Cleveland Iron Mining Co. v. Husby

40 N.W. 168, 72 Mich. 61, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 504
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 40 N.W. 168 (Cleveland Iron Mining Co. v. Husby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Iron Mining Co. v. Husby, 40 N.W. 168, 72 Mich. 61, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 504 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Morse, J.

This is a bill in equity, filed in the cir[63]*63■cuit court for the county of Marquette, in chancery, fov a new trial of a suit at law, in which the complainant was cast in damages. The corporation moved for a new trial in the circuit, which was refused, and then brought the case at law to this Court by writ of error, where it is still pending.

The bill is founded principally upon the allegation that the most important witness for the plaintiff in the suit at laAv committed perjury upon the trial, which was also a surprise to the- defendant in such suit, who is complainant here.

We said in Gray v. Barton, 62 Mich. 197 (28 N. W. Rep. 817), that the—

“Weight of authority is decidedly against the granting of a neAV trial in a court of equity to impeach the testimony of witnesses, or because a party has committed perjury, or even suborned a Avitness to commit perjury."

See, also, Miller v. Morse, 23 Mich. 365. It is best, as a matter of public policy, that a judgment obtained in a court of law should stand, unless it is manifestly against conscience. In that case, or in a case where a perjury of a witness has been fully established by judicial determination, or by written documents, equity may very appropriately grant relief.

To permit, hoAvever, after a trial has been concluded at law, and the trial court has refused upon motion and hearing to grant a new trial, the losing party to hunt up a witness of the prevailing party, and procure from him an affidavit that he has sworn falsely upon the trial, and by this means carry the controversy, as to a new trial, into a court of equity, would open the door to manifold abuses, and to an uncertainty in the administration of law, not to be desired in the interest of justice, and which would necessarily give to the stronger party financially an undue advantage in' litigation. There would be but few [64]*64suits at law which, in this way, after judgment, could not be opened up again in chancery. The present case is a fair example of the abuses to which such a course might expose every litigant in a suit at law.

A statement of the case here becomes necessary; and a bare recital of the facts will, we think, show the desirability of adhering pretty strictly to the rule as laid down in Gray v. Barton, supra.

On March 22, 1886, Anders Husby, a native of Sweden, was killed in the iron mine of the complainant. The defendant here, as administratix of his estate, brought suit in the circuit court for the county of Marquette, in which the mine was situate, against the complainant, to recover damages for negligent killing. She obtained judgment in that court on December 14, 1886, for $5,000 damages. On February 25, 1887, a motion was made-before the circuit judge for a new trial upon several grounds, among which was the following:

“8. Because injustice was done defendant on said trial in the production of evidence thereon which was misleading and untrue.”

April 27, 1887, this motion was denied. April 30, 1887, a bill of exceptions was settled in the circuit court.

At the trial in the circuit court, one of the principal witnesses for the administratrix was Ludwig Strand, also-a Swede, and not very conversant with the English language.

The negligence of the complainant, complained of in the suit at law, was substantially as follows: In the pit in which the deceased, Husbyj was working under a shift-boss,” there was a large mass of rock, immediately over the place where deceased was working, which was loose, and likely to fall; that the attention of the complainant was directed to it, through its shift-boss,, whose attention was called to it; but, disregarding the danger [65]*65to which, said deceased would be subjected by going to work under the said rock, the said Cleveland Iron Mining Company, by its said shift-boss, and without warning to him of the danger, ordered the deceased to go to work under said rock, which shortly afterwards fell from the roof, and killed him.

Upon the trial Ludwig Strand testified, in substance, that he was working in this pit with the deceased and others; that one of the workmen, Gustave Ladie, went up on a ladder, and examined the roof. The shift-boss thought it was all right, but Ladie told him it was not; but Williams, the shift-boss, told them to go to work. Strand also testified that he was looking at the roof, and saw a large crack therein that he could put his finger in. He claimed he went up the ladder, and saw this crack, and several others, • in the roof, and that he could see the cracks from the bottom of the pit.

Hpon the motion for a new trial, the affidavit of Strand was presented to the court in favor of the motion under the eighth ground or reason assigned for a new trial. This affidavit was .made February 17, 1887, before one T. W. Durham, a notary public. In this affidavit Strand affirmed that he did not go up the ladder until after the accident; that he never intended to say that he went up before in his testimony, or that he could see the cracks in the roof from the bottom of the pit by looking up; that he does not well understand the English language, was examined without an interpreter, and did not fully understand what he testified to.

“He further says that he could not in truth and fact stand on the bottom of the room in which the accident happened, about which he testified, and see a crack of the size of the one in question; that he is satisfied that it would be impossible so to do, because the room is always filled with smoke, besides being dark; that he.does not [66]*66remember whether, after the ore fell, he looked up to see if he could see whether the crack remained there, but if he had looked he could not have seen from the bottom; that he does not know, of his own knowledge, whether the crack which he saw before the fall was or was not there after the fall. He did not look to see, so far as he can remember."

The affidavit of one John Brandin was also presented. He deposed that, before Strand’s affidavit was drawn up, the testimony of Strand, as printed by the stenographer from his notes taken on the trial, was shown to him, and Strand read the same, and stated to Brandin that such testimony was wrong and untrue, and thereupon the affidavit was drawn; that Strand understood the affidavit, and the difference between that and his testimony taken on the trial. Strand said he was scared upon the trial, understood English imperfectly, and -had no interpreter. Strand read the affidavit, and Brandin' talked with him, and explained it to him. Brandin is also a native of Sweden. ,

Ladie also made an affidavit, which was used on the motion. In this affidavit Ladie states that he went up the ladder, and saw one crack, and only one, in the roof. He came down and told the shift-boss:

“It’s bad ground up there; it will come down very soon." He said: “It’s all right; John Beerling has been barring it."

Ladie, or Leijdi (as it is often spelled in the record), states in this affidavit that the “young Swede" (meaning Strand) stood there, and heard his remark to the shift-boss, but that the “young Swede” did not go up the ladder after he (Ladie) came down. Ladie was not sworn upon the trial in the law case, but was examined as a witness for the defendant in this suit, and testified that he went up the ladder and came down by the order

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.W. 168, 72 Mich. 61, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-iron-mining-co-v-husby-mich-1888.