Seymour v. Hoyt & Tabor
Seymour v. Hoyt & Tabor
Opinion of the Court
But one error is assigned, namely, that the court should have set aside the verdict of the jury against the defendants, and gran ted them a new trial, on the ground of evidence newly discovered. The action was to recover an alleged balance due, after deducting various payments, upon a sale of two hundred and thirty barrels of apples by plaintiff to defendants. The answer sets up, in substance, that defendants bought the apples before they arrived, upon the representation of the. plaintiff that they were sound, good winter apples, etc.; that they were not sound,'but largely rotten, etc.; that defendants, when they discovered'this, notified plaintiff thereof, and a new contract was entered into by which defendants were to send east, get a cider-mill, make the apples into cider, do the best they could with them, and, deducting expenses, pay the balance to the plaintiff, which, they allege, they have done. The cause was tried by a jury, who returned a ■ verdict for the plaintiff. Defendants made a motion for a new trial, on the ground of newly discovered evidence. That evidence was that they could prove by one Doty that he had heard a conversation between the parties as follows : “ Iioyt told Seymour that the apples were not the kind he bought and that he did not care about keeping them. Then Seymour (plaintiff) told Hoyt (defendant) to get a cider mill and make up the poorest of them into cider and do the best he could with them, and that he would make it all right. Hoyt said, if you will make it all right, I will do so; and Seymour agreed to it.” Hoyt, in his affidavit, filed with the motion, claimed that he was surprised by the testimony of the plaintiff, denying the alleged new contract. None of the evidence in the cause is preserved by bill of exceptions, or the certificate of the jlidge.
We would not allow a party to be concluded by such statements on the part of the j’udge, provided the appellant had furnished us the data by which the j'udge’s opinion might be reviewed and the correctness of his statement tested..
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.