Court Opinion

ID: 6565752
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:19:36.604552+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:43.413366
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Gabbert
delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff in error was convicted of the larceny of a steer, and. sentenced to pay a fine of one thousand dollars. After the verdict, she filed a motion for a new trial, based upon newly discovered evidence, which was embodied in an affidavit of a party by the name of Beals, wherein he set out in detail what he would testify to. On behalf of the people, in opposition to the motion, affidavits were filed, the purpose of which was to impeach the credibility of Beals. Counsel for plaintiff in error moved that these affidavits be stricken from the files, which was denied, and the motion for a new trial overruled.
The two propositions urged upon our attention are, that the court erred in overruling the motion of defendant to strike from the files all counter affidavits filed by the people in opposition to the motion for a new trial; and also erred in overruling the motion of defendant for a new trial. In support of the first proposition, it is contended the record discloses that the court was influenced by the counter affidavits, and con*481sidered that Beals had been impeached, or discredited for truth and veracity. The record, will not support this contention. It recites that the motion to strike the counter affidavits was ■overruled; but it further recites that “the motion for a new trial will he overruled for the reason that the evidence referred to and set forth in = the affidavits is cumulative, and because of the length of time which has elapsed since,the first trial, there having been two trials of this case since the April 1911 term, and the information having been filed on the 4th day of April, 1911.”
So far as pertinent to consider in connection with the ■statements in the affidavit of Beals, the testimony on the part of the prosecution was to the effect that the defendant .and a man in her employ were seen driving a steer, light red in color, .Branded Bar P Bar, which was the brand of Charles H. and Richard Parris, from whom, it was charged in the information, the steer in question had been stolen by the defendant. It also appears from the testimony on the part of the people, that this animal had been driven several miles ■some days before it was taken possession of by defendant, by two parties who were gathering cattle for a party whose brand was P, but, after driving it to the vicinity of the Sherrell ranch, they concluded, on closer inspection, that it was branded Bar P Bar, and turned it out of the herd they were driving. It was in the vicinity of where this steer was left that defendant took possession of it.
The defendant testified that on the day the larceny •charged was committed, she took possession of a steer near the Sherrell ranch that she was afterwards seen driving by the witness for the people, which she drove to her place and ■converted to her own use; but claims, according to her testimony, that it was her property, branded with her brand, I Bar X. The party who assisted her in driving the steer to her corral was a witness in her behalf. His testimony was, that the hair on the animal was long; that he could not make out the brand, but that he could notice a couple of bars. This *482evidence, in--a s'ense,'corroborated the testimony of the .people, as the Parris brand' was thus, |P|, while the defendant’s .brand was thus, I|X; that is, in the Parris brand were two bars, and in the defendant’s but'one. It will thus be seen'that one of the vital issues 'of fact was, whether the animal she drove to her corral arid was charged with having stolen, was branded Bar P Bar, or I Bar X, and to> establish which testimony as to the exact 'biran'd was introduced pro- and con. The jury by the verdict returned resolved this issue of fact in favor of the people.
• Beals, in his affidavit, states in substance that he met the defendant and: the man assisting her,» driving a steer on the date the larceny wriS alleged to have occurred, branded I Bar -X. ■ •
As a general rule, in order to warrant granting a new trial on the ground of. newly discovered evidence, it must appear, among other things, that it is not merely cumulative to the former evidence. 14 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 791; Colo. Spgs. & I. Ry. Co. v. Foglesong, 42 Colo. 341. The statements of Beals with respect to the. brand on the animal merely tended to' prove the same point to which other evidence of precisely the same character, to prove the same probative fact, had been offered and received on the part of the prosecution, as well as on behalf of the defendant at the trial, and was, .therefore, cumulative. The trial judge refused a new trial for this reason. We think this ruling was correct, and should not be disturbed.
The trial court also correctly ruled that defendant had not shown diligence. It is settled by an unbroken line o.f decisions, that a motion for a new trial on the ground* of newly discovered evidence will not be entertained unless it appears that it could not have been discovered before the trial, by the exercise of due diligence. Defendant was first'tried in April, 1911'. The jury disagreed. The next trial, when she was -convicted, took place in November following. In-her affidavit she states that she now recalls .and remembers seeinsr, or meet*483ing, some one driving a team 011 the road along which she was driving the steer, but did not recognize him, or know that this party was Beals, or that she was recognized by him, as her attention at that time was attracted 'by Sherrell. This showing wholly fails to satisfy the rule regarding diligence. 'The case had once been tried. . The jury-having disagreed, a second trial was ordered. The defendant had heard the' testimony on the part of the people as introduced at the first trial, ■eight months before the second. There is no- showing that at the latter it was any different from that given at the first. According to her own statements, she made no effort whatever to- ascertain the name of the party she met on the road, who now turns out to be Beals, or what fact he would testify to. Neither does she offer any valid reason why, before the ■second trial, she did not remember having met this party.
Decided October 7, A. D. 1912.
Rehearing denied December 9, A. D. 1912.
The judgment of the district' court is' affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Chief Justice Campbell and Mr. Justice Hill concur.