Judges: Maltbie, Hinman, Avery, Brown, Jennings
Filed Date: 11/1/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On October 21st, 1937, the plaintiff was tried in the Court of Common Pleas upon informations charging him with assault, breach of the peace, and resisting an officer, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and sentence was imposed on October 26th but stay of execution was granted pending an appeal. On December 1st, 1937, the plaintiff brought this petition, alleging that since the trial the plaintiff had discovered material evidence in his favor which he failed to discover before or during the trial, although he used all due and reasonable diligence in endeavoring to find testimony in his favor, which evidence *Page 672 was set forth in the form of affidavits annexed to the petition; a transcript of the evidence upon the trial also was annexed. The answer denied the allegation of due diligence, the alleged new evidence and the further allegation that the verdict was unjust.
At the hearing the plaintiff sought first to introduce the testimony of the persons whose evidence was set forth in the affidavits which accompanied the petition. To these proffers the State objected on the ground that the plaintiff should first show that this evidence was not discovered or discoverable by the exercise of due diligence prior to or during the former trial, and the trial court so ruled. Salinardi then rested without attempting to prove that the evidence he offered was newly discovered and not discoverable with due diligence in season for introduction on the trial. The validity of this ruling is the issue on the appeal.
The statute (General Statutes, 5701) under which this action is brought includes the discovery of new evidence among the causes for which new trials may be granted. The petition must allege and set forth the evidence produced on the former trial, together with the newly discovered evidence. Gannon v. State,
The proper order of proof may well depend upon the determinative issue. If that be the presence or absence of due diligence in the discovery of the new evidence, evidence on that point may logically precede development of the nature and extent of the new evidence and consideration of its materiality to the result, for without a showing of the requisite diligence that further consideration would not be reached. This was the procedure in Hall v. Tice, supra; 130 Supreme Court Records Briefs (3d Dist., Jan. 1913) 581, 590. Where, however, due diligence is not controverted and the paramount question is whether the new evidence is such as would probably change the result if a new trial be granted, the course indicated would be to proceed immediately to testimony disclosing the new evidence, as in State v. Goldberger,
From our earliest decisions the order of proof has been made subject to the exercise of a liberal discretion by the trial court. Hurlburt v. Bussemey,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.