Hatch, 64 N.H. 573; Gibson v. Boston, 75 N.H. 405. The fact that an estate will descend to a party, subject to the claims upon it, does not make his admissions evidence against the administrator. Taylor v. Railway, 48 N.H. 304. See also, Carleton v. Patterson, 29 N.H. 580. All these cases turn upon the question whether there is such a relation that the nominal party can be charged with the words or acts of other, who is in fact conducting the litigation on his own behalf and is therefore to be treated as the real party.
It follows that, as the administrator is not in privity with the party who defended the former suit, and the latter is not the party in interest here, the evidence introduced in that suit was properly excluded at the trial. Morrison v. Noone, 78 N.H. 338, 341, and cases cited.
The further claim that the evidence should have been received as an admission by an agent is equally untenable. The point in controversy was the existence of the agency, and it is elementary law that this cannot be shown by the hearsay statements of the alleged agent. Bohanan v. Railroad,70 N.H. 526.
Exception overruled.
MARBLE, J. did not sit: the others concurred. *Page 509