Appellant rests her appeal on the failure of the court to grant her motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, and the failure to give at her request the affirmative charge.
The generally accepted rules, obtaining in many jurisdictions, as to the granting of a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, are: (1) The newly discovered evidence must he such as could not, with reasonable diligence, have been discovered in time to be produced at the trial; (2) it must be such as to render probable a different result on the retrial of the case.
To these requirements, and as corollaries thereto, the courts have added certain others: (a) That the newly discovered evidence must be material and competent to the issue of fact originally tried; (b) that it must be not merely impeaching evidence; (c) that it must not be merely cumulative.
Whether the “cumulative evidence” is additional evidence of the same kind and to the same point as that given on the original trial, or is distinct and independent evidence of a different character, tending to establish the same ground of claim or defense, was carefully considered in Layman v. Minneapolis St. Ry. Co.,
It was competent and material testimony, presented to the court in support of the motion for a new trial as newly discovered evi *616 dence, that Wm. H. Harris, a salesman of plaintiff’s knew of no such denial of credit to Fries by plaintiff’s manager, and that Mr. Griswold, as bookkeeper of the plaintiff, made the ledger entry, A-319, referred to by the witness, and that said Griswold wonld swear that he did not write the name of Mrs. R. H. Fries on said ledger as it appears on the margin thereof, and did not know when it was so written. It was further competent to show that said bookkeeper did not know of the private business custom testified to by witness Heins as obtaining in the keeping of the plaintiff’s hooks of the Birmingham branch; that no such custom did obtain or was followed by bim as sucb bookkeeper, but that be opened an account on plaintiff’s books in the name of any person purchasing on credit, with an appropriate number on the ledger, and that he continued such account in such name and number as to all subsequent purchases made by such person; and that where members of the same family became purchasers they had different accounts and number's, just as other purchasers buying ou credit in said business, the name of each such purchaser being placed at the top of the page of his account on plaintiff’s ledger. While the motion for a new trial was not, by its terms, rested on the affidavit of the former bookkeeper, Griswold, but was on that of Wm. H. Harris as to the denial of credit vel non to Fries, yet the motion was supported by Griswold’s affidavit, and submission was had on the motion supported by the several affidavits of R. H. Fries, Wm. JL Harris, and E. P. Griswold and the exhibits thereto.
The motion for a new trial wás overruled by the trial court, and this appeal was taken from the judgment or order overruling the motion. When the newly discovered evidence thus presented in support of the motion is considered in connection with plaintiff’s testimony as to its private business custom as to credit and with the account exhibited on tbe leaf of its loose leaf ledger, tbe original of wbicb was duly certified to Ibis court, we are impressed with tbe necessity of resubmission of the full facts to another jury for trial. There was no objection to the introduction in evidence under section 4003 of the Code, of the original leaf containing the Fries account from plaintiff’s loose leaf ledger. Shepherd v. Butcher Tool & Hardware Co.,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
