State v. Laper

CORSON, J.

The defendant, upon an information filed by the state’s attorney of Edmunds county, was tried and convicted of a crime of receiving stolen property, knowing it to have been stolen. From the judgment of conviction and order denying a new trial, the defendant has appealed to this court. It is stated, in substance, in the information, that the property alleged to have been received by the defendant knowing it to have been stolen was one sorrel mare with white hind legs and one white fore foot and bald face, stolen by one Henry T. Laper -on the 17th day of January, '1906, and that the said defendant on September 25, 1906, had received the same, knowing the same to have been stolen.

Numerous errors are assigned on the part of the defendant, among which are alleged errors of the court in denying a new trial on various grounds, and in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. It is contended by the Attorney General on the part of the state that the motion for a new trial on the ground of errors of law occurring at the trial was not properly presented to the trial court. In the view we take of the case, it will not be necessary to consider or discuss the various points made by the- Attorney General, relative to the motion for a new .trial, on the ground of errors occurring at the trial, as we shall confine ourselves- exclusively to the motion for a new trial upon -the ground of newly discovered evidence.

On the trial -one of the principal questions presented by the evidence was as to the identity of the animal alleged to have been stolen and received by' the defendant. It was alleged in the information that -the mare stolen was the property of one Joseph Wentz, and on the trial the defendant offered evidence -tending to prove that -the animal found in his -possession was raised by him from a colt whose dam was owned by him, and which was foaled in the year 1903, and remained -on the rancla owned by Henry T. Laper until the spring of 1905, when it was -taken by the defendant to his own ranch in Edmunds county, and there kept until the time of the trial in the spring of 1909. The evidence in regard *154to the identity of the animal stolen or lost by Joseph Wentz and the one found in the possession of the defendant was conflicting,' but the jury found by their verdict that the animal alleged to have been stolen from Wentz and found in the possession of the defendant belonged to the said Wentz. The defendant on the trial testified himself in his own behalf, that he owned the mare, the dam of the mare in controversy, that the same was a colt raised by him, and had remained in his possession up to the time of the trial. His testimony, as to the ownership of the mare, was corroborated by several witnesses, but on rebuttal the state introduced a number of witnesses whose testimony tended to corroborate the statement of Wentz that the mare found in the possession of the defendant was the one that had been lost or stolen from liim on the 17th day of January, 1906. On the motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, the affidavits of 23 witnesses were introduced on the hearing, all tending to prove that the defendant was in the. possession of the mare'in controversy as early as 1905, and the testimony of several of them tended to prove that the defendant had been in possession of the mare from the time it was foaled in 1903 up to the time of the trial.

The court in denying the new trial states as the principal ground upon which it denied the motion that the defendant did not show proper diligence in procuring the evidence sought to be introduced upon the new trial. The affidavits are very voluminous extending over some 50 pages of the abstract, and we shall therefore not attempt to reproduce them in this opinion. The evidence is of such a character as to tend to establish the fact that the mare alleged to have been stolen and received by the defendant was in fact the property of the defendant and not of Wentz as claimed by the prosecution, of at least as tending to raise a doubt in the minds of the jury as to the guilt of the defendant. The granting of a motion for a new trial upon the grounds of newly discovered evidence is not favored by the courts, and where the evidence is simply-cumulative, or merely impeaching evidence, and would not probably change the verdict on another trial, the motion will ordinarily be denied; and, in order to obtain a new trial *155upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, defendant must show that he has used due diligence to procure the evidence at the former trial.

As above stated, the defendant introduced several witnesses on the trial who testified that they had known the mare alleged to have been stolen and received -by the defendant since 1905, and that the same was the property of the defendant, and tends to rebut the contention of the state at the time it had rested its case. We are of the opinion that the defendant was not bound to anticipate that the rebutting testimony would be of such a character as to overcome the testimony introduced by him in support of his ownership of the property, and that he is not charged with a want of due diligence in'not producing the witnesses in support of his ownership of the property whose affidavits were read on motion for a new trial. It is true that the witnesses whose testimony is sought to be obtained on the new trial live in the county, but their evidence is of such a character that the defendant could not have readily known without specially interviewing each of the witnesses as to the testimony he would give on the trial in regard to the defendant’s ownership of the property. While this court has generally held that merely cumulative evidence, or impeaching evidence, or evidence that the court cannot clearly see might lead to a different verdict upon another trial, or where due diligence has not been used, a new trial would not be granted, we are of the opinion that in the case at- bar, however, the evidence sought to be introduced is not cumulative in the sense in which that term is generally used, as the ownership of the property by the defendant is sought to be shown by witnesses who have, at various times since 1903, seen the mare in the possession of the defendant, driven and used by him, under such circumstances that they could not possibly be mistaken as to the identity of the mare as being the one so claimed by and in the possession of the defendant. The contention that the newly discovered evidence sought to be produced is simply cumulative is not tenable. It is true witnesses were introduced on the trial tending to prove that at various times between 1905 and the time of the trial they had seen the mare found in the possession of the defendant ,at the time of the trial *156in the possession of the defendant and being used and driven by him.

The evidence of the witnesses whose affidavits were u-sed on the hearing, while tending to establish the ultimate fact that the defendant was the owner of the mare, and that it had been in his possession from the year 1903 as a colt, and J905 as a two year-old, in the possession of, used, and driven by the defendant, the evidence did not tend to support the statement of any particular witness who had testified on the trial that at a particular time and place- he 'had seen the mare in the possession of the defendant prior to January, 1906, but that they had seen the animal in the possession of the defendant at other times not referred to by‘ the witnesses who had testified in the case. Such evidence, therefore, was not cumulative because it tended bo prove the ultimate fact by evidence of the witnesses that they had seen the mare in the possession of and used by the defendant prior to January, 1906. The rule applicable to cumulative evidence was quite fully discussed by this court in the case of In re McClellan’s Estate, 21 S. D. 209, 111 N. W. 540. In the case of Boggess v. Read, 83 Iowa, 548, 50 N. W. 43, the Supreme Court of Iowa discussed the question of cumulative evidence quite fully. The action was an action for slander charging a clergyman with lewdness. There was a verdict for the plaintiff, a motion for a new trial on the ground of newly -discovered evidence, and an appeal. Granger, J., who -delivered the opinion -of the appellate court, said: “When evidence is additional '-to -other evidence on the same point as distinguished from an ultimate fact, it is cumulative * * * As a defense in -this case the defendant attempted to show lewdness or adulterous- conduct. On the trial already had, there was evidence of particular facts tending to- show lewdness. Additional evidence as to such particular facts would be cumulative. But the showing of newly discovered evidence is that witnesses will testify to other facts from which the ultimate fact of lewdness may be found. The defendant purposes- to prove a-ct-s not before attempted to be established. Such evidence we do not regard as -cumulative within the rule for denying a party a new trial.” 8 Am. Eng. Enc. of Law, p. 465.

*157The ultimate fact sought to be established in the case at bar by the defendant was that he had been the owner of the mare found in his possession at the time of the trial since the time it was foaled in 1903, and, if this ultimate fact was established, the defendant could not have been guilty of receiving the -same as’ stolen property subsequently to January 17, 1906. The witnesses on behalf of the defendant had testified -that at various times between 1903, when the mare was a colt and the time of the trial, they had seen her in the possession of the defendant. The new evidence sought to be introduced, it is .true, was intended to establish the same ultimate fact by -showing that different witnesses had at other times than -those testified -to seen the identical mare alleged to have been received as stolen property by the defendant in the possession of and used by the defendant prior to the time it was alleged to -have been stolen in January, 1906, in the possession of and used by the defendant at various times prior to January, 1906, and subsequently, but not at the particular times and places testified to by any of the witnesses who had -testified on the trial. Clearly, therefore, the testimony proposed to be given by the newfy discovered witnesses was not cumulative, and the objection made to the granting of the motion upon that ground was untenable.

The trial court in its opinion given on the motion for a new trial says: “In reference to the application for a new trial * * * on the ground of newly discovered evidence, would say that, owing to the fac-t that this application has appealed so strongly to me from an - equitable standpoint, I have endeavored to make an exhaustive examination of the authorities bearing upon this question. * * *” He further -says in the course of the opinion: “I am of the opinion that this -testimony, if produced, would be likely to change the -result.” The court, however, notwithstanding these views, seems to- have been of the opinion that under the weight of authority it was required to- deny the motion. But in our opinion these two findings -of the trial court were sufficient'to warrant it in granting a flew -trial, even though, under the -technical rules governing the -courts relative to motions for a new trial, the same would ordinarily be denied. A motion for a new *158trial on -the ground of newly discovered evidence is largely in the sound judicial discretion of the trial court, .and the court’s decision will not ordinarily be reversed unless there has been an abuse of such discretion, but, where the court can see from the character of the evidence that is sought to be introduced upon a new trial it would probably change the result or tend to raise doubts in the minds of the jury as to the ownership of the property alleged to have been received, it should not hesitate to grant a new trial in order that the defendant may have the -opportunity of presenting his defense to'another jury when the same can be done without violating any positive provisions of law. It is not the theory of the law that rules established by the courts for the promotion of justice and the ending of litigation should be used for the purpose of injustice, or in denying to a defendant in a criminal case an opportunity to establish his innocence of the crime charged upon a proper showing of newly discovered evidence. In our opinion, therefore, under the showing made on the motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, the motion should have been granted. In the view we take of the case, it will npt be necessary to consider of discuss any of the other questions presented on this appeal, as they may not arise on another trial.

The order of the circuit court denying a new trial is reversed, and a new trial is granted.