21 N.Y.S. 699 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This motion is opposed upon the part of the plaintiff upon the ground that there are.certain rules governing the disposition of motions of this kind which must be complied with in order to entitle a party to relief; and that the defendant in this action has not complied with these requirements. It is undoubtedly true that in a large number of cases certain features have been referred to as necessary to be present upon motions of this kind, in order that relief might be granted. But it will be found upon an investigation of those cases, and of the principles upon which they were founded," that the peculiarities of each case necessarily .varied the rules which upon this application are claimed to be invariable, and that there is no absolute criterion which can be held to govern in all cases, and the peculiarities of each must determine as to whether or not the evidence claimed to be newly discovered is of such a character as calls upon the court to set aside the judgment, and allow the defeated party an opportunity to introduce the same before a jury. In the case .of Dillingham v. Flack, (Sup.) 17 N. Y. Supp. 867, the motion was denied because there was no newly-discovered evidence. and that the principal ground on which a new trial was asked was to allow witnesses already sworn to revise their testimony, because, upon reflection'and. consideration, and talking with other people, they had come to the conclusion that they were mistaken somewhat in the se-' quence of events, and upon the further ground that there was no evidence but that the newly-discovered evidence was all within the reach of the plaintiff at the time of the trial, and could have been procured. The fact that the rules alleged to govern applications of this kind are not invariable was illustrated, notably, in the cases of Clegg v. Union, 51 Hun, 232, 4 N. Y. Supp. 280, and Silver Plate Co. v. Barclay, 48 Hun, 54, and also in the case of Sistare v. Olcott, (Sup.) 5 N. Y. Supp. 114, in all of which cases it was held, as" a sufficient ground .for a new trial, that the newly-discovered evidence would probably, upon a new trial, bring about a result favorable to the party making the application; and that this conclusion must necessarily be arrived at by considering the nature of the evidence by which the successful party has established either his claim or defense, and the nature of the newly-discovered evidence.
Now, in the case at bar, what is the plaintiff’s claim, which he has attempted to establish almost solely by his own evidence? It is that •some time prior to May, 1881, be had a conversation with his uncle, George Caulfield, who told'him that the defendant had applied to him (Caulfield) to borrow money, and-that he had advised the defendant to apply to the plaintiff, and that he advised 'the plaintiff to loan the
The only corroboration offered by the plaintiff to this extraordinary story was that of the witness Barnes, who testified that he was present, at the time the plaintiff gave to the defendant the $5,000, upon which
Now, in view of the extraordinary claim of this plaintiff; the fact of the secrecy attending all these loans; that he has not a scrap of paper or a single particle of evidence of this indebtedness, nor a single witness who can be called credible, to support his extraordinary story; that he gave no credible explanation as to the manner in which he got this money, claiming, on the one hand, to be in receipt of an income of $6,-000 a month from a mythical business, and on the other that he was-influenced to loan this money because of something good the defendant •might put him in,—it seems to us that evidence tending to show that this remarkable claim had no foundation in fact ought not to be shut out by any court. It is true it is claimed that some of the witnesses offered on defendant’s behalf are in the lottery business, and are therefore to be discredited. But that is a question for the jury. They are certainly no more engaged in the lottery business than the plaintiff himself was during the time he was representing these combined lottery schemes at 599 Broadway; and . the idea that it was because of some compunctions of conscience, and because he found out that lotteries were illegal, that he relinquished this agency, is scarcely worthy of a moment’s discussion. If there had been a loan of money to the defendant to the large amount testified to by the plaintiff, it is absolutely incredible that he should have nothing whatever to show to support it; and the very fact of the secrecy attending the alleged transaction, as an excuse for the failure to produce the papers which would ordinarily attend a transaction of this description, stamps the whole alleged loan with suspicion, to say the least. Under these circumstances, with this re