205 N.W. 663 | S.D. | 1925
Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title to a quarter section of land in Jackson county, S. D. The complaint alleges that plaintiff is the owner in fee of the said tract; that it is his homestead; that the defendant claims, interest in the land by reason of a purported deed made by the plaintiff and his wife to the defendant; that the deed is without consideration; that it was never in fact executed and delivered by the plaintiff and his wife; that, if it contains the signature of plaintiff and wife, it was executed in blank and before a description of the land was inserted, and the description was inserted thereafter without any authority, written or otherwise, from the plaintiff; that, if it was procured, it was under the representation that it was to be given only as collateral to divide a loan already existing and not intended as a deed or mortgage; that the defendant represented the in
The answer is a general denial with a counterclaim alleging the deed was intended as security for a debt and in effect a mortgage, and asks a foreclosure. While the action is one in chancery, the issue of fact was tried to a jury, and in a special verdict the jury found that the plaintiff and his wife did not sign the instrument. Defendant went to' trial without having in its possession the original deed; the proof of the instrument being made by using the record of the deed in the register of deeds office. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law adopting the jury’s finding, and entered judgment in favor of' plaintiff. Defendant moved for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence; the newly discovered' evidence being the original deed. The motion for new trial was supported by affidavits showing that the defendant had made diligent search for the original instrument prior to the trial, having searched all files of the defendant company and of the Cottonwood State Bank where the company had its principal office, but were unable to find the original deed. That, after the trial of the case, and after the plaintiff had testified that he had not placed his signature-upon the instrument, defendant made further search for the said deed, but was unable to find it in any of the files of the company or of the said bank, but finally, in a search extending over several days, the original deed was found in a basement of the bank building containing old and discarded files of the bank and of the company. The court sustained the motion, set aside the judgment and findings of the court, and granted a new trial, and, from this order, plaintiff appeals. In this state a new trial may be granted on— “newly discovered evidence, material to the party making the application, which he could not, with, reasonable diligence, have discovered and produced at the trial.” Subdivision 4, § 2555, R. C. 1919.
Trial courts have a wide discretion in granting new trials, and. the exercise of such discretion will not be disturbed except in case of manifest abuse. Longley v. Daly, 1 S. D. 257,
The record discloses that plaintiff in his testimony denied signing the deed. The jury in its special verdict found the deed had not been signed by plaintiff and his wife. The complaint does not squarely present this issue. It does not allege that plaintiff did not sign the deed; it alleges the deed “was never in fact executed and delivered by the plaintiff and his wife,” and explains why it is not operative as a deed, although! it may contain the signatures of plaintiff and his wife. It is indefinite, uncertain, and apparently inconsistent, in that it pleads that the deed was without consideration; that it was signed in blank; that it was signed before the description was inserted; that it was signed under a representation that it was to be collateral; that it was nor intended as a deed or mortgage, and not to affect the title to plaintiff’s land; and that it was procured by fraud. A man could not distinctly remember that he did not sign the deed and at the same time distinctly remember the circumstances and conversations surrounding the transaction if he did sign it. The inference to be draw-n from the complaint is that, while plaintiff does not remember signing the deed, he does remember the details of a transaction when he signed or thinks he signed an instrument which defendant now claims is a deed. On the trial he denies signing the instrument and makes no other defense against it. If he is mistaken and his signature is in fact on the deed, then there has been a miscarriage of justice. The deed was. highly material, if not essential, upon this issue. The handwriting might easily be the determining factor in the conflicting testimony. If the complaint had squarely presented this issue, diligence might have required an exhaustive search for the original instrument. As it stood, defendant was not negligent in risking trial after a diligent search through all the files where it would be likely to find the deed, believing it would have to meet only hazy and uncertain recollection on the part of plaintiff as to the signing. If the original instrument will disclose, who is telling the truth in
The order of the circuit court granting a new trial is affirmed.