It sufficiently appears in the moving papers that the evidence claimed to be newly discovered first came to the notice of the defendant after the trial of the action; and that it could not have been obtained for use at the trial by the exercise of reasonable diligence; and that the defendant’s attorney did exercise all diligence in the preparation for trial, by way of inquiry, to ascertain who were spectators of the occurrence which formed the subject of the inquiry at the trial. If the three witnesses whose affidavits have been produced on this motion had been present and testified at the trial, it is quite probable a different result would have been reached before the jury. It is true that in a certain sense the newly-discovered evidence is partly cumulative, but, upon reading the whole record of the trial, it would seem that the verdict of the jury resulted from the strong numerical preponderance of the
