Belt v. Morris

1934 OK 391, 34 P.2d 581, 168 Okla. 528, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 29, 1934
Docket22755
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1934 OK 391 (Belt v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belt v. Morris, 1934 OK 391, 34 P.2d 581, 168 Okla. 528, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 34 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Ottawa county, Olcla., granting defendant’s petition for new trial on the grounds of newly discovered evidence. The parties occupy the same rel *529 ative position in this court as they occupied in the trial court, and will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendant. The action was commenced by the filing- of plaintiff’s petition in the nature of ejectment. The petition was filed in February, 1922. The cause was tried to a jury on November 1, 1922, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for possession of 20 acres of land and for $40 damages, all as prayed by plaintiff. The real estate involved was a portion of the allotment of Mitchell Sguirrell, deceased, a full-blood Cherokee Indian. The plaintiff, Mary Belt, is the daughter of one Leguake Kingfisher, and the issue was whether or not Mitchell Sguirrell and Leguake Kingfisher were common-law man and wife, and whether Mitchell Sguirrell acknowledged plaintiff as his child. The only evidence introduced at the trial was that of four witnesses in the form of depositions, and the oral testimony of a deputy court clerk as to certain records. The defendant was present by attorney both at the taking of depositions and at the trial of the cause, and cross-examined the witnesses.

After the trial and judgment rendered the defendant appealed to this court, which appeal was on September 6, 1923, dismissed. Within’ one year from the rendition of judgment the defendant filed his petition for a new trial upon the grounds of newly discovered evidence. This petition was supported by the affidavits and depositions of some three or four witnesses whose testimony related to the pedigree of Mary Belt, the plaintiff, and related to the relationship which existed between Lequake Kingfisher and Mitchell Squirrell during their lifetime. There was unusual delay in passing upon the defendant’s petition for a new trial, occasioned in part at least by the disqualification of one' trial judge and the intervening death of another. The petition was passed upon by the trial court on the 30th day of March, 1931, and was sustained and a new trial granted to the defendant. It is the trial court’s action in sustaining such petition for new trial upon the grounds of new-’ ly discovered evidence of which plaintiff here complains.

One of the grounds urged for reversal of the action of the trial court is that the defendant failed to show proper diligence before the trial of the cause in the discovery of the evidence offered, and in this connection it Is urged further that the evidence so offered as grounds for new trial is not such as would probably require a different verdict or decision from that rendered upon the trial. This court in Tickers v. Phillip Carey Co., 49 Okla. 231, 151 P. 1023, announced the following rules applicable to such motions.

“A rule of wide recognition regarding the granting of new trials on the ground of ‘newly discovered evidence’ exacts that the evidence fulfill the following requirements: (1) It .must be such as will probably change the result if a new trial be granted; (2) it must have been discovered since the trial; (3) it must be such as could not have been discovered before the trial by the exercise of due diligence; (4) it must be material to the issue; (5) it must not be merely cumulative to the former evidence; (6) it must not be to merely impeach or contradict the former evidence.
“Where the newly discovered evidence tends only to strengthen other evidence of the same kind to the same point, and is impeaching in its character, and is not such as would, probably change the result if a new trial were granted, it is error-, calling for a reversal, for the trial court to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant the moving party a new trial.”

The Tickers Case, supra, is one of the comparatively early decisions of this court, and deals ably and somewhat exhaustively with the law applicable to the issues raised here; in. Therein the court points out that applications for new trial based upon newly discovered evidence are not favored in law, and are regarded with suspicion and should be examined with caution. The court in that case, and numerous other decisions of this court, adhered to the rule that one is not entitled to a new trial upon a showing of newly discovered evidence, unless it is apparent the original judgment rendered was manifestly unfair and unjust, and that such newly discovered evidence would in all probability correct the probable apparent or manifest error of the original judgment. The rule is well stated in 46 C. J. 261, paragraph 234, as follows:

“The newly discovered evidence must be material or important to the moving party; And newly discovered evidence on or relating to a matter collateral to the issues is seldom ground for a new trial. It has been held not sufficient that the new evidence, had it been offered on the trial, might have changed the verdict, and that the legitimate effect of the newly discovered evidence must be such as to require a different verdict, and not merely such as might induce a jury to give a different verdict. * * * According to the weight of authority, it must be sufficiently important to make it probable that a different verdict will be returned on another *530 trial. A new trial may be denied where, if all the newly discovered evidence had been offered and received at the trial, the findings of the trial court would still have sufficient support in the evidence. According to some authorities, the new evidence must be of a decisive or conclusive character or such as to render a different result reasonably certain as to some material matter, - although not necessarily of the whole case. Since probability of a different result is all that is usually required, a new trial will be granted where the court is convinced that the new evidence will probably result in a different verdict. A new trial will be granted more readily where the verdict appears to be against the weight of the evidence or where it is quite doubtful under the evidence, or where the verdict is unmistakably wrong.
“It is not imperative that a new trial be granted, even though the evidence is newly discovered and, if presented to a jury, would justify a different verdict.”

Such rule is supported by numerous authoritieSj a number of them being decisions of this court.

The court in the Tickers Case, supra, in discussing the objects to be accomplished and the considerations of the court in granting a new trial upon this ground, used the following language:

“There should be a reluctance in courts to disturb the verdicts of juries, unless in cases where it is manifest that either the law has been perverted, or mistaken, or that, the losing party has not had a full and impartial hearing. In deciding motions or petitions for new trials on account of newly discovered evidence, courts have found it necessary to apply some stringent rules to prevent an almost endless mischief which a different course would produce. The reasons for this are obvious. As trial by jury is largely resorted to in the settlement of action at law, there is a clear policy to protect such trials from the imputation of injustice, and preserve for it the good opinion of those whose ■dearest rights may be subject to its decision.

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 391, 34 P.2d 581, 168 Okla. 528, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belt-v-morris-okla-1934.