Gautier v. Douglass Manufacturing Co.

52 How. Pr. 325
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 How. Pr. 325 (Gautier v. Douglass Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gautier v. Douglass Manufacturing Co., 52 How. Pr. 325 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

Brady, J.

The plaintiffs declare, through their counsel, that their success in this action depends, first, upon the construction of the papers creating a trust mentioned in the pleadings, and that unless, under and by virtue of the construction given them, a lien results in their favor, this action cannot be maintained. The motion for a reference is therefore denied. It is conceded that if the lien is declared to exist, a reference to take an account will become necessary in [328]*328order to ascertain against what the lien may he applied. Motion denied for these reasons.

Owen & Gray, attorneys, and John E. Parsons, of counsel, for plaintiffs. L. C. Ashley, attorney, and L. R. Marsh, of counsel, for defendants.

The cause finally came on for trial before Mr. Justice Donohue, at a special term of the supreme court on the 17th day of June, 1875, and lasted several days, a large number of witnesses being called and examined on both sides. The judge held the case for several months after the hearing before rendering his opinion, judgment being entered February 5, 1876, when the court rendered a personal money judgment against the defendants, the Douglass Manufacturing Company, the Russell & Erwin Manufacturing Company, and T. J. S. Flint, for $41,814.22.

A motion for a new trial was made on the part of the defendants, on the ground of surprise and newly discovered evidence, based upon numerous affidavits, and came on to be •heard at a special term of .this court before Mr. Justice Lawrence, on the 28th day of November, 1876, which was denied, the following opinion being rendered. Further facts appear in the opinion.

Lawrence, J.

I do not agree with the counsel for the plaintiffs that this motion should be denied on the ground that the defendants were guilty of laches in not making the motion at an earlier date.

The affidavit of Mr. Ashley, one of the counsel for the defendants, sufficiently excuses any apparent laches in that, respect.

It is my opinion, however, that the motion should be denied, for the reason that the newly discovered evidence on the part of the defendants is partially cumulative, and on the further ground that most of the witnesses by whom it is [329]*329alleged that the newly discovered evidence will be given were examined upon the trial, and being in the employ of the defendants, could have been examined if due diligence had been used, and by a proper examination or cross-examination of those witnesses, the facts now sought to be established by the defendants could have been elicited (Leavy agt. Roberts, 2 Hilton, 285).

In Floyd agt. Jayne (6 Johnson’s Ch. Reports, p. 479) Chancellor Kent held that it would be establishing a grevious precedent, and one of great public inconvenience, to interfere in any other case than one of indispensable necessity. This does not seem to be such a case.

The witness Swan was examined upon the trial, and the question as to the quality and character of the steel furnished by the plaintiffs was distinctly put to him, which question was overruled, and the defendants excepted.

If the court erred in excluding that evidence, the defendants have their remedy on appeal.

The other witnesses, by whom it is alleged that the defendants expect to prove that they are entitled to a rebate or offset on account of the unmerchantable or unfit character of the steel furnished by the plaintiffs, could only give evidence of the same kind, as to the quality of the steel as the witness Swan, and the question whether such evidence was competent at all being raised by the exception to the exclusion of Swan’s evidence, a new trial should not be granted to enable those witnesses to testify. The competency of the evidence will and must be passed upon by the general term on the appeal upon the case made. If incompetent it cannot be received, even if there should be numberless witnesses who would give such evidence, and the right of the defendants to give such evidence can just as well be settled upon the rejection of the testimony of one witness and an exception thereto, as upon the exclusion of the testimony of many witnesses.

The witness Bruff was also examined on the trial, and the excuse given for not then examining him as to the points [330]*330referred to in the plaintiff’s affidavits, for the reason that he had, or was supposed to have had, a bias against the defendants, affords no ground for granting a new trial.

The witness was sworn to tell the whole truth, and it cannot be presumed that if interrogated properly his bias, even conceding it to have existed, would have led him to have sworn falsely.

If there is any reason for supposing that he would have given a false statement of the contract with the plaintiffs, or of the course of dealing with them on account of such bias, the court surely cannot now be asked to give any weight to the affidavit which he makes in this motion.

Again, a party is chargeable with laches, who, previously to the trial, knew that the witness whose testimony he seeks to introduce as newly discovered evidence, must probably, from his situation and employment at the time of the transaction, the subject of the controversy, have been conversant with the facts in relation to such transaction and who yet does not examine the witness in regard to those facts (People agt. Superior Court, 10 Wend., 285, 292).

In my opinion it is quite apparent, from the whole case, that the defendants must have known that Bruff would be a witness upon the trial, and certainly they knew, when he was put upon the stand, that he could testify as to what the agreement between the unincorporated Douglass Manufacturing Company and the plaintiffs really was. The defendants, in respect to the testimony of this witness, have not shown due diligence.

The witness Burdell was also examined on 'the trial, and testified that he was in the employ of the defendants, the Bussell and Erwin Manufacturing Company, “to keep the accounts of the Douglass Manufacturing Company by themselves, add in a set of books entirely different from the Bus-sell and Erwin Manufacturing Company.”

This witness being in the defendants’ employ, and known by them to- have charge of the books of the Douglass Manu[331]*331factoring Company, could and should have been interrogated by them as to the accounts between the plaintiffs and that Company, and the failure to do so was laches on the part of the defendants; and even if the defendants did not in point of fact know that he could have testified to the matters, which it is now alleged could have been proven by him, the affidavits of the defendants on this motion do not appear to me to excuse the neglect of the defendants in not ascertaining what evidence could be given by one who was in their own employ and in the same office in which the business of the Bussell and Erwin Manufacturing Company was carried on.

This witness was called by the defendants, and there is no reason for supposing that he had any desire to exclude from their knowledge any facts or circumstances of which he was cognizant which might be beneficial to them in resisting the plaintiff’s claim.

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Bluebook (online)
52 How. Pr. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gautier-v-douglass-manufacturing-co-nysupct-1876.