Simonowitz v. Schwartz

Hatch, J.:

This action was brought to recover the sum of $300, being the amount of a check which the defendant gave to the plaintiff, and which the plaintiff claims that he lost the same evening and immediately notified the defendant that he had lost the same, but that the defendant failed to notify the bank upon which the check was drawn to stop payment thereon until the second day after the plaintiff notified the defendant, and in the meantime the check had been presented by the finder and the bank had cashed the same.

The defendant contends that the plaintiff did not notify him of the loss of the check until after it had been cashed by the bank, and that he was, therefore, powerless to stop the payment of the same The evidence disclosed that the defendant was an officer of an insurance society, and on the evening of June 4,1900, as such officer, he *490gave the plaintiff a check for $400 drawn on the State Bank in the City of New York.

Simonowitz then asked Schwartz if he would cash the check for him, and Schwartz told him to come to his place of business at a restaurant known as “ Little Hungary,” 255-263 East Houston street in the borough of Manhattan, and that he would cash the check for him. They went to Schwartz’s place of business where he informed Simonowitz that owing to the lateness of the hour, it then being ten o’clock in the evening, he could not pay him the full amount of the check, and, therefore, gave to Simonowitz $100 in cash and his personal check drawn on the State bank for $300. Thus far there is practically no dispute in the evidence of the plaintiff and defendant.

Simonowitz testified that he then went directly home and when he arrived there he found that he had lost the check; that he immediately returned to Schwartz’s place of business and informed him of the loss, and that Schwartz told him to come around again in the morning. The following morning, June fifth, at about ten o’clock, Simonowitz went to Schwartz, who told him to take with him a man who spoke English, go to the bank and stop payment of the check, and he also gave Simonowitz a letter directing that the payment of the check be stopped. This letter Simonowitz took to the bank and delivered to a clerk at about ten o’clock the morning of the fifth, went back and reported what he had done to Schwartz, who in Simonowitz’s presence called up the bank on the telephone and then reported to Simonowitz that the payment of the check had been stopped. On the day following, the sixth, Simonowitz went to Schwartz and asked for the money, and Schwartz told him to wait until the next day; that on some day thereafter when Simonowitz called to see Schwartz about the money, Schwartz told him that the check had been paid by the bank and showed him a check with Simonowitz’s name indorsed in German on the back. Simonowitz then testified that he never indorsed his name upon the back of the check; that the indorsement was in German; that he could not write German, but could only sign his name in Hebrew. Schwartz refused to pay Simonowitz the amount of the check, which had been lost, or any part of it.

Schwartz testified that the first time he saw Simonowitz after he *491had given him the $300 cheek was on the afternoon of the fifth of June, when Simonowitz, with a friend, came to him and asked him to indorse Schwartz’s name on the check so that he could get the money ; that the next day, the sixth of June, Simonowitz returned and told Schwartz that he had lost the check, and Schwartz immediately telephoned the hank to stop payment of the check, and was informed by the bank that it was too late, as the bank had closed for the day, but to send in a written order on the next day. The next morning about nine or nine-thirty o’clock Schwartz gave Simonowitz the letter directing payment of the check to be stopped, 'which was taken to the bank and which reads as follows:

“ Few York, June 1th, 1900.
“ Mr. Vorhies,
Cashier State Bank, 378 Grand St., City :
“Dear Sir.— Please stop payment on check issued to Fathan Simonowitz on June 4th for 300.00/100 Fo. 1564 check has been indorsed by me. By so doing you will greatly favor me.
Yours truly,
“MAX SCHWARTZ.”

On the sixth day of June the bank cashed a check drawn by Schwartz to the order of Simonowitz for $300 and indorsed on the back by Max Schwartz and written on the back thereof in German the name of Fathan Simonowitz, but the number of this check was 1985. This last-mentioned check was offered in evidence by the defendant, and Simonowitz swears that it was -not the check given to him on the fourth day of June. Schwartz testified that it was the same check that he gave him on the fourth day of June ; that the stub number in his check book is 1564, and that the reason for the discrepancy in number was that when he wrote the check he made a mistake in numbering it 1564; that he tore one up and took another from the back of the book numbered 1985 and gave that to Simonowitz, but made no record of it on the stubs in his check book.

The jury brought in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $318, being the amount of the check with interest thereon from the time the cause of action accrued, and judgment was entered thereon May 21, 1901.

From such judgment the defendant appealed to this court, claiming that the verdict of the jury was against the weight of *492evidence. This court, on January 10, 1902, affirmed the judgment (,Simonowitch v. Schwartz, 67 App. Div. 536), holding that a case was made for submission to the jury. On September 13, 1901, the defendant made a motion for a new trial on affidavits tending to show newly-discoverecf evidence; such motion was granted and a. new trial was ordered. From such order the present appeal is taken. It appears by the affidavits upon which the motion was based that the newly-discovered evidence consists wholly of matters tending to contradict the testimony of the plaintiff and to show that he was in possession of the check and exhibited the same to a number of people after the time when he claimed to have lost the same and reported such loss to the defendant.

The latter claimed that he knew nothing about the existence of' this testimony until some considerable time after the rendition of the verdict and that he discovered it by making an application to one Schaumburg, who informed him that the plaintiff had possession of the check and Avho also put him upon the track of the other witnesses who had seen the check in the plaintiff’s ¡Dossession after the time when he testified that he had lost it and notified the defendant. One Gross makes an affidavit that he was a member of the insurance society from whom the plaintiff received the first check ; that on the sixth day of June he was in the shoe store of one Geist, who had employed the plaintiff and Avas informed by him that the plaintiff had the check and exhibited it to him on the sixth day of June, together with some money, and that subsequent to-that time the plaintiff informed Geist that he had lost both the check and the money.

The whole of the testimony claimed to be newly discovered related to the claim that the plaintiff was in possession of the check after the time when he testified that he had lost it. The trial was-begun on Friday, May twenty-fourth, and the case was finished on Monday, May twenty-seventh. The plaintiff gave his testimony early on Friday, so that the defendant knew by noon of that day the claim of the plaintiff and the testimony which he had given. At this time Schaumburg and Gross were both present in the court. The defendant kneAV, if it was a fact, that Schaumburg accompanied the plaintiff to Schwartz’s place of business after the loss of the check. Schaumburg so testifies and the defendant stated that the *493plaintiff came to him with a friend. Schaumburg and the witness Gross were both well acquainted with the defendant, and, although the defendant knew on Friday morning what the plaintiff had testified to and knew that Schaumburg and Gross were both present in court, yet he made no inquiry of them with respect to their knowledge concerning the check, nor was either called as witnesses, although confessedly the defendant subsequently learned the information possessed by them and was thereby enabled to discover the other witnesses. The defendant neither made inquiry of either of these men during the trial nor thereafter, but took an appeal from the judgment and sought to reverse the same by such remedy. It was only after all of these steps had been taken that he made inquiry of Schaumburg and Gross, although he had two full days in which to make such inquiry after the plaintiff had given his testimony. Upon these facts we think the defendant was guilty of gross negligence in failing to make the inquiry of the witnesses which were available at his hand, not only during the trial, hut at all times thereafter. In Conable v. Smith (19 N. Y. Supp. 446) it was said : “ It appears that upon the trial of the action, the maker of the note, Henry Garretsee, was present in court, and heard the testimony of the two defendants to the effect that this alteration had been made in the note. But he was not called as a witness on either side. The fact that he was in the court was known to the defendants. * * * He further says, however, that he did not know what this witness would testify to, and hence did not call him. But, under the well-established rules governing motions for new trials upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence, it is not permissible for parties at the trial thus to experiment with the court, and after-wards claim the privilege of another trial under the pretense that their evidence is newly discovered.”

This doctrine finds precise application to this case. Here, as there, the two witnesses were in court, and inquiry of them would have at once developed all of the facts upon which the defendant now relies. He made no such inquiry nor did he take the slightest -step in attempting to find out what those witnesses knew or to what they would testify. There was an abundance of time for him to .have discovered the evidence which he now seeks to make available, procure every witness and have presented each witness and his evi*494deuce to the court on Monday when the case was with him. He chose to do nothing, but, in the language of the authority we have cited, experimented with the court as to the sufficiency of the testimony which he produced and upon which he asked judgment in liisfavor.

The authorities are uniform and abundant that a party under-suck circumstances is required to exercise diligence and take the-necessary steps promptly to discover the existence of such testimony. (Biddescomb v. Cameron, 58 App. Div. 42; Reid v. Gaedéke, 38 id. 107; Smith v. Rentz, 73 Hun, 195; Sayer v. King, 21 App. Div. 624; Thompson v. Welde, 27 id. 186.)

Ooncededly, the defendant did not in this case exercise the slightest degree of diligence. He did nothing, and having remained passive and taken his chances of a favorable result, he failed to make a case which entitled him to the favorable consideration of the court based upon legal rights or as matter of favor. ' The motion for a new trial should, therefore, have been denied.

It follows that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs, and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.

Patterson, Ingraham, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ.,, concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.