Court Opinion

ID: 8505099
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:26:18.656907+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:51.095566
License: Public Domain

Woods, J.
Several objections to the verdict have come up for consideration in this case.
In the first place it is said that there is a variance between the declaration and the evidence. The evidence is that the defendant, in addition to the special undertakings for the breaking of which the action is brought, promised also to keep the plaintiff’s team that he should send for the pork. One witness stated the contract as having embraced this stipulation, while another, who was called on by the parties when they had completed the contract, to listen and bear witness to its terms, stated it as the declaration set it up, and without the special undertaking of the defendant to keep the plaintiff’s team. And this is the alleged variance.
There are two answers to this exception. The plaintiffs have brought their action against the defendant upon a contract by which — for considerations which they *298have correctly set forth, and which they were obliged correctly to set forth — the defendant was bound to sell and deliver to them a quantity of pork. They do not sue the defendant for not keeping their team. It might be shown, perhaps, that they agreed to do this, and refused, or that they agreed to do it, and did not refuse; but this is not what the plaintiffs claim damages for, and it was their right to waive the matter and omit all mention of it. Such omission is not a material one for which the defendant can defeat the action, or insist on, as impairing the identity of the contract. Favor v. Philbrick, 1 N. H. Rep. 333, and authorities there cited.
But if the variance were material, and if, under a count upon a promise to deliver pork, the plaintiffs could not prove a promise to deliver pork, if his witnesses also swear that the defendant at the same time promised, on request, to keep the plaintiffs’ team, it would be severe upon a plaintiff to hold that he must fail in his suit, if his witnesses do not recollect, or did not understand the terms of the contract alike. It is a perfectly well settled principle of the law of evidence,, that although a party shall not ordinarily impeach the character of a witness whom he has introduced, he may show, by other proof, that his witness is mistaken, and may contradict him. 1 G-reenl. Ev., sec. 443. Without that privilege few actions could be maintained upon the testimony of witnesses. The ruling of the court was correct on this head.
Exception was taken to the testimony of a witness whose deposition was used to prove a fact that was in the course of the trial admitted. Under these circumstances the court will not inquire how just the exceptions were which were urged against its reception. It would be trifling with the technicalities of the law, and wholly perverting their use, to suffer an error which cannot possibly have had an influence in procuring a verdict, to be made the occasion of setting it aside.
*299The defendant made, in the presence of the plaintiff s’ servant, an assertion, which, if true, would affect or wholly take away their right of action. The servant received the communication in silence. The defendant insists that the law interprets that silence as an admission of the truth of the assertion.
Omitting an obvious question, of the authority of the servant, by express language, to admit away his master’s rights in the circumstances of this case, it is sufficient to deny that the law interprets the silence of a party to be an admission of all that he hears. What is said in a party’s hearing may be proved, but it is the peculiar province of the jury to put a construction upon the party’s behavior at such time. They may say that he is silent because he is afraid to speak, or because he is struck dumb with amazement and despair at the audacity of the falsehood, or because he acquiesces in the thing said, as so perfectly understood between the parties as not requiring his express assent; or, in short, they may draw such inference as they think ought to be drawn from conduct that, in itself, without the aid of surrounding circumstances to explain it, is extremely equivocal.
The court correctly refused the instructions demanded by the defendant, and his exceptions must be overruled.

Judgment on the verdict.