64 Neb. 610 | Neb. | 1902
This is a proceeding in error from the judgment of the district court for Gage county granting a new trial at a term subsequent to the rendition of the judgment, on account of newly-discovered evidence, in an action wherein John S. Atherton is plaintiff and the German National Bank et al. are defendants. The facts necessary to an understanding of the questions presented by the record are substantially as follows: On February 11, 1893, the German National Bank recovered a judgment in the district court of Gage county against O. L. Schell for $2,636, which judgment was duly entered upon the court journal. At that date the said Schell was the owner in fee of lots 11
The newly-discovered evidence which forms the basis of the plaintiff’s application for a new trial, was evidence
It is urged by counsel for the defendants that certain admissions made by the attorney for the plaintiff upon the first trial are binding.and conclusive upon plaintiff throughout all stages of the case, and that he is precluded from denying the truthfulness of such admissions thus solemnly made. Upon the first trial counsel for plaintiff admitted, and the admission became a part of the record, that the bank recovered a judgment against Schell on February 11, 1893, for $2,636, and that said judgment was entered of record on said day in the office of the clerk of the district court of Gage county, and properly journalized ¿ that the date and amount of said judgment and the
It is also argued that the entry of this judgment upon
It is next urged that there is not sufficient showing that the newly-discovered' evidence might not have been produced upon the trial by'the exercise of diligence on the part of plaintiff and his counsel. An examination of the record convinces us that there is not such a lack of diligence shown as would warrant the court in denying a new trial upon that ground. It is a well-settled rule that in cases of this kind the determination of the district court will rarely be interfered with. In Smith v. Groves, 24 Nebr., 545, it is said that “diligence, or the want of it, in discovering testimony in a particular case, depends in so great a degree upon the various circumstances concerning the parties, and the conduct of the cause, which are peculiarly within the knowledge of the trial court, that its determination on the matter of granting a new trial, made in view of them, will rarely be disturbed.” In the brief of counsel for the defendants other questions are discussed, but they are bottomed upon the assumption that the admissions of the plaintiff upon the first trial are conclusive upon his rights. As we have considered this question, no useful purpose will be subserved in answering the other objections. We have gone over the testimony, and are clearly of the opinion that the plaintiff was not guilty of laches in failure to set up as a defense upon the first trial the facts now urged as a ground for a new trial:
There was no error in granting the plaintiff a new trial, and we therefore recommend that the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.