It appears from tbe complaint in this case that on tbe 14th of January, 1893, tbe defendants Newton and Ezra Farr executed and delivered to tbe plaintiff a promissory note in tbe sum of $900, and at the same time Newton Farr and bis wife,. Martha D. Farr, executed and acknowledged a mortgage on certain real property as security for the note. When this action was brought by the plaintiff to foreclose the mortgage, the defendant Lorin Farr set up in his answer, as matter of defense, that on the 16th day of February, 1893, Newton Farr executed and delivered to him a note for $3,000, and secured it by mortgage on the same property as that described in the complaint, and that, the mortgage was recorded on the following day. He also averred that the plaintiff’s mortgage was not recorded, and that he had neither actual .nor constructive notice of a prior mortgage. At the trial a decree of foreclosure was made, and judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff, and this action of the court is now challenged on appeal.
The decisive question in this case, it being conceded that respondent’s mortgage was not recorded, is whether the appellant, at or before tbe time of taking his mortgage, had actual notice of the existence of the prior unrecorded mortgage. Counsel for the appellant contend that the fifth finding of fact, wherein the court found that the appellant had such notice of the prior mortgage, and of tbe fact of its being a lien on tbe property therein described, is not supported by the evidence. This being an action in equity, the supreme court is empowered (under section 9, art. 8, of the constitution, which provides,
It is also insisted that the court erred in refusing a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. Three affidavits of Lorin, Ezra, and Enoch Farr appear in the record, and are relied upon to support this contention. The alleged new evidence is contained in the affidavits of Ezra and Enoch Farr. It is merely cumulative, and it does not very satisfactorily appear from Lorin Farr’s affidavit why this evidence could not, by the use of reasonable diligence, have been discovered and produced at the trial, — especially that of Ezra Farr, who