Case ID: ad_75/html/0006-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Spring, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Sarah J. Bridenbecker, Respondent, v. Eliza Bridenbecker, Substituted in the Place and Stead of Frank W. Arnold, as Grand Secretary and Treasurer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, Appellant.
    
      Motion for new trial because of newly-discovered evidence — when denied — a “case” is required.
    
    -A motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence must be made upon a case'.
    An order granting such a motion will be reversed where it appears that the person relied upon to give such newly-discovered evidence was an old friend of the moving party, resided in the same house with her and was present during the entire trial.
    Appeal by the defendant, Eliza Bridenbecker, substituted in the place and stead of Frank W. Arnold, as Grand Secretary and "Treasurer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Oneida Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk, of the county of Onondaga on the 12th day of April, 1902, granting the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial -upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence and appointing a referee to hear, try and determine the issues involved.
    
      Da/oid F. Costello, for the appellant.
    
      William Townsend, for the respondent.
   Spring, J.:

In January, 1895, a benefit certificate was issued to Edward A. Bridenbecker by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, which is a co-operative assessment insurance organization. The certificate provided for the payment of $1,500 to the defendant Eliza Bridenbecker, who was the wife of the insured at his death. The certificate in terms made the constitution of the organization a part of the agreement, and in order to transfer a certificate it was necessary by section 58 of the constitution of the order to procure the consent of the local lodge of which the insured was a member. The ■section continues : “ He shall then authorize or make such change in writing on the back of the certificate in the form prescribed, attested by the Secretary, with the seal of the Lodge attached ; but no change or transfer shall be valid, or have any binding effect until said certificate has been forwarded to the Grand Lodge, and said transfer duly recorded on the Grand Register and marked approved,’ with the day and date of such approval stamped thereon, and signed by the Grand Secretary and Treasurer.” Bridenbecker was a member of West Shore Lodge No. 213 in the city of Syracuse, and at a meeting of the lodge February 5, 1901, upon his request a resolution was passed consenting that the beneficiary be changed from his wife to his mother, the plaintiff in this action. The secretary of the lodge was not present at this meeting, but between that date and the seventeenth of the month he found at his home the certificate of Bridenbecker with the blank transfer filled out to the plaintiff which he forwarded to the grand lodge at Peoria, 111., where it arrived February nineteenth, and Bridenbecker died the eighteenth. This action was -commenced against the secretary and treasurer of the brotherhood to recover upon the certificate, but as -the mother and the widow each ■ claimed the money, an order of interpleader was granted by which the widow was substituted as defendant upon the original defendant paying into court the said sum of $1,500, and an answer was thereafter interposed on behalf of the widow.

. - The case was tried before a- referee and the certificate wás pro^ duced with the transfer purporting to have been signed by the insured indorsed thereon. The daughter of the plaintiff testified that the signature' was that, of the insured. The secretary testified that when he first saw the transfer it was unsigned and he signed the-name of Edward Bridenbecker to it and mailed it to the grand lodge. Both of these witnesses were sworn on behalf of the plaintiff and the defendant offered no proof and the sole issue of fact was over the genuineness of this signature and was confined to-these two witnesses. The referee delivered his report finding as a fact that the signature of Bridenbecker was made by the secretary “ supposing that he had the right so to do ” and that there was, no-valid transfer of the certificate and dismissed the complaint.

This motion was thereafter made, based necessarily upon a case (Code Civ. Proc. § 997; Davis v. Grand Rapids Fire Ins. Co., 5 App. Div. 36) in order that the pertinency of the proposed new evidence may'be seen and also upon affidavits. The new evidence-which it is claimed will change the result is that of John G. Cuming, whose affidavit accompanied the moving papers, in which he says that Bridenbecker told him in Utica on the 3d day of February, 1901, that he was going to Syracuse to his local lodge to have his benefit certificate transferred from his wife to his mother, and also that about the tenth of February the insured told the deponent that the local lodge “had authorized the transfer,” and it “had been properly filled out and signed and sent on to the Grand Lodge after having obtained consent of the local lodge.”

Although motions of this kind are addressed largely to the discretion of the court at Special Term, the discretion is not an arbitrary one, for there are certain well-defined rules which govern to a large degree in their determination. Among these essentials the moving papers must- show that the evidence could not have been obtained upon the former trial by the exercise of due diligence, and that it has been discovered since the trial. The attorney for the plaintiff states in his affidavit that this new evidence was discovered him by and the plaintiff since the trial, but as to her knowledge he could not know absolutely. The plaintiff resided in the same city with the attorney, but it is significant to note that her affidavit is not among the moving papers. The affidavits of the attorney for the defendant and of the defendant show that Cuming attended the. trial during its two sessions; that the trial took place at Syracuse, and Cuming, the plaintiff, her daughter and attorney went from Utica together to the place of trial; that when they arrived in the court room they went into the private office of the referee, taking with them the certificate with the transfer indorsed thereon, and were in consultation for some time; that upon the termination of the hearing, 'November 26, 1901, there was an adjournment for several days, and Cuming went away with the plaintiff; that on the adjourned day no additional testimony was offered. Cuming was, therefore, present during the entire taking of the evidence, which was occupied in the main with disputed testimony over the genuineness of the signature of the said decedent in said transfer. It is quite apparent that the slightest diligence would have discovered whatever facts were within the knowledge of Cuming upon this subject. It further appeared that Cuming lived in the same house with the plaintiff, had been her long-time friend, and that he furnished the groceries used by her. There are no affidavits in the record contradicting any of these facts. The plaintiff does not claim that she was taken by surprise by the testimony offered, and in fact the answer denied that the transfer was signed by the decedent or authorized by him.

It is quite evident that the plaintiff elected to go on with her case without the testimony of Cuming or without further investigation.

The authorities are uniform in holding that a new trial will not be granted on the ground of newly-discovered evidence if the testimony could have been obtained for the trial with reasonable diligence. (Thompson v. Welde, 27 App. Div. 186; Bastian v. Keystone Gas Co., Id. 584; Kring v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 45 id. 373, 378; Haight v. City of Elmira, 42 id. 391, 396; People v. Holmes, 32 id. 148; Smith v. Rentz, 73 Hun, 195.)

In Thompson v. Welde (27 App. Div.) the court say (at p. 188).: “ Motions for a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence are granted only where the evidence could not have been discovered before the trial by the exercise of reasonable diligence, and that fact is made to appear by the moving papers. To permit any other rule would be manifestly unjust, because it would enable a litigant to experiment as to the amount of evidence necessary to win his case, in the hope that if the evidence produced was not sufficient lie might be allowed another trial, in which he could introduce the evidence held back and supply the gaps which he .had permitted to exist. - Because of this lack of diligence in preparation of trial this motion should have been denied.”

The moving papers wofully fail to comply with this requirement. The justice who granted this motion did not have the light which comes to one who has tried the case. His decision is based upon the record which is presented to this court.

The counsel for the respondent has discussed the case viewed from the report of the referee, claiming that the legal conclusions arrived at are incorrect. The judgment on that record is not up for review. That can be considered only by appeal. The case presented upon this motion is not for the purpose of enabling the court to consider • the correctness of that judgment and we do not assume to ■do so.

The order should be reversed, with costs and disbursements of this appeal, and the motion for á new trial denied, with ten dollars costs.

Adams, P. J., McLennan, Williams and Hiscocek, JJ., concurred. •

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