45 N.J. Eq. 41 | New York Court of Chancery | 1889
This is an application for leave to file a bill of review on the-ground of newly-discovered evidence. The case has already been twice heard, first on final hearing, and afterwards it was reheard on the application of the complainant. The subject of the dispute is a sum of money which was paid into court under a decree of interpleader.
The litigation between these parties had its origin in certain transactions, which, for present purposes, may be sufficiently described as follows: The defendant, Peter Voorhees, gave his-bond to Fanny Traphagen, dated March 31st, 1881, conditioned for the payment of $4,000-on the 1st day of April, 1882, with interest. The payment of the bond was secured by mortgage, executed by the defendant and his wife, on a farm in Somerset county. Fanny Traphagen died testate on the 1st day of October, 1885. At the time of her death, the bond and mortgage were in the possession of her counsel, with her other securities. Shortly after the testatrix’s death, and Avhen the bond and mortgage were produced for appraisement, the defendant claimed that the debt Avhich they represented had been paid, and that he Avas entitled to have them surrendered to him. In support of his claim, he produced a receipt, dated April 2d, 1883, signed by the
The fundamental law on the subject of bills - of review is-Lord Bacon’s first ordinance. That ordinance reads as follows: “ No decree shall be reversed, altered or explained, being once under the great seal, but upon bill of review; and no bill of
There are authorities which seem to hold that leave should not be granted simply to let in new oral testimony as to facts which were controverted on the final hearing, and that as to these facts
But newly-discovered evidence which simply tends to impeach the character or impair the credibility of witnesses, examined on behalf of the successful litigant, has never been regarded as a sufficient ground for giving leave to file a bill of review. Livingston v. Hubbs, supra; Jenkins v. Eldredge, supra; Southard v. Russell, supra.
Another indispensable requisite is, that the evidence, on which the application is grounded, must not only be new and material, hut the applicant is bound to show that the nature, condition or .situation of the new evidence was such that he could not, by the use of reasonable diligence, have discovered it in time to have made use of it on the final hearing. In the language of Lord Eldon, in Young v. Keighly, supra: “The question always is, .in cases of this kind, not what the complainant knew, but what, .using reasonable diligence, he might have known.” There has never, so far as I can discover, been any diversity or contrariety of judicial opinion on this point. Some of the cases, showing how this doctrine has been applied and enforced, are cited in a note to section 414 of Story’s Equity Pleadings. The best résumé of the law on this subject which can, perhaps, be found, is that given by Lord Kingsdown, in pronouncing the opinion of the privy council, in Hosking v. Terry, 8 Jur. (N. S.) 975. He said: “ The party who applies for permission to file a bill of. review,
The question, whether or not the complainant is entitled to prevail in his application, must be determined by the principles above stated. The newly-discovered evidence, on which his application rests, consists of two classes: first, of what one of the •defendant’s witnesses had said respecting the receipt on which the defendant rests his claim to the surrender of the bond and mortgage, and also of an admission, by the same witness, showing bias in favor of the defendant; and, second, of what a new witness will testify respecting the receipt.
Hannah Jerolaman testified on the final hearing on the call of the defendant. The complainant says that he can now prove, by a witness by the name of Melick, that Hannah has said, since the final hearing, that no such paper as that produced by the -defendant was executed by the testatrix, and that the same was a fraud, and also that Hannah said, in the same conversation, that the defendant had loaned her money, and would loan her money when no one else would, and that she did not intend to go back ■on him. And also that Hannah, on another occasion, said to two other persons, that the receipt held by the defendant was a put up job and a fraud. As I understand the law regulating the competency and admissibility of evidence, no part of this new evidence would have been admitted, even if offered, on the final hearing of the case, except, possibly, that part of it. which tends to show bias; and as to that, the rule is settled. Evidence merely tending to show bias, or simply going to the credit of a wituess, is not sufficient as the basis of a bill of review. Hannah •Jerolaman gave no evidence whatever respecting the receipt. So far as appears, she knew nothing at all about either its origin or history. She did not testify that she had ever even seen it. She made but two allusions to it in her evidence; she said she knew
The complainant, in the second place, says that he can prove by Ann Hoffman that no paper or receipt, by which the testatrix gave or promised to give the bond and mortgage in question, or the principal thereof, to the defendant, was executed by the testatrix at the time the receipt bears date, and that, at the time the receipt bears date, the testatrix was not at all friendly with the defendant. Whether this evidence is competent, material or relevant, indeed, whether it is legal evidence or not, depends entirely upon the source from which the witness derived her knowledge. That is not disclosed. If the witness derived her knowledge from the testatrix, by a communication made to her by the testatrix, when the defendant was absent, such knowledge, it is clear, would not be evidence. And such would be the case if the knowledge was communicated to the witness by any person except the defendant himself. But if the fact is that the witness was present when the receipt was signed, and saw it and read it, and knows that since it was signed it has been altered from a receipt for $240 to $4,240, her knowledge would not only be competent as evidence, but it would, in all probability, be also decisive of the present application. Nothing of that kind, however, is either alleged or sworn to. The burden is on the complainant. To induce the court to give him permission to pursue the defendant with further litigation he is .bound to show, clearly and plainly, that he has newly-discovered competent evidence of a
The complainant’s case, in another respect, is, in my judgment, fatally defective. The complainant does not show, by a statement of facts or circumstances, that he could not, by the use of reasonable diligence, have discovered the new matter in time to have made use of it on the final hearing. It is true, he declares, both in his petition and .affidavit, that that is the fact, but his statement in that regard is merely his conclusion, or opinion. He ’ gives no facts. His opinion is not evidence. The applicant, in such a case, must set forth the facts and circumstances, so that the court may judge for itself whether or not reasonable diligence has been used. Simply stating his conclusion or judgment is not evident e, and amounts to nothing at all. The cases are uniform on this subject. Dexter v. Arnold, supra; Massie v. Graham, supra; Jenkins v. Eldredge, supra; Long v. Granberry, supra; Young v. Keighly, supra; Rubber Co. v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. 805.
The application must be denied, with costs.