66 Ind. App. 212 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1917
Lead Opinion
Appellant filed bis complaint in tbe court below on April 5, 1913, for a new trial after term, under §589 Burns 1914, §563 R. S. 1881. Appellee filed a demurrer thereto for want. of facts, wbicb was sustained. Appellant refused to plead further, and judgment was thereupon rendered against
If a question arose -on the trial as to what money Ada M. Scott received in the years 1894, 1895, and 1896, as bearing on the ownership of the moneys involved in such action, it is fair to presume that such question should have been anticipated by appellant in making preparation for the trial. Reasonable diligence would have led to an inquiry as to what money she had earned during such time. An investigation of such fact would have disclosed that she-had, or had not, worked at said woolen mills during such time. If it disclosed that she had not worked there during such time, appellant would have been in possession of such fact at the time of the trial, and would have known at once that the witness Berner was mistaken in his testimony. This would have enabled him, if not during the trial, at least before the close of the term, or within the time in which a motion for a new trial could have been filed, to have made inquiry at such woolen mills as to such facts, called the witness’s attention to the error in his testimony, secured a correction thereof, and thus availed himself of such correction without resort to the remedy provided by this extraordinary procedure. At least some such attempt could have been made and such fact would have served as some evidence of diligence. This is only the suggestion of a single act of diligence, but others on reflection will readily occur. However, no act of diligence whatever is alleged in the complaint, but appellant has been content to rest his cause in this regard on the bare allegation that he did not know at the time of entering on the trial of the cause that any one would so testify. Under the allegations of the com
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
On Petition eoe, Rehearing.
We have caréfully considered the other questions presented in the petition for a rehearing, hut find no reason for changing the conclusion stated in the original opinion.
Petition for rehearing overruled.
Note. — Reported in 115 N. E. 956, 117 N. E. 260.