delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit brought in the District Court of Guayama by Isabel Silva as a legal representative of her minor children named in the petition against Jaime Salamanca and other unknown relatives for the purpose of having said minors declared to be the acknowledged natural children of Don Miguel Alemany y Ripoll, deceased, to bear the name of the latter, and to receive the portion of the inheritance as such acknowledged natural children.
After various preliminary pleadings and motions the trial took place on the 20th of June, 1907. Proof was presented by both sides and on June 29, 1907, the court decided in favor of all the prayers of the petitioner, the appellee in this court, and ordering that the judgment be filed in the civil register.
An appeal was taken from the judgment but not prosecuted in this record. The present appeal is taken from the order of the court of the 7th of September, 1907, denying the motion for a new trial made on the 19th of August, 1907.
Two grounds of a new trial were assigned in the motion, namely, that the judgment was not supported' by the evidence and that after the trial defendant had discovered new evidence which was so important that it could change the decision previously made, and alleging besides that the proof offered was new and material and not cumulative and not offered to impeach the testimony of the witnesses at the trial.
*531The complaint set up that Don Miguel Alemany y Ripoll died in Guay am a on Octuher 6, 1907, a bachelor and of age; that he lived in concubinage with Isabel Silva up and to the date of his death having had in this union four children, three of whom were baptized in the “parrochial” church of Gua-yama as the natural children of the complainant; that Isabel Silva and the said minor children lived under the care and protection of said decedent, the latter sustaining and supporting them as a true father of a family and treating them in public and in society as his children; other facts were recited in the complaint tending to show acknowledgment of said children on the part of said Alemany; that at the timé of the conception of such children as well as of the' death of said Alemany no impediment existed between him and the said complainant to prevent the couple from marrying, as they were each single, and not related, and no other cause existed to prevent marriage.
The motion for a new trial in so far as it sought to attack the judgment on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence is supported by a statement of the case. There is, however, no specification in such statement of The particulars in which such evidence is alleged to be insufficient, such specification being required by paragraph three of section 223 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is true that at the end of the said statement there are several so-called particulars mentioned but they are set forth in such general terms as to be a mere restatement of the ground of the motion, namely, that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment. That the particulars were capable of ready specification is shown in the brief of the appellant himself, when he alleges: First, that the only proof of the capacity of the decedent to marry was given by Jaime Salamanca, who testified that the decedent was a bachelor, without such proof showing the nonexistence of other obstacles;'and second, that there was no *532proof, whatsoever of the capacity of the complainant to contract a marriage. Section 223 says that a motion for a new trial which fails to specify particulars should be disregarded, but it is nevertheless evident that, if properly made the' objections would not avail the appéllant. Jaime Salamanca testified. that he lived in Gruayama; that he know Don Miguel Alemany y Bipoll, a bachelor, a brother on the side of deponent’s mother dying on October 6, 1907, and that no degree of relationship existed between his brother and Isabel Silva. ■Thus the presumption arises that the decedent was and continued to be single to the time of his death and that there was no other obstacle to his marriage.
With respect to Isabel Silva the objection is met by the principle announced in the decision rendered by this court in the case of Lange v. Avilés, 2 Set. del Tribunal Supremo, which says on page 611:
“Considering, with respect to the violation alleged of the articles: 325 and 327 of the Civil Code, that even if the complainant did not take care to demonstrate her civil status and that of Don Ulises Lange in the manner required by such articles to justify that they were in the legal condition to contract marriage at the date of the conception of their children, Antonio and Luis Paulino, this circumstance can have no influence to destroy the justness of the sentence appealed from in declaring the said minor children natural children of Don Ulises Lange inasmuch as in the complaint the question of the legal capacity of the complainant and of Don Ulises to contract' marriage at the date mentioned, having been raised and such circumstances not having been expressly attacked in the answer of the defendant succession nor any proof offered to the contrary, there exist in favor of said minors the legal presumption juris tantum of belonging to the class of natural children even without demonstrating the civil status in the form which the foregoing articles of the Civil Code require, and this in conformity with the jurisprudence announced by the Supreme Court of Spain, in the judgments of the 12th of November, 1858, and 11th of October, 1882, according to which that his parentage having been proved by the one who desires to be recognized as a natural child, as happens in the present case, it is not necessary to prove that his parents at the mo*533ment of conception or of birth could legally marry without dispensation beeause this matter is presumed until the contrary appears.”
Therefore the court below was fully justified in giving no heed to the motion for new trial on this ground.
The motion for a new trial on the grounds of newly discovered evidence was supported by several affidavits tending to show that the complainant had had sexual relations with others than the defendant at the time of the birth and conception of said minor children. There were counter affidavits, and especially one of the complainant, which tends to disprove these facts. It does not affirmatively appear that the respondent below exercised due diligence in obtaining knowledge of these facts. The witnesses had all been employed by the decedent and it seems to us that the testimony might have been readily obtained, if sought for, especially when the issue in the case was the question of the parentage of such children. When the ground of the motion is newly discovered evidence, courts look with suspicion at such motion and the mover, if he would prevail in an appellate tribunal, must show not only that the court below did not exercise a sound discretion but also that the party complainant could not, with due diligence, have discovered such proof; that the evidence is material and not cumulative and that it will have a tendency to change the result if the case is opened for proof. (See People v. McCardy, 68 Cal., 576; Harralson v. Barret, 99 Cal., 607; Balter v. Joseph, 16 Cal., 173; Von Glahn v. Brennan, 81 Cal., 261; People v. Warren, 130 Cal., 683; People v. Rushing, 130 Cal., 449; Oberlander v. Fixen & Co., 129 Cal., 690.)
The appellant has not shown the element of diligence necessary, nor that the alleged new evidence would tend to change the result of the trial as required by some of the cases cited.
In the case at bar, however, there were contradictory affidavits and the judge' below was in the best position to judge the truth of them and decide the conflict. If, there had been no contradicting affidavits and he still believed that the evi-*534dencé’offered-would not tibauge 'tire result lie was fully justified in overruling tfie motion, for a new; trial.
’ Tlie order appealed from must be affirmed.
Affirmed-
.Chief Justice Quiñones and Justices Hernández, Figueras and MacLeary concurred.