conclusion which has been arrived at by the primary tribunal. Now it may be that in some cases the effect of what I call the unrecorded material is very small, indeed insignificant, and utterly outweighed by other circumstances. It may be, on the other hand, that it guides, and necessarily guides, the tribunal to the proper conclusion. If that is the case, as I have said before, the Court of Appeal cannot say that the conclusion is wrong without disregarding the material which it knows must have been existent before the tribunal below, and is necessary to a just conclusion."
I agree with every word of that passage, whether it is applied to a trial by a Judge alone or to one by both Judge and jury, and I think it puts forward considerations to which sometimes too little weight is given in reviewing decisions of fact, decisions often given under circumstances which it is impossible to reproduce before another Court. It is obvious that, in a case like the pre- sent one, such circuinstances as those which were referred to by my learned brother Isaacs were likely very strongly to influence the minds of the jury. Up to a certain point the facts are com- mon to both sides, but after that point is reached there is a com- plete dissonance here between the witnesses for the petitioner and those for the respondent, and obviously it is open to the jury to say which side they believe, and equally open and proper for them to decide that question not only upon the spoken word, but upon circumstances surrounding the giving of evidence and also upon the demeanour of witnesses, attaching to that word the wide sense which it occupies in the passage I have just quoted. There seems, then, every reason why we should not disturb the jury's verdiet in this case unless there can be found upon the deposi- tions something which in itself demonstrates beyond question that that verdiet is wrong. I say without hesitation that it is impossible to find that in the evidence which has been read to us. The circumstances, too, under which the case came before the Court were such as would justify the jury in giving more than usual importance to the incidents of the case, SO far as they con- sisted of demeanour. Three of the witnesses were, as has been correctly put in the argument, emissaries of the petitioner; one was a brother, another an employé, another a great friend of his brother's Now, when witnesses go to a place on the prompting