Bledsoe v. Burleson

289 S.W. 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1926
DocketNo. 7043. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 143 (Bledsoe v. Burleson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bledsoe v. Burleson, 289 S.W. 143 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

This suit is the outgrowth of the flogging case in Williamson county, in which several of the fioggers were convicted of felonious assaults^ upon appellee, R. W. Burleson. He sued 37 defendants for damages resulting from said assault and flogging, which occurred about April 1, 1923, and charged conspiracy among all of said defendants to commit said criminal assault. Upon the trial appellee dismissed his suit as to ten of said defendants. At the close of the evidence the court gave peremptory instructions to the jury to find in favor of 15 other defendants. Upon the finding of the jury judgment was rendered in favor of appellee against the remaining defendants for the sum of 87,000 damages.

The trial court granted plaintiff’s motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. And it is from this action of said court that the 15 defendants who had an instructed verdict in their favor have appealed.

Appellants’ first contention is that said motion should not have been granted because the record shows that appellee failed to use diligence to obtain the testimony claimed to be newly discovered. This testimony which he alleges will be available to him upon another trial is that of 2 of the defendants, Frank Pyle and Frank Robbins, who had absented themselves from the county during the trial, and against whom judgment was rendered. There are statements in their affidavits to the effect that they absented themselves from the trial and from the county at the instance of one of the attorneys for appellants, and that they were furnished by him with expense money. From what source the attorney obtained such expense money is not shown, and, upon motion of appellants, all of that portion of said affidavits relative to their conversation with said attorney was stricken out by the trial court as privileged matter, and we are not concerned with it here. The causes of their absence we deem immaterial, as they had not been summoned as witnesses when the trial began, and their testimony as set forth in their affidavits was self-incriminating, and such that they could not have been compelled to give.had they been present. Nor does appellee’s motion allege that it would have been available to him on said trial had they been present.

In his motion appellee made the following allegations as to diligence:

“That the plaintiff has used all due and proper diligence to obtain the testimony of the said witnesses, in that the said witnesses are each defendants in this cause, and that up to the time of and during the trial of this cause each of the said witnesses were hostile to the plaintiff, and neither the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s attorney could with propriety approach the said witnesses with reference to ascertaining what they knew in this cause, and that *144 much of the testimony given by the said witnesses, as set out in the affidavits hereto, was entirely unknown to the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s attorneys, all of which said new testimony is material to the plaintiff’s cause of action; that, the said witnesses each being defendants, the’ plaintiff had the right to believe, and did believe, that the said defendants would be present and in attendance upon the trial of this cause, and that, after this case was called for trial, and after the plaintiff had announced ready herein, the plaintiff discovered that the said witnesses, as defendants, were not present, and were not in attendance upon the trial of this cause, and that thereupon the plaintiff caused subpcenaes to be issued for each of the said witnesses, and caused the same to be placed in the hands of the sheriff of this county, and that the sheriff of this county used all due and proper diligence to execute the said subpcenaes, and thus procure the attendance of the said witnesses; that, after making due diligence to serve the said subpoenas, the sheriff of this county reported that the said witnesses were out of the county; and that according to information furnished they had but recently left the county.”

We do not think this constitutes such diligence as would entitle him to a new trial as against appellants, who had a judgment in their favor. According to his own motion, neither appellee nor his attorneys had attempted to interview these two parties, whom he now offers as witnesses, nor sought to ascertain what they- knew, or what they would testify. They were present in the county, and, so far as the record shows, could have been interrogated at any time. . The fact that they, along with 35 others, were defendants did not obligate them to be present at the trial. The fact that appellee had charged these two newly proffered witnesses with being parties to a conspiracy necessarily charges the appellee himself with the knowledge that these witnesses knew the facts constituting ’the conspiracy, and could testify in his behalf as to those facts if they were willing to do so. The real condition presented, as we see it, is, not that appellée had discovered new evidence so much as that he had, after the trial, discovered that two of the defendants, against whom he obtained a judgmept, then were willing to testify to facts showing the alleged conspiracy; appellee being charged with knowledge all along that .these witnesses possessed information favorable to him. He made no effort to ascertain from them prior to the trial what they knew, nor what they would testify, nor did he have them summoned as witnesses, nor undertake to take their ex parte depositions, as authorized in article 3769, R. S. 1925. He took no steps whatever in the matter even of securing their presence until after he had announced ready for trial; and, after he' learned that they were out of the county, which he did while the trial was in progress, he made no effort to delay the proceedings to obtain their presence, but, with the knowledge that they could not be found, he chose to proceed with the trial on the evidence he had and take his chances before the jury. His excuse is that he had assumed these witnesses were hostile, and that, being defendants, they would be present at the trial. In the light of the decisions hereafter adverted to, we think that appellee, as a matter of law, has not shown the exercise of such diligence as would entitle him to a new trial.

The general rule is that applications for new trials on the grounds of newly discovered evidence are not favored. 29 Cyc. 883, and cases cited. And as there stated:

“A new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence will not be granted for evidence that was known to the unsuccessful party at the time of the trial.”

And in Johnson v. Brown (Tex. Civ. App.) 65 S. W. 485, it was held that a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence was properly refused, where the existence of such evidence was known, but not the whereabouts of the witnesses, and no continuance to secure their presence was requested. In the instant case the evidence, or rather the willingness of the two witnesses to testify concerning the conspiracy with which appel-lee had charged them in his petition, was discovered soon after the trial. In 29 Cyc. 892, it is stated—

“that evidence was discovered soon after the trial by systematic inquiry or search usually indicates that proper diligence was not exercised to discover the evidence before the trial.”'

And further that—

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bledsoe-v-burleson-texapp-1926.