28 Me. 436 | Me. | 1848
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
— It is denied by the complainant’s counsel, that the District Court have authority, after verdict and before judgment, to grant a new trial by virtue of Rev. Stat. c. 97, <§> 23, which is relied upon by the other side. The language is, “ The District Court, before rendering judgment, shall have power to grant a new trial of any action and for any cause for which by the common law a new trial may be granted, or when in the opinion of the Court, justice has not been done between the parties.” Did the Legislature intend to embrace within that provision the process for the maintenance of bastard children ? If the power does thus extend, the complaint must be included in the term “action.” Noah Webster defines the meaning of the word when used in a legal sense, thus: “ In law, literally, urging for right; a suit or process, by which a demand is made of a right; a claim made before a tribunal.” “ Action is the form of a suit given by law, for recovery of that, which is one’s due ; or it is the legal demand of one’s right.” Co. Lit. 285. Bracton defines it, “ Actio nihil aliud est quam jus prosequendi in judicio quod alium debetur.
The process is criminal in its form, but it is well settled, that in substance it is a civil remedy having all the incidents of civil processes. It is made upon the complaint only of the one to be benefited; the bond required of the accused is to be given to her; she may settle the claim in any manner she may deem proper, if sole, unless for the protection of towns the selectmen thereof interfere. If she be a married woman, her husband must be joined with her in the proceedings, as in civil actions, and he can exercise the same control over them, and is subject to the same liabilities; issue upon a written plea is necessary before questions of fact intended to
But the exceptions are attempted to be sustained principally on the ground, that the proceedings are not according to the course of the common law, and therefore the power to grant a new trial does not exist; and the case of ex parte Gowen, 4 Greenl. 58, is relied upon as a decision upon this point, and also as having been adopted by the Legislature in the Rev. Stat. by the use of language in the section before quoted, which it is contended is substantially similar to that, in the act of 1822, establishing the Court of Common Pleas, § 8. That was a petition for a mandamus to the Court of Common Pleas, for refusing to grant a new trial after verdict and judgment in a bastardy case, and the prayer was denied. But no decision upon the point like the one here presented was made, though it was discussed by C. J. Mellen, who held that the power was not given to the Court of Common Pleas. It is the opinion of an enlightened and distinguished Judge, under the law as it then was, and is entitled to great respect; and we do not intend to say that his views were erroneous. lie says, “the statute of this State and that of Massachusetts, giving power to the Supreme Judicial Court to grant reviews in civil actions never embraced prosecutions for the maintenance of bastard children, and constant usage and constructions confirm this. The 8th section of the act establishing the Court of
The construction contended for by the complainant’s counsel cannot be considered as adopted by the Legislature, in the Revised Statutes. The point was not decided, and the new statute was manifestly intended to be different in this respect from the old. In the Revised Statutes, the power of the District Court to grant the new trial, by chapter 97, § 23, is to be exercised before rendering judgment. In the statute of 1822, it is limited-to a term of one year from the rendition of judgment ; notice is required in the statute last referred to, whereas under the other, it is not necessary and is not provided for. By sustaining the motion made by the respondent in this case, the District Court did no violence to the language of the statute, and by granting the new trial, secured the object contemplated, in the most ready and direct manner.
Exceptions overruled.