14 Mo. App. 60 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action on an account, commenced before a justice of the peace and tried anew in the Circuit Court. The evidence was quite conflicting, so much so as to lead to an unavoidable inference that some of the witnesses were guilty of perjury. The testimony of the plaintiff, Mrs. Fendler, and her witnesses, was sufficient to support the verdict which the jury rendered in her favor. The testimony of the defendant and his witnesses went equally to show that he owed her nothing. The court gave all the instructions which were asked by either party, and these instructions appear to have put the case to the jury in a manner free from objection.
The substantial ground on which a new trial is sought is, that during a recess of the court, while the cause was on trial, some of the jurors, who had remained in the courtroom, “ did converse with and listen to the statements of the witnesses for the plaintiff; * * * which said witnesses were not then on oath; * * * that the statements
The affidavits of the defendant’s witnesses are to the •effect that the plaintiff and her sisters, who were witnesses in her behalf, at the time in question, used loud, boisterous and insolent language towards the defendant and his witnesses, who had remained in the court-room, accusing them of having sworn falsely. The counter-affidavits of the plaintiff and ber witnesses tend to show that some warm words passed between the respective parties and witnesses, •or some of them, as to why they had appeared and testified against each other, as they had done. None of these affidavits show that any statements, in the nature of evidence, were made in the hearing of the jurors, which would have, had a tendency to influence them one way or the other.
The learned judge who had heard these witnesses at the trial, who knew the bailiff who had charge of the courtroom, and who had better opportunities than we have of •coming to a sound conclusion as to the value of their statements, did not deem the affidavits a sufficient ground for a new trial. The rule of the law is, that the granting of new
The judgment is accordingly affirmed.