The 28th rule is thus: “ In every case intended for argument, [at a law term,] copies of all the material papers shall be delivered to each of the judges at or before the opening of the court on the first day of the term, or immediately upon the entry of the action upon the law docket; and no action shall be so entered by the clerk, until the papers are prepared and ready to be delivered as aforesaid; provided, that when the question arises upon a special verdict, a writ of error, or certiorari, or the answers of trustees, or in a suit in equity, it shall be sufficient to make out one complete copy of the material papers, to be delivered to the chief justice, and abstracts of the same, to be delivered to each of the other judges; such abstracts to be so made as to present fully the question intended to be argued ” *438This case, we think, is not within the exception. The exception is where an abstract will indicate the points. But when the determination of the case depends upon a weighing and comparison of evidence, each judge must be furnished with a full copy of the evidence. The exception does not apply, because the reason of the exception does not apply.
R. Choate Sf B. F Ha/lett, for the respondent,to the point that the respondent was entitled, as a matter of right, to the specifications called for, cited Adams v. Adams, 16 Pick. 254; Bishop on Mar. & Div. § 303; Wood v. Wood, 2 Paige, 113; Fellows v. Fellows, 8 N. H. 160; and to the point that the subsequent cohabitation of the wife was a condonation of the cruelty, and a bar to the suit, Bishop on Mar. & Div. § 357, and authorities cited; North v. North, 5 Mass. 320; Anon. 6 Mass. 147; Williamson v. Williamson, 1 Johns. Ch. 488: Wood v. Wood, 2 Paige, 108; Johnson v. Johnson, 4 Paige, 469; Delliber v. Delliber, 9 Conn. 233; Quincy v. Quincy, 10 N. H. 272; Evans v. Evans, 2 Notes of Cases, 470; D’Aguilar v. D’Aguilar, 1 Hagg. Eccl. 773.
L. F. Brigham, for the libellant,to the point that a refusal of the presiding judge to order further specifications was not a subject of exception, cited Haynes v. Morgan, 3 Mass. 208; Pierce v. Thompson, 6 Pick. 196; and to the points that the husband’s cruelty was not absolutely condoned by subsequent cohabitation, and that the cohabitation was presumed to be upon condition that the cruelty should not be revived, nor any reasonable fear of it excited, Perkins v. Perkins, 6 Mass. 69; Snow v. Snow, 2 Notes of Cases, Supp. 15; Angle v. Angle, 6 Notes of Cases, 197; Wilson v. Wilson, 6 Notes of Cases, 290; Burr v. Burr, 10 Paige, 20; Threewits v. Threewits, 4 Desaus. 560; Hollister v Hollister, 6 Barr, 449.
The substance of the evidence introduced in support of the motion for a new trial, so far as it is material to the understand-_.„g of the points of law decided, is stated in the opinion of the court, which was delivered at April term 1855 bv
The respondent then gave security, to the satisfaction of the clerk, for his fees. And the case was fully argued on the bill of exceptions and motion for a new trial.
*439Dewey, J.1. The respondent contends that he was entitled* as a matter of legal right, to the granting of his motion for a particular specification of the times and places of the several acts alleged in the libel, and that, until this was furnished him, he ought not to have been put on his trial.
The great principle, here urged, of affording full opportunity to a party charged with any illegal act to understand the nature of the charge, and to prepare his defence, is entirely sound, and it is the duty of the presiding judge as fully to secure these objects as the nature of the case will admit, and to protect a vigilant party from being surprised by evidence in relation to a subject not anticipated, and which he has not had the opportunity to meet and repel. This may lead to requiring a particular specification of the nature of the causes of action in a civil suit, or of the acts relied upon to support a libel for divorce.
But ordering a specification is one of the steps preparatory to the trial, and like amendments to pleadings, postponing to a future day, and the like, must, to a great extent, rest in the discretion of the presiding judge. Such order will usually involve no legal question, but depend upon the circumstances of each particular case. It by no means follows that further specifications are of course to be ordered, when asked for. In each case, it becomes necessary to recur to the pleadings already before the court, as well as to regard the nature of the subject, and how far it admits of details. If the declaration or libel is already specific, or as much so as an ordinary specification would be, nothing further is to be required.
To apply this principle to the present case—had this libel contained only the general allegation of cruelty between the periods of the 1st of January 1848 and the 14th of April 1853, the application of the respondent for a more particular specification would have been a proper motion, and ought to have been granted. But upon recurring to this libel, it will be found to contain eleven distinct charges of cruelty, committed at as many distinct periods of time. Of these, seven allege periods varying from nine to four months, while the remaining and more recent *440acts of craelty are charged as occurring within brief periods of time. These are specifications, and are as precise in point of time as would ordinarily be required in specifications.
In this state of the case, the presiding judge might properly decline to grant the motion of the respondent, and especially might he decline to do so, when he accompanied that ruling with the further statement that if it should appear at any stage of the trial that the respondent was surprised by the production of unexpected testimony, or of evidence in support of facts of which he had not been so informed as to enable him to make full preparation to answer and meet it, he would thereupon be entitled to a reasonable postponement for that purpose.
But if this were more doubtful, the subsequent course of the proceedings at the trial of this case, clearly shows that the respondent, by the postponement of the hearing for three months after the libellant had put in all her evidence, had the fullest opportunity to prepare to meet the entire case of the libellant thus fully developed. He attempted to do so, suggesting at no time any surprise, nor asking any postponement to meet any unexpected evidence introduced by the libellant.
In the opinion of the court, there is no sufficient ground for granting a new trial on account of the refusal of the presiding judge to grant the respondent’s motion that the libellant file more particular specifications of the several allegations contained in her libel.
2. The further exception is to the ruling of the presiding judge as to the matter of condonation.
It appears from the. bill of exceptions that the latest act of personal violence, alleged to have been committed on the person of the libellant, is stated to have been committed on the 14th of April 1853; and that the libellant occupied the same sleeping room and bed on the night of that day, but not afterwards; ar d that this libel was filed on the 18th of April.
The counsel for the respondent insisted that such cohabitation was in law a condonation on the part of the wife of all previous acts of cruelty, and would of itself preclude the maintaining of this libel for divorce. The presiding judge held that this fact *441must be considered in connection with other facts in the case; and finding from the evidence that after the night of the 14th of April, and before the filing of this libel, “the respondent by the violence of his conduct caused a reasonable apprehension in the mind of the libellant that she could no longer live and cohabit with him without imminent danger of suffering further extreme cruelty from his assaults; ” and that after this violence towards her the libellant did not cohabit with him as her husband ; he ruled that such cohabitation on the night of the 14th was not a condonation of all acts of cruelty prior to that night.
It has sometimes been supposed that the doctrine of condonation, arising from continued cohabitation, was inapplicable to cases of libel by the wife, seeking a divorce for extreme cruelty. The cases of Perkins v. Perkins, 6 Mass. 69, and Hollister v Hollister, 6 Barr, 449, are to that effect. But the better established rule seems to be "that cruelty, as well as adultery, may be the subject of condonation. Burr v. Burr, 10 Paige, 20. Whispell v. Whispell, 4 Barb. 217. Masten v. Masten, 15 N. H. 159. Bishop on Mar. & Div. § 369, and cases cited. The English cases are to the like effect. But Dr. Lushington, in Snow v. Snow, 2 Notes of Cases, Supp. 15, says that the two offences of adultery and cruelty are so distinct in their nature that the same considerations cannot be equally applicable to both, as respects condonation.
Condonation is not so easily to be inferred against the wife, from her cohabitation, as it might be against the husband. Wood v. Wood, 2 Paige, 108. D'Aguilar v. D'Aguilar, 1 Hagg. Eccl. 773. Beeby v. Beeby, 1 Hagg. Eccl. 789. The state of the respective parties differs materially in their opportunities of at once withdrawing from the scene of discord and violence Forbearance for a season may be not only a justifiable, but a necessary step on the part of the wife; and when shown to have been so, no condonation for acts of extreme cruelty is to be inferred from such cohabitation.
But any condonation by the wife of cruelty to her on the part of the husband is upon the explicit condition that he will hereafter treat her with conjugal kindness; and any breach of this *442condition revives the right to maintain a libel for the origina» offence. Burr v. Burr, 10 Paige, 20. Bishop on Mar. & Div. § 372. The breach of such condition may be shown, in cases of libel by the wife for cruelty, by evidence which would be insufficient to establish the principal charge. Here words of heat and passion, and any acts of violence in conduct causing a reasonable apprehension of renewed acts of cruelty, would be properly before the court, and might fully answer all grounds of defence arising from alleged condonation. D'Aguilar v. D'Aguilar, 1 Hagg. Eccl. 773. Beeby v. Beeby, 1 Hagg. Eccl. 789.
Such is the rule of law as to condonation; and conceding, what we should by no means admit as a universal rule, that a cohabitation for the single night immediately succéeding the last act of cruelty which was made the ground of a divorce, would per se operate as a condonation, unless such condonation was forfeited by subsequent misconduct of the husband, it is clear, upon the facts found by the presiding judge, whose report as to the facts is to be taken to be correct, and who alone has heard the evidence at large in the case, that the subsequent violent acts of the respondent, within the well settled principles governing this class of cases, revive the right of the wife to proceed for the original cause for the divorce, and effectually bar the defence of condonation.
3. This brings us to the consideration of the petition filed by the respondent in April 1854, for a rehearing of this case generally, upon the ground of newly discovered evidence. The grounds of this application arise principally from alleged newly discovered evidence to establish the fact of Walter S. Gardner’s incapacity to have written a certain paper exhibited at the trial. It is somewhat important to understand the precise bearing of this question as to the authenticity of this paper. The acts of cruelty relied upon by the libellant to sustain her libel were testified to by various witnesses, and particularly by Eleanor P. Gardner and Josephine A. Gardner, daughters of the parties. The paper was not and could not be introduced as testimony to support the charges in the libel. It was no part of the libellant’s *443case, as proof of such facts. It only became competent after the respondent had introduced in the defence the testimony of his son Walter, and was introduced by the libellant to impeach Walter by showing that he had given a different account of the matter from that stated on the trial. Looking at it in this aspect, the newly discovered evidence would only tend to sustain a former witness who is supposed to have been discredited at that hearing. On the part of the respondent, however, it is said that the question of the genuineness or falsity of this paper is very material in its bearing upon the whole case; and that, if shown to have been a false and counterfeit paper drawn up by the principal witnesses for the libellant, it would establish a conspiracy to maintain by forgery and fraud the case of the libellant. And in this view of the case, the facts in relation to the genuineness of the paper do become of importance, and the newly discovered evidence would be material.
The further inquiry is, whether it is cumulative merely. If so, the general rule certainly is that it furnishes no legal ground for a new trial. Gardner v. Mitchell, 6 Pick. 116. Sawyer v. Merrill, 10 Pick. 16. Whitbeck v. Whitbeck, 9 Cow. 266. The People v. Superior Court of New York, 5 Wend. 114, and 10 Wend. 285. Whether particular testimony is cumulative or not, is often a question of some nicety. This court has, in common with many other tribunals, been disposed to limit this objection as to cumulative testimony to that which is most obviously so, and not to apply it to all testimony tending to establish the same fact. If it differs in kind, as an admission of a party to some facts about which evidence had been given of a different kind, that has been thought sufficient to take it out of the rule. Chatfield v. Lathrop, 6 Pick. 418. Gardner v. Mitchell, 6 Pick. 116. Watts v. Howard, 7 Met. 480. So, when the evidence on the trial was wholly circumstantial, and the newly discovered evidence positive and direct. Guyot v. Butts, 4 Wend. 579. Barker v. French, 18 Verm. 460.
To determine with accuracy how far this new testimony is cumulative, it is necessary to look at the evidence produced at the hearing. From the report of that evidence, we find the issue *444was distinctly taken as to the fact whether Walter S. Gardner did write the paper; that a part of the evidence offered was to show that Walter had not capacity to write the paper. Walter himself testified to that effect, and so did several other witnesses, including two physicians who testified as to defects in his eyes. It is in part a different kind of evidence, if the source from which it comes gives it that character; as the new evidence from his school companions of his incapacity to learn to write at school; but generally it is not only testimony to the same facts, but also by the same class of witnesses as testified at the trial. There was the testimony of the medical profession, and the testimony of the teachers, on that occasion. It is now proposed to add to both these classes further witnesses to the, same effect. The prevailing character of the newly discovered testimony is certainly that of strictly cumulative evidence, and as such is obnoxious to that objection when relied upon as a ground for a new trial.
4. But the stronger objection to granting the motion for a new trial is" that arising from the laches of the respondent. Upon the effect of want of due diligence in the party, the authorities are quite uniform, and the rule is well established that a new trial will not be granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence, if it appear that with reasonable attention and diligence such new testimony might have been procured before the trial. The People v. Superior Court of New York, before cited. Williams v. Baldwin, 18 Johns. 489, and cases cited. Stearns v. Allen, 18 Verm. 119. This rule is one of great practical importance, and binding upon the court. It is necessary to secure to litigant parties the termination of their legal controversies. Every facility is to be granted to the parties to present their case fully at the hearing. This is their day in court; this the time to exhibit all their proofs. If they lie by, through over confidence in their own strength, or in a mistaken belief of the weakness of their adversary, and the result is against them, they must abide the consequences. The law allows us to open the case anew for further proofs, only when it appears that the newly discovered evidence could not have been procured with the exercise *445of due diligence; and when the party is informed of the existence of material evidence which he cannot procure in time for the trial then in progress, he should apply to the judge to postpone the trial; and if he goes to trial without the evidence, the court will not grant a new trial to enable him to introduce it. Jackson v. Malin, 15 Johns. 293.
Has the respondent exercised due diligence; and does it now appear that the new testimony could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence on the former trial 1
It appears, by the cross interrogatories proposed by the respondent to the libellant’s witnesses, by the evidence at the former trial, and by his own affidavit in support of his petition for a new trial, that, before the hearing in February, he knew of the existence of the paper, and that the ability of Walter to write it would be a material subject of inquiry; that he had taken the testimony of two physicians to this point; and that when the paper was produced at the trial, he suggested no surprise and asked for no postponement. And after the hearing was finished and the opinion pronounced, the only questions reserved were upon rulings in matters of law, stated in the bill of exceptions, and already considered. It was not until a later period that any suggestions were made that the case had not been heard upon all the evidence that was material for a proper adjudication of it.
There are some other facts in this case not to be overlooked. The relation of the respondent to Walter carries with it every presumption that he personally knew, during the entire pendency of this libel, Walter’s ability or inability, as the case may have been, to write such a paper. Indeed, in his affidavit accompanying this petition, he admits “ he knew Walter could not write a paper, unless his hand was guided by some one, on account of his blindness.” This fact of Walter’s ability to write such a paper was not to be proved by distant witnesses, by application to uncertain sources, nor confined to the ■ knowledge of a few persons. The proposed new evidence at once discloses the facility with which most of it might have been procured. We cannot doubt that, with proper attention and *446diligence, the testimony of those who had been teachers ox schoolmates of Walter might easily have been procured in season for the former hearing, or some short adjournment thereof! To open the case anew to supply it would, under the circumstances, be an entire departure from the rules of law. Such new. testimony could only change the result by destroying the credit of Eleanor and Josephine, the two daughters of the respondent, and virtually declaring them guilty of conspiracy and perjury to sustain this libel. Whatever might be shown as to Walter’s capacity to write, there still remains, from the other witnesses, full and abundant testimony to sustain the charge of cruelty, and it is only by destroying their credit that the defence can be maintained.
The respondent, in our opinion, has shown no sufficient ground for opening anew the hearing of this case, for the pur pose of introducing further evidence of the incapacity of Waltei S. Gardner to have written the paper in question.
The court then went into an extended examination of the other evidence relied on as furnishing grounds for a new trial, (which involved no discussion of points of law,) and upon the whole matter, were of opinion that the motion must be overruled, and a New trial refused.