38 Vt. 75 | Vt. | 1865
The case stands solely upon exceptions to the decision of the county court in denying the motion to dismiss the petition of the plaintiff. Do the facts stated in the petition give the county court jurisdiction?
Scott v. Stewart, 5 Vt. 57, was a petition to set aside a judgment obtained by default through some mistake. The defendant objected on two grounds. 1st, that the 17th section of the statute of 1825 gave the exclusive jurisdiction of granting new trials to the supreme court, and 2d, that the facts set forth in the petition clid not disclose sufficient grounds for granting a new trial. These are substantially the reasons which the defendant now presents to sustain his motion to dismiss.
The 17th section of the act of 1825 enacted that “petitions for new trials, in cases tried before any county court, shall be presented to the supreme court.” The court held that the statute was not intended to impair the common law right of courts to set aside a judgment or default that was obtained through fraud, accident. or mistake ; and that its language did not apply to judgments obtained by default. The language of our present statute is a little different, having been altered in the revision of 1839. It is, “The supreme and county courts may grant new trials in all cases determined in such courts,” &e. We do not think that the use of the word “determined” in place of “tried” was intended to change the meaning of the statute, and to include judgments obtained by default. It is unquestionably a word of larger import. But to extend it according to its literal meaning to every case that has come to an end in such courts, without considering how such end has been reached — whether by trial, default or discontinuance — would be going quite beyond the reasonable intent of the act. The term “new trial” supposes that a trial has been already had.
.In 1842, after the act now substantially in force was enacted, in which the word “determined” is used, the case of Adams v. Howard, 14 Vt. 158, arose. That was a petition to the supreme court for a new trial in a case where the county court had rendered judgment by default. Now if the words “cases determined” were intended to include defaults as well as trials, the supreme court would have had
The petitionee insists that the facts stated in the petition do not furnish sufficient ground for erasing the default. They substantially allege a default obtained after the decease of the petitioner’s counsel} and when the petitioner had good reason to suppose the suit had never been entered in court. Mistake and accident not arising from the neglect or fault of the party is a ground which the courts have the right to act upon in amending their records.
It is also urged that the suit was in fact entered in court} and that counsel for the petitioner appeared and answered to the case. That may all be true and yet the judgment be by default and wholly wrong. In this case it- also appears that the counsel of the petitioner died in less than a year after the entry of the suit in court— that the petitioner claims he did not know the suit was in court, and had good reason to suppose that it was not — and that after the decease of his counsel no one had authority to appear or act for him. It is-not for this court to revise the decision of the court below upon the facts. If the petition presented a case upon which they might le5gaily act, their jurisdiction and action must be sustained. We cannot say that the fact that counsel appeared in the case for the defendant necessarily defeats the right of the petitioner to have the default erased.
The case of Foster v. Austin was not a petition to correct the record of the county court because erroneously made, but to vacate the record and judgment which the petition admitted were made just as the court upon the hearing intended they should be. Judge Kellogg states this as the reason why it should be regarded as a peti
Judgment affirmed.