Court Opinion

ID: 3643775
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:00:35.683528+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:50:46.384397
License: Public Domain

When judgment was offered for signature in this case, the plaintiff moved for a new trial for newly discovered evidence, but his Honor stated that he was about to depart for the next court and could not hear the motion, and continued it to be heard at next term. He thereupon signed the judgment, embracing therein the above statement and an order staying proceedings under the judgment till said motion could be decided at next term. At such next term, another judge being on the bench, adjudged that he had no power to grant said motion, and denied the same, from which order the plaintiff appealed.
An irregular judgment can be set aside by motion within a reasonable *Page 134 
time (Strickland v. Strickland, 129 N.C. 89); but a motion to set aside a regular judgment based on a verdict "can only be heard at the same term at which the trial is had." The Code, sec. 412(4). This section covers all motions to set aside regular judgments, though they may be on grounds not specifically named therein. Quincey v. Perkins,76 N.C. 295; Puffer v. Lucas, 107 N.C. 322; McCaskill v. Currie,113 N.C. 313; Hardy v. Hardy, 128 N.C. 178. The only exceptions made in The Code are motions on the grounds named in section 274, "mistake, inadvertence, surprise, and excusable neglect," in which cases the motion may be made "within one year after notice of the judgment." A motion to set aside a judgment "for newly discovered evidence" does not come within the latter category, and therefore could only be heard at the trial term. Section 412(4). The continuance of such motion was therefore improvident, and the judge who held the next term properly held that he could not hear it. The requirement that motions to set aside judgments must be "heard at the same term at which the trial is had" (except in cases coming under section 274 and in cases of irregular (189)  judgments) is wisely conceived. Such action at the trial term is discretionary and not reviewable (as has been always held as to motions to set aside for newly discovered evidence), and, besides, no one could possibly be so well advised as to the justice and propriety of granting or refusing such motion as the judge who has just heard the facts developed in the trial. In Redmond v. Stepp, 100 N.C. at p. 219,Smith, C. J., says: "Where the new evidence is discovered during the term, the motion must be made to the court that tried the cause, and its decision, whether granting or refusing the new trial, is conclusive." A motion on such ground can ordinarily be made in this Court only when discovered after the adjournment of the court below at which the cause was tried, and pending the appeal, and is decided here as a matter of discretion, not as a legal right, no opinion being written in any case. Bledsoe v. Nixon, 69 N.C. 81; Henry v. Smith, 78 N.C. 27;Brown v. Mitchell, 102 N.C. 347, 11 Am. St., 748; Nathan v.R. R., 118 N.C. 1066.
Under the peculiar facts of this case the plaintiff might have made the motion in this Court, and failing to do so, he may make it on a petition to rehear filed for that purpose, as was allowed in Black v. Black, 111 N.C. at p. 305, provided his affidavits make out such a prima facie case as shall justify some member of the Court to endorse the petition to rehear.
While, as we have pointed out, the plaintiff under the circumstances of this case still has an opportunity to present his motion in this Court, it is not amiss to quote, "Such applications are regarded with suspicion and examined with caution, the applicant being required to rebut the *Page 135 
presumption that the verdict is correct and that he has not exercised due diligence in preparing for trial." 14 A.  E. Enc. Pl. and Pr., 790.
Our own decisions require as prerequisites for such motions, whether made below or in this Court, that it shall appear by         (190) affidavit (1) that the witness will give the newly discovered evidence, (2) that it is probably true, (3) that it is material, (4) that due diligence was used in securing it, and that such motions have been allowed only "in cases of manifest injustice and wrong and when there was no other relief attainable." Carson v. Dellinger, 90 N.C. at p. 231. But the motion will be denied if the new evidence merely tends to contradict a witness examined on the trial (Brown v. Mitchell, 102 N.C. at p. 367, 11 Am. St., 748), or to discredit the opposing witness (S. v. DeGraff, 113 N.C. 688), or is merely cumulative (S. v. Starnes,97 N.C. 423); and it is not sufficient to state that "every means had been used to find out where the witness was." The applicant should state what means he did use, and let the court judge. Schehan v.Malone, 72 N.C. 59.
No error.
Cited: McLeod v. Graham, post, 474; S. v. Robinson, 143 N.C. 624; Adenv. Doub, 146 N.C. 13; Gay v. Mitchell, ib., 511; Smith v. Moore,150 N.C. 159; Mottu v. Davis, 153 N.C. 164; Chrisco v. Yow, ib., 436; Murdock v. R. R., 159 N.C. 132; Stilley v. Planing Mills,161 N.C. 519; Johnson v. R. R., 163 N.C. 454; Allen v. Gooding,174 N.C. 273; Alexander v. Cedar Works, 177 N.C. 537; Cogburn v. Henson,179 N.C. 635.