55 Neb. 75 | Neb. | 1898
June 25, 1892, on the complaint of Delia A. Callahan, George F. Munro was by the district court of Douglas county adjudged to be the father of the former’s illegitimate child. From this judgment Munro prosecuted a proceeding in error to this court, which affirmed the judgment of the district court. (Munro v. Callahan, 41 Neb. 849.) Subsequently, on December 6, 1894, Munro filed a petition in the district court of Douglas county against Callahan reciting the record and proceedings of the former suit and alleging, among other things, that Callahan had procured said judgment by committing willful and corrupt perjury on the trial'of that case, and prayed the court to set such judgment aside; and to grant him, Munro, a new trial. The district court, on hearing the action, set aside the former judgment and granted Munro a new trial, from which order Callahan has appealed. The bill of exceptions containing the evidence offered on the trial of this case in the district court has been quashed, and the sole question for our determination is Avhether the pleadings in this case will support the decree gendered therein, . .
2. Assuming that tbe general finding of tbe district court includes tbe finding that tbe judgment obtained by Miss Callahan against Munro was procured by her willful perjury, is tbe petition in that respect sufficient to support tbe finding? Is it good against a demurrer? When tbe nature of tbe case in which that judgment is rendered is considered, when it is remembered that tbe only issue in that case was whether Munro was guilty of being tbe father of Callahan’s illegitimate child, that without her positive and unequivocal testimony that be was her child’s father, she could not have procured tbe judgment she did, and that she, and she alone, could positively and certainly know who was the father of her child, we think tbe petition sufficient. In other words, from the very nature of the case, a finding that one is the
The cases are not numerous in which a judgment has been vacated and the defeated party granted a new trial on the ground that the judgment was obtained -by the perjury of the successful party; but this is perhaps because, from the very nature of the case, the existence of the fraud or perjury could not be established otherwise than by trying anew the issue tried and determined in the action in which the new trial is sought; and neither
In Laithe v. McDonald, 12 Kan. 340, Laithe brought an action against McDonald for a failure to deliver goods which he charged were received by McDonald as a common carrier and lost through his negligence. McDonald answered by a general denial and did not appear further in the case. On the trial Laithe willfully, corruptly, and falsely swore that McDonald was a common carrier; had received the goods in that capacity and failed to deliver them; and that they were worth something over |5,000, for which sum he obtained a judgment. The supreme court of Kansas affirmed a judgment of the district court vacating the judgment in the law action on the ground that Laithe obtained it by fraud, the fraud consisting of his perjury. The court held that a defendant was not entitled to have a judgment vacated on account of any innocent mistake or want of recollection on the part of the plaintiff or his witnesses, nor even on account of the perjury of other witnesses in the case, but said that no party was bound to anticipate or suppose that the other party would commit willful and corrupt perjury, and that no party was bound to the exercise of extraordinary diligence in preparing to meet such perjury. It will be observed that in the case cited the judgment rested entirely upon the perjured testimony of Laithe, just as, in the case at bar, the judgment that Munro was the father of Callahan’s illegitimate child depended entirely for support upon Callahan’s evidence that he was the father of her child.
In Graver v. Faurot, 76 Fed. Rep. 257, the complainant brought a suit in equity, in a state court, in which he charged two defendants with fraudulently inducing him to purchase some worthless shares of corporate stock, and, in accordance with the old chancery practice, he
Our conclusion therefore is that the petition charges that Miss Callahan procured a judgment determining that Munro was the father of her illegitimate child; that she obtained such judgment by her own false and perjured testimony, and that this was a fraud practiced by her in and about the trial; and, from the nature of the case, the judgment rests solely upon her evidence and the petition sustains the decree of the district court vacating that judgment, and snch decree is accordingly
AFFIRMED.