21 Vt. 68 | Vt. | 1848
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a petition preferred to the county court, praying to have the judgment of a justice of the peace in favor of the petitionee and against the petitioners set aside and vacated for the alleged cause, that the justice, after the petitioners had been defaulted and the case continued for the assessment of damages, refused, at the day to which it was adjourned, to call in a jury upon the application of the petitioners, to assess the damages. The petition assigns no other cause of complaint. The county court dismissed the petition, upon the ground that the case did' not come within the statute, which, in the exercise of a discretionary power, would authorize the court to vacate the judgment of the justice.
The statute defining the powers and duties of justices of the peace secures to either party a trial by jury, if demanded ; and the term trial, as here used, we apprehend, means that trial of the issue, which precedes the judgment. In the case at bar it appears, that the judgment was rendered upon the default of the petitioners, and the subsequent assessment of the damages was not the trial of an issue, and not the trial contemplated by the statute. This assessment might be made by the court at any convenient time, without any adjournment of the cause, and without even notice to the adverse party. We think it quite clear, that the justice act, under the circumstances of this case, did not give to the petitioners the right to have the damages assessed by jury. And even if we were to admit, (which we are by no means prepared to do,) that the justice might, in the exercise of his discretion, have awarded a venire for a jury to assess the damages, yet we are well satisfied, that his refusal to do it is no ground of error.
But it is urged, that section thirty two of the statute relating to
It is farther insisted,- if there is no statute authorizing justices to assess damages, in cases like the one under consideration, by the intervention of a jury, that, there being no statute denying the right, the right ’exists at common law, and should, therefore, have beeg, granted by the justice.
The common law has been adopted in this state, so far as it is applicable to our situation and circumstances and is not repugnant to the constitution and laws of the state. But whether the provisions of the common law, in relation to the assessment of damages in suits where judgment is rendered upon default, have been adopted, may well be doubted. The thirty second section of the statute relating to the county and supreme courts provides a mode for the assessment of damages in such cases, somewhat different from the common law; and hence, we conclude, that those courts can only assess damages in the manner provided by the statute. If this part of the common law has been adopted here, and is applicable to such cases in justices’ courts, (which we would by no means intimate,) it is certainly quite remarkable, that no instance is known to have occurred in the state, in which justices, upon judgment by default, have resorted to the intervention of a jury to ascertain the damages. This fact may well lead us to doubt, whether justices of the peace, in such cases, have authority to award a writ of inquiry according to the course of the common law. But if it be admitted, that they have such authority, we do not think the admission would avail them in the case at bar.
In the case at bar the justice, instead of awarding a writ of inquiry to inform his conscience, saw fit to assess the damages himself. And we hold that he had a right so to do.
' The judgment of the county court is therefore affirmed.