State Ex Rel. Davenport v. McKee

4 S.E. 545, 98 N.C. 500
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 4 S.E. 545 (State Ex Rel. Davenport v. McKee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Davenport v. McKee, 4 S.E. 545, 98 N.C. 500 (N.C. 1887).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

(after stating the case). Upon the hearing in this Court and preliminary to entering upon the merits, the defendant asked for a new trial upon evidence discovered since the transfer of the cause to this Court by the appeal, and when by the adjournment of the Superior Court it had passed out of its jurisdiction, so that no relief could there be obtained. The application is based upon the alleged misconduct of a juror in swearing that he had formed and expressed no opinion adverse to the defendants, when soon after the former trial, which the juror had heard, he declared that if he had been on the jury he would have hung it until doomsday, and would have rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, or words to that effect.

This is alleged by the defendant G. W. McKee, in his affidavit, made on information and belief, and the other affidavit was made upon a knowledge of what the juror said in reference to the previous trial, and it is to the effect that he was present at it, and if a juror he would have been in favor of the plaintiff; that the conduct of the sheriff in not bringing up the $1,700 receipt on the first settlement, showed fraud.

We should not be at liberty to act upon such ex parte evidence and vacate a judgment rendered without notice to the appellee, if any sufficient grounds had been given to warrant such action in a Court having a discretion in the matter, but we know of no precedent for such interference *504 upon the facts set out, if they were even stronger, for the only case in which, a new trial will bé granted in this Court is the discovery of such new evidence as was proper to be heard by the jury, a Judge, or a referee, in passing upon and finding the facts, and not for irregularities occurring in the trial, and for which the Judge, in his discretion, may set aside the verdict or finding and re-open the case. And the circumstances must be stringent to annul what has been judicially done and deprive the successful party of the fruits of the adjudication. It is more than questionable whether the application, if made in the Superior Court before removal, would have been allowed, as there was a challenge to the juror made for favor, and upon it the Court decided the fact against the challenger, and it is therefore a case of res adju-dicóla. But however this may be, the application, as that made in State v. Starnes, 94 N. C., 973, has no support in the law and practice in this Court as a Court for the correction of errors, and is without any precedent in its support.

The allegations in the complaint are none of them controverted, except in so far as it denies and repudiates the alleged payment of $1,700 mentioned in the receipt, and this was the only matter in contention between the parties. The receipt was in this form :

“ Received of George W. McKee, sheriff, ($1,700) seventeen hundred dollars of the general county fund for this year, 1882.

This, December 4th, 1882. J. A. DAVENPORT,

County Treasurer.

Witness: R. W. Query.”

In the progress of the trial one John F. Luper, the register of deeds of Gaston county, stated, in answer to an inquiry as to the amount of the tax-list put in the sheriff’s hands in 1882, that, not including the school tax, the county tax was $6,041.20f.

*505 To ascertain the amount the witness read from-the book of official reports of the county the record of settlement which, he said, was made with the sheriff by the finance committee on March 15th, 1883.

The defendants’ counsel objected, on the ground that this was not the best evidence, the tax-list being primary.

The defendant McKee being shown to have been present at the settlement, the evidence was received, and defendants excepted.

The evidence was competent, under the authority of the case of State v. Voight, 90 N. C., 741, and the record of such settlement is, by the express terms of the statute, made “prima facie evidence of their correctness, and impeachable only for fraud or special error.” Acts of 1881, ch. 117, §46, and Acts of 1887, ch. 137, §132.

But if it were otherwise, the presence and concurring agency of the sheriff in making the settlement would render it competent against him and his sureties as well. The Code, §1345; Badger v. Daniel, 79 N. C., 372.

We do not interpret the case to be that the evidence lies in the oral statement by the witness of the contents of the record, but the record is before the Court, and, as such, is read for information.

Aside from this, we do not see the pertinency of the evidence to the matter in controversy, which is not as to the amount of county taxes due on the delivered list of 1882, but whether upon the admitted balance the sheriff shall have a further credit upon the receipt.

The next exception is to the admission of proof of a declaration made by the plaintiff to a witness under these circumstances : One Kiser, chairman of the board of county commissioners, testified that on January 3d, 1883, the plaintiff reported that he had received from the sheriff only $500 of the county fund; and further, that in the sheriff’s absence the plaintiff was asked if this was all he had received, *506 and he answered that it was all received on the county fund. This latter declaration, made in the absence of McKee, was objected to, but the testimony was admitted as corroboration of the statement before made by the plaintiff in his examination as a witness without objection. The defendant excepted.

The testimony of confirmatory statement, as sustaining what the witness swears to on the trial, has been admitted to support his credit, when and however impeached, by a series of decisions which establish the law. The cases to this effect are numerous and the rulings uniform, from Johnson v. Pattison, 2 Hawks, 183, to the present time.

' The defendants except also to the reading in evidence the deposition of one M. J. Nelson, taken at Danville, Virginia, then her place of residence, under a commission, on April 22d, 1885. The witness was shown to have been living in the county of Mecklenburg at the time of the Court next preceding the trial, from which place she had removed to Winston, a place more than seventy-five miles distant from the place of trial, and had been summoned on July 11th, 1887, to be present as a witness for the plaintiff.

Upon this evidence as to the residence of the witness being more than seventy-five miles distant, the deposition was received and read.

It was pressed with great earnestness in the argument for the appellants that it was not shown that the statutory requirements had been observed necessary to the admission of the deposition, and that this was an essential condition of its admissibility.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E. 545, 98 N.C. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davenport-v-mckee-nc-1887.