26 Tex. 372 | Tex. | 1862
Two grounds are relied on for reversing the judgment—1st. That the court improperly'admitted the patent in evidence without proof of the assignment of the certificate on which it issued. 2d. The refusal of the court to grant a new trial.
Upon the first point we think the ruling of the court was manifestly correct. The law authorized the commissioner of the land office to issue the patent to the assignee, upon his presenting a sufficient and properly authenticated chain of transfer from the original grantee down to himself. (O. &. W. Dig., art. 1274.) The commissioner was made the judge of the sufficiency of the transfer to enable him to pass the title from the State to the assignee of the certificate. As between the State and the patentee, the patent was certainly evidence of title in the latter. The decision of the commissioner would not be conclusive against the grantee, or any assignor of the certificate, of the genuineness of the assignment; but as between the patentee and strangers, the patent is at least prima facie evidence that the title is ifi the patentee, and relieves him of the necessity of proving the assignment in an action of trespass to try title against a party who does, not claim under the certificate on which the patent'issued.
The remaining question is not so free from difficulty. In deciding upon motions for new trials on the ground of newly discovered evidence, courts have found it necessary to lay down stringent rules, and to scrutinize such applications with much strictness, to prevent the mischiefs which would otherwise be produced. The losing party too often finds it an easy matter to obtain nerv evidence to supply former deficiencies. It is easy to claim the discovery of new evidence, when the claim is really unfounded, or the result of negligence in the first preparation; and it would
We do not regal’d it as liable to the objection that it is cumulative evidence. It is not proposed to multiply witnesses to any distinct fact or circumstance testified to by witnesses upon the trial; but it brings to light a new and independent truth, which the testimony upon the trial sought, but in vain, to prove. It is analogous to the case put by the court in Waller v. Graves, (20 Conn., 303,) where it was said—“ Suppose a question on trial be, whether the note of a deceased person has been jbaid, and witnesses have been introduced, testifying to various facts conducing to prove such payment; and after a verdict for the plaintiff, the executor should discover a receipt or discharge in full, or had discovered that he could prove the deliberate confession of the plaintiff of the payment of the note—there could be no question in such a case that
We think the present a stronger case for the granting of a new trial than the case cited by counsel from 2 Wash. C. C. R., 411, where Judge Washington granted a new trial, and many other adjudged cases wdiich might be cited, of the granting of new trials upon newly discovered evidence, (1 Gra. on N. T., 490, etseq.; 3 lb., ch. 12.) The new evidence relates to the proof of a fact by means so dissimilar from that used upon the trial, as to afford no ground for treating it as cumulative merely of the evidence upon the trial. It is of so decisive a nature, so material to the just decision of the matter in controversy, that the defendant ought not to be denied the right to have it submitted to the consideration of the jury, unless his failure heretofore has been in consequence of his own fault, and we cannot perceive that it is. It is desirable that there should be an end of litigation with as little delay and expense as possible consistently with the great end of litigation, a correct decision of causes according to their real merits; but it should always be sought in subordination to the great end to be attained. Though there had been two trials, this was the only application for a new trial on the part of the defendant; he had been successful upon the first trial. We think a new trial ought to have been granted. And although we have felt some hesitancy-in pronouncing the refusal of it to be error, yet when we consider the nature of the controversy, and of the new evidence, and the very material bearing it may have upon the just decision of the case, we are constrained to conclude that the refusal of the application was the denial of a right to which the defendant was entitled according to established rules of law governing such applications, and consequently that it must be regarded as error, for which the judgment will be reversed.
Another question is suggested by the examination of the record, to which, as the case will be remanded for a new trial, it is thought proper to call the attention of the parties and their counsel. The original grants of labors one and two, call for the “national road” as the boundary between them. The plaintiff claims that the space designated for' the road remained vacant public land after the
Reversed and remanded.