Plaintiff appeals the trial court’s ruling granting defendant relief from a previous order of the court determining the interest due on plaintiff’s judgment for. damages. We affirm.
I.
This case has had a long procedural history, including an appeal to the United States Supreme Court that established important new First Amendment precedent. See
Greenmoss Builders, Inc.
v.
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.,
The original complaint for defamation was filed on October 21, 1977. On April 10, 1980, the trial court entered judgment on the jury’s verdict of $50,000 compensatory and $300,000 punitive damages. On October 20,1980, the trial court granted defendant’s motion for a new trial. Plaintiff filed an interlocutory appeal of this order, and on April 15, 1983, this Court reversed the grant of a new trial and reinstated the jury verdict.
On remand, plaintiff moved that the trial court reenter the judgment, including interest accrued since the original award of damages in 1980. While plaintiff did not specifically bring its method of calculating interest to the attention of either defendant or the trial court, plaintiff, in effect, added accrued interest annually to the principal amount due, and calculated future interest on this amount of accrued interest at annual periods, or more simply, it compounded interest on the judgment. At a hearing on the motion, defense counsel stated that “I won’t take time now to argue against the computations that were made. I ask the [c]ourt to note our objection for the record, so that our rights are reserved in connection with the calculation of interest. ...” The trial court then entered judgment, implicitly accepting plaintiff’s method of compounding interest on the judgment award.
Defendant appealed the case to the United States Supreme Court, which affirmed the decision of this Court on June 26, 1985. Defendant subsequently paid plaintiff $572,845.06, representing *367 the original award of damages, costs, and simple interest from the date of the verdict to the date of payment. Plaintiff acknowledged this payment as partial satisfaction of the judgment. On August 5, 1985, defendant moved in the trial court to amend the judgment to recalculate the interest due on the judgment by the method of simple interest instead of the compounding method previously employed, thus making defendant’s previous payment full satisfaction of the judgment. On November 20, 1985, the trial court granted defendant’s motion. It is from this action that plaintiff brings its appeal to this Court, raising two allegations of error: first, that the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion for relief under V.R.C.P. 60(a), and second, that the trial court erred by holding that a judgment may bear only simple and not compound interest.
II.
Plaintiffs first claim of error is theoretically correct, but does not afford a basis for reversing the instant case. Defendant based its motion for relief upon V.R.C.P. 60(a), which provides in pertinent part that “[c]lerical mistakes in judgments . . . arising from oversight or omission may be corrected by the court at any time of its own initiative or on the motion of any party . . . .” Plaintiff properly points out that this rule cannot serve as a basis for relief, since no “clerical mistakes” arose in the entry of the judgment. While the trial court may not have been aware of the method by which the interest had been computed when it entered judgment for plaintiff in 1983, this act would not constitute a clerical mistake. Indeed, in granting defendant’s motion for relief, the court agreed with plaintiff that there had been no clerical error. The error in the judgment was an error in substantive law, not a clerical or mathematical error, as contemplated by V.R.C.P. 60(a). See
Scola
v.
Boat Frances, R., Inc.,
We have previously stated that:
A motion for relief from judgment, V.R.C.P. 60(b), “is addressed to the discretion of the trial court and is not subject to appellate review unless it clearly and affirmatively appears from the record that such discretion was withheld or otherwise abused.” R. Brown & Sons, Inc. v. International Harvester Corp.,142 Vt. 140 , 143,453 A.2d 83 , 85 (1982) (citations omitted). A motion brought under V.R.C.P. 60(b)(6) serves as a request for relief from judgment for “any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” Id. We have stated “that relief from judgment under V.R.C.P. 60(b)(6) is, by its very nature, invoked to prevent hardship or injustice and thus to be liberally construed and applied.” Cliche v. Cliche,143 Vt. 301 , 306,466 A.2d 314 , 316 (1983). Nevertheless, clause (6) of the Rule may not be used to relieve a party from free, calculated, and deliberate choices he has made. See 11 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2864 (1973).
Estate of Emilo
v.
St. Pierre,
We believe the instant case meets these criteria. At the 1983 hearing, defendant specifically objected to the calculation of interest in the judgment order. Relief could reasonably have been granted by the trial court to correct an error in law which it implicitly accepted by entering the judgment order as proposed by plaintiff. The requested relief, therefore, would be invoked to avoid an injustice to defendant and not to relieve defendant from a freely made tactical decision. Plaintiff fails to convince us that the trial court’s actions, in correcting a previous error of law, do not reasonably fall under the broad spectrum of relief covered by V.R.C.P. 60(b)(6). We reach this conclusion even though the trial court failed to rely clearly on V.R.C.P. 60(b)(6), if indeed it did examine the claim in this manner. See
Circus Studios, Ltd.
v.
Tufo,
V.R.C.P. 60(b)(6) also requires that such motions “be made within a reasonable time.” The test for determining whether the
*369
trial court could properly find that a motion for relief had been filed within a reasonable time is whether the trial court exercised sound discretion on this matter given all the factors and circumstances of the particular case. Such a decision will be disturbed only upon a showing of an abuse of that discretion.
Brown
v.
Tatro,
III.
Plaintiff also alleges error in the trial court’s altering what plaintiff considers the correct method of calculating interest under Vermont law. The controlling statute, 9 V.S.A. § 41a(a), provides that “the rate of interest or the sum allowed for forbearance or use of money shall be twelve percent per annum computed by the actuarial method.” Plaintiff argues that this means that interest must be computed by being compounded annually. We disagree.
Neither the statute nor any persuasive authority defines “actuarial method.” When the meaning of a statute is not plain on its face, legislative intent “should be gathered from ‘a consideration of the whole and every part of the statute, the subject matter, the effects and consequences, and the reason and spirit of the law.’ ”
Langrock
v.
Department of Taxes,
Affirmed.
