The appellant was tried and convicted in the court below, on November 11, 1880, of burglary. On December, 6, 1880, no motion for a new trial or in arrest of judgment having been entered, he was brought before the court, and, showing no sufficient reason to the contrary, was sentenced to confinement in the State penitentiary for two years, in accordance with the verdict of the jury. On December 9, 1880, application was made by counsel for the defendant for leave to file a motion for a new trial on account of newly-discovered testimony.' The, *170court, on considering the application, refused to permit it to be considered or to allow the motion to be filed. To this action and ruling of the court the defendant excepted and gave notice of appeal.
Whilst the motion for new trial was not permitted to be filed and considered as such, a bill of exceptions reserved "to the ruling of the court shows the grounds of the motion, and accompanying affidavits disclose the testimony alleged to have been discovered since the trial, and how it was expected to obtain it, as well as the diligence employed in order to procure it at an earlier day. From these sources of information, and from the evidence adduced on the trial, we conclude that at least one, if not the principal, object to be attained by the new testimony was to discredit the State’s witness who testified to the fact that the defendant was not a house-servant of the family occupying the house alleged to have been burglariously entered, by showing the fact to be that the defendant was a domestic servant of the family, and as such servant had a right to enter the premises at pleasure.
We are aware it has been held that a domestic servant of the person from whose house property has been stolen, could not be convicted of theft from a house, eo nomine, whilst there was by law such an offense, but, occupying a sort of confidential relation to the family and necessarily entitled to enter the house in order to perform the duties of a domestic servant, on proof of a theft having been committed could only have been convicted of simple theft, to which a milder punishment was fixed by law than to that of theft from a house. Alston v. State, 41 Texas, 39. Yet we fail to discover that the principle announced in that case has any application to the present inquiry.
By the State’s witness it was proved that the defendant was a tenant of the witness, and lived about seventy-five yards from the residence of the witness where the burglary'is charged to have been committed, and which house, *171agreeably to the testimony, is situated about three miles couth of the city of Dallas. The State’s witness further testified, on cross-examination, that the defendant was not a domestic servant of his or of the family at the time the offense was committed or at any other time, but was a tenant of the witness, cropping on shares. This much of the testimony against him was certainly known at the time of the trial, if not before, and it is unreasonable to suppose, if the facts were not as testified, that evidence could not have been procured to establish them at a much earlier day than as presented in the motion of the defendant. And further, when the defendant was arrested in the house of the witness in the darkness of night, it is hardly credible to suppose that, if he was in fact a domestic servant, habitually admitted into the house for purposes of his employment, he did not make himself known as such, or that he could not have called some member of the family, or some other tenant or employee about the premises, to show his relation to the family. But, no matter what his relations were, he had no right to enter the house under the circumstances disclosed by the State’s witness, without the knowledge or consent of the occupants of the house.
Treating the motion for a new trial as though it had been filed and overruled, and giving the appellant the benefit of that view of the subject, and treating the subject in that light, -we are of opinion that it would have been but an ordinary application for a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. Testing the motion as if it had been filed and overruled, if such had been the action of the court, there would have been no error in overruling the motion and refusing a new trial on the grounds and affidavits set out in and appended to the motion, and we conclude that there was no error prejudicial to the rights of the accused in the refusal of the court to permit the motion to be filed at the time and *172under the circumstances attending its presentation. The new testimony, if material, which is not seen, could certainly have been discovered at an earlier day than that disclosed by the motion, by the use of the most ordinary diligence. The rules governing motions for new trials on account of newly-discovered evidence ought not ordinarily to be attended with difficulty under Texas laws at this late day. The provision of the present Code of Procedure, article 777, clause 6, to the effect that motions for new trials on the ground of newly-discovered evidence are to be governed by the same rules as those which regulate civil suits, is but a re-enactment of clause 6, article 672, of the original Code of Procedure (Pasch. Dig. art. 3137), as follows: “ Where new testimony material to the defendant has been discovered since the trial, a motion for a new trial based on this ground shall be governed by the same rules as those which regulate civil suits.”
In Shaw v. State, 27 Texas, 752, it was said (the court quoting the language of the Code of Procedure) that a motion on this ground (newly-discovered testimony) is governed by the rules which regulate civil suits. It was said by this court in Bronson v. State, 2 Texas Ct. App. 46, on this subject, that the correct doctrine is laid down by the court in Shaw v. State. Looking further into the doctrine as laid down in Shaw’s case, 27 Texas, 750, it is found that the rules governing new trials as the ground of newly-discovered testimony are as deduced by Judge Sutherland in 5 Wend., cited in Graham & Waterman on Hew Trials, 498, which were adopted as expressing the views of the Supreme Court, and which are as follows: “ It has been shown that there are certain principles in relation to such applications which are clearly settled and well defined by long continued practice and an uninterrupted series of decisions in our own and other courts. Those principles are: 1. That a party is bound and presumed to know the general leading points which *173will be litigated in his case. 2. That if he omits to procure evidence which with ordinary diligence he might have procured in relation to those points upon the first trial, his motion for a new trial for the purpose of introducing such testimony shah be denied. 3. If the newly-discovered evidence consists merely of additional facts and circumstances going to establish. the same points which were principally controverted before, or of additional witnesses to the same facts and circumstances, such evidence is cumulative, and a new trial should not be granted. In cases to which these principles clearly and unquestionably apply, the granting or refusal of a new trial is not a matter of discretion. The parties have a legal right to a decision conformable to these principles. When there is doubt upon the point of negligence, or as to the character of the evidence, or as to its materiality, it becomes a matter of discretion, and the court wih not, —perhaps I ought to say cannot, — rightfully interfere.”
The rules thus laid down will be found on examination to be in precise accord with Graham & Waterman on New Trials, in the chapter which treats of the subject of granting new trials, “for newly-discovered evidence.” Chapter 13, page 462. It is there said, under the head of “general remarks,” and corresponding with the principles laid down in Shaw’s case: “It sometimes happens that after the utmost diligence, and the best directed efforts of the party and his counsel, the true merits of the case have not been submitted by reason of the absence of facts which, had they been known and introduced, would have given a different complexion to the case; or it may be that facts have occurred subsequently to the trial which tend to present the point at issue differently, and to show that the verdict, if suffered -to remain, would operate unjustly. When such a case happens, and the court be*174comes satisfied that, to promote the ends of justice, an opportunity ought to be allowed for the introduction of new testimony, it will furnish an opportunity by setting aside the verdict and directing a new trial. But, to prevent abuse, practicing with witnesses, careless preparation in the first instance, and harrassing the court with unfounded applications, the party moving on the ground' of newly-discovered evidence is required to conform himself to very stringent regulations. The negligent are to expect no indulgence, and applications founded on light circumstances will be promptly denied. Nothing but a clear case of injustice, occasioned by means beyond the control of the party, and the certainty of correcting it by those means since brought to light and placed within the reach of the applicant, will answer the purpose. There is, therefore, no ground on which motions for new trials rest, better ascertained or more clearly defined, so as to guard against practice and imposition than that of newly-discovered evidence. By a series of well digested decisions, it is settled that the evidence which would warrant the court to set aside the verdict must be new, material and not cumulative, and that the party applying has used reasonable diligence.” These authors cite Hr. Justice Woodworth, in Porter v. Talcot, 1 Cowen, 359, in laying down the essentials “with brevity and perspicuity,” as follows: “The application for a new trial ought to be granted, on the ground that there has been reasonable diligence, that the new evidence is material, that it has been discovered since the trial, and is not cumulative.” The rules laid down in Shaw’s case and those laid down in Gra. & Wat. on New Trials are susceptible of easy reconciliation with the rules of Mr. Wharton, Crim. L. § 3161, and those of Mr. Archbold, in Arch. Crim. Pr. & Pl. 178-26, cited in West v. State, 2 Texas Ct. App. 209, and again in Terry v. State, 3 Texas Ct. App. 236. *175See also Boothe v. State, 4 Texas Ct. App. 202; Hutchinson v. State, 6 Texas Ct. App. 468, and Duval v. State, 8 Texas Ct. App. 370.
By a proper application of these rules we are of opinion a new trial should have been refused even if it had been applied for within the two days, the time ordinarily allowed for motions for new trials. The application coming, as it did, nearly a month after the trial, we are of opinion the court did not err in refusing to permit it to be filed at all.
Counsel for the appellant in the brief argue that in felony cases a new trial may be applied for at any time during the term of court at which the trial was had. This is in one sense true. The language of the Code is, “A new trial must be applied for within two days after the conviction, but, for good cause shown, the court, in cases of felony, may allow the application to be made at any time before the adjournment of the term at which the conviction was had. When the court adjourns before the expiration of two days from the conviction, the motion shall be made before the adjournment.” Code Crim. Proc. art. 779; Pasch. Dig. art. 3136. There is but slight difference between the phraseology of the present Code in this respect, and that employed before the late revision. That portion of the article which declares that a new trial must be applied for within two days after the conviction, seems to apply as well to felony cases as to misdemeanors, and seems to be mandatory in cases of misdemeanor. That portion which authorizes an application for a new trial in felony cases to be made at any time before the adjournment of the term, by the very language employed indicates very clearly that such an application, when made after the expiration of two days, addresses itself to the sound discretion of the court before which the application is made; for good cause shown, the application may be made. Necessarily the court to whom the application *176is made out of the regular time must determine whether the cause shown is good or not. Who can determine so well as to the sufficiency of the cause shown for permitting’ the application to be made out of time, as the court before whom the trial was had? ' In all matters where a discretion is confided to the trial courts to do or not to do a particular thing, it has heretofore not been the practice of this court to interfere unless it be made to appear that the discretion confided to the court below had been improperly exercised, and that too to the prejudice of the party against whom the ruling was made. We see no reason to depart from this rule in cases like the one under consideration. Linn v. LeCompte, 47 Texas, 440.
We have considered the several objections urged against the charge of the court, but have not discovered any principle of law incorrectly enunciated, or any direction given to the jury which was not applicable to the evidence or calculated to confuse or mislead the jury in applying the. law of the case to the facts proved. The material question for our consideration is the refusal of the court to permit an application for a new trial to be filed at the time and under the circumstances disclosed in the defendant’s bill of exceptions.
There may doubtless be cases where the court on appeal would be warranted in revising the ruling made by the court below, where the matter is not solely confided to the trial court. Railway Co. v. Forsyth, 49 Texas, 171. In such a case the action may unquestionably be revised. If the trial court should in this or any other matter abuse the discretion confided to it and the party is prejudiced thereby, this court would feel called on to revise the ruling; and, if the discretion had been abused to the prejudice of the party, and injustice been done or the law improperly administered, would feel called on to set the action aside. • Such, however, is not the present case. The material defect in the defendant’s application consists *177in the immateriality of the new evidence sought to be obtained, and in the palpable want of diligence in not bringing it to light at an earlier day of the term.
We find no material error in the proceedings, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.