On mоtion of the plaintiff the court amended a judgment awarding him compensation Linder the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The judgmеnt was entered on December 9, 1918. The amended judgment was entered on 'September 23, 1920. The defendant brings certiorari.
The judgment was amended because of judicial еrror. There was no mistake in its entry. It was entered just as the court wanted it entered. It determined the rights of the plaintiff and the defеndant just as the court thought they were. The plaintiff did not care to contest its correctness by a review in this court.
There must сome a time when-a judgment is final against judicial error correctable by the court rendering it. The common law fixed the expiration of the term of court as the time. Under our holdings a judgment cannot be corrected by the court rendering it, because of judicial error, when it stands unchallenged until the time for review by this court has passed. This subject is discussed at length in Gallaghеr v. Irish-American Bank,
In Gallagher v. Irish-American Bank,
In Smith v. Minneapolis St. Ry. Co.
In Tomlinson v. Phelps,
The result is that the judgment in a compensation proceeding, like other judgments, cannot be corrected for judicial error by -the court rendering -it after the time for review has passed, unless there is a provisiоn in the compensation act authorizing a correction.
Again in State v. District Court of Rice County,
“It is not the contemplation of thе Compensation Act that there be retrials for error as in an ordinary action. Upon the determination of the case judgment is entered. There is a right to a review of questions of law by certiorari. Laws 1913, p. 688, c. 467, § 30 (G. S. 1913, § 8225). The act provides that all аwards not exceeding the compensation for six months” disability shall be final and not subject to readjustment and that all lump sum payments shall be final. Laws 1913, p. 687, c. 467, §§ 26, 27 (G. S. 1913, §§ 8221, 8222). The court, however, has power to open its judgments and correct or modify them upon thе presentation of newly discovered evidence, when manifest wrong has been done, upon substantially the principlе upon which it rests its inherent power to grant a new trial. This power need not of necessity be invoked before the lapse of the 60-day period in which a review may be sought by certiorari. G. S. 1913, § 8313. The statute allowing relief within a year applies. G. S. 1913, § 7786.”
In the case just cited the court affirmed the order of the trial court opening the case for the purpose of intrоducing additional evidence upon the extent of the injury, expressing a caution against a too free exercise of the power.
Judgment reversed.
