5 S.D. 233 | S.D. | 1894
In August, 1889, the appellants were partners
While the affidavits upon which were based the motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence are set out in the abstract, the question of error in the refusal of the motion on that account is not referred to in the argument of counsel on either side, and, we conclude, is not relied upon as substantial error. Without a very careful or critical examination and comparison of the statements of the affidavits with the testimony which went to the jury on the trial, it would appear that the newly discovered evidence was simply additional or cumulative, upon a question upon which both sides offered .evidence upon the trial. The evidence referred to in the affidavits would doubtless have tended to discredit some of the statements of the principle witness for the plaintiffs. These statements did not go directly to any element of the cause of the action. Except under unusual circumstances, a new trial will not be granted ori the ground of newly discovered evidence which goes only to discredit or impeach a witness (16 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 572, and cases cited), nor newly-discovered evidence which is merely cumulative (Id. p. 575).
No exceptions were taken to the charge of the court, and it must be treated as the law applicable to this case. The
The evidence tended to show that the storm which caused the damage came up between 9 and 10 o’clock in the evening, and was of unusual violence. Allowing that the storm itself was of such a character as to constitute an ‘ ‘irresistible superhuman force,” the question still remains, as a question of fact, whether the storm would have caused the injury if the defendants had used reasonable diligence, either in preliminary pre cautions or in caring for the goods during the storm. Defendants' negligence, in either respect, directly contributing to the injury, would have left them liable under the charge of the court. It was in evidence that water had once before flooded this basement on the occasion of a violent rain.- Defendants introduced testimony showing what precautions had been taken by them to provide against a recurrence of such casualty. Were they reasonably sufficient to provide against storms, unusual, but still such as defendants knew sometimes did, and were liable to, occur? It was in evidence that defendants knew in what room these goods were, and that the rain .was coming down “in torrents,” that the water and mud ran in through the window and damaged these goods, which were on exhibition on the tables. Does the evidence show that defendants were negligent, under