Heath v. Conway
This text of 4 Ky. 398 (Heath v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION of the Court, by
— Two ob* jections are made to the proceedings in this case ; the one diat the declaration has not avered the steers and cows killed and shot by the appellant below, to have f,een Df ⅛6 proper goods and chattels of the plaintiff %. the other that the court erred in overruling the motion for anew trial. It appears that this motion was founded, 1st, on a suggestion that the jury had been guilty of misconduct in the manner of finding their ver-diet ; 2dly, that the defendant had been surprised by (⅛ introduction of material testimony, which it was impossible for him to foresee, but the effect of which the defendant could now do away.
To SUpp0rt the first ground the defexidant below of-r , 1 1 . , r r i • ^ to prove by two witnesses, that lour ot the jurors had declared that the verdict was for a greater sum they thought ought to have been given; and that the verdict was found by adding together the several sums which each juror was inclined to find, and dividing the amount by twelve : which testimony the court re- . * * ⅝ . jseted for very good reasons. The said defendant then moved the court for process to bring in the jurors, or a majority of them, to testify as to their “ misconduct’* [399]*399aforesaid, which the court refused. To support the second member of his motion, the said defendant “ of* iered to make affidavit in court that the testimony of one of the witnesses introduced by the plaintiff, and on which the jury must have founded ther verdict in part, was such as the defendant had no knowledge or conception of, and had actually supposed impossible until it was introduced, and that he could, if he had had any knowledge or conception of such testimony previous to the trial, have produced evidence which would have destroyed its effect on the verdict of the jury” — but the court refused to hear the affidavit, because they were of opinion the statement, if sworn to, was insufficient to induce a new trial.
The objection to the declaration is too nice and technical, especially after verdict. The cattle are stated by the plaintiff to have been “ his” ; this use of the pronoun in the possessive case, conveys a clear idea of property in the plaintiff to the steers and cows, and the plaintiff ought not to have had a verdict, unless he had proved property in them»
The exceptions to the opinions delivered by the court on the subject of the misconductcharged upon the jury embrace three considerations ; 1st. the manner of making up the verdict; 2dly. the after opinions of some of the jurors ; Sdly. the mode proposed of coming at the two former points. Upon these subjects little need be said after the full discussion which they underwent in the case of Taylor vs. Giger,
The statement of surprise to which the defendant below “ offered?” to swear, is totally insufficient; the affidavit should have set forth distinctly the testimony with which he was surprised, and the means by which he could counteract it on another trial, that the court themselves might have judged not only of the probability of a surprise, but of the efficiency and fairness of the evidence proposed to be used by way of re-action in another trial. But we cannot forbear to disapprove of the mode in which this motion seems to have been conducted ; the defendant “ offered to make affidavit,” — Surely the court ought never to set such a snare for the conscience, as to adjudicate upon the “ offer,” and if they [401]*401decided upon the sufficiency, then to require the party to come up to the mark by his affidavit. The practice most convenient in itself, as well as most conducive to the ends of justice, is to require the party to file his written affidavit as the pre-requisite and unchangeable foundation of his motion. Upon the whole there is no error in the proceedings as the plaintiff in erfor hath complained. — — Judgment affirmed.
Har. 586
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4 Ky. 398, 1 Bibb 398, 1809 Ky. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-conway-kyctapp-1809.