| Me. | Nov 19, 1926

Philbrook, J.

This case was heard by a single justice, the docket entry showing, “Hearing before Court without intervention of jury with rights of appeal to Law Court.” The Justice below made a finding for the defendant and the plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial upon the grounds usually alleged in a case where there has been a jury trial.

In cases tried before a single justice it has usually been considered that his findings upon matters of fact are conclusive, and that errors' of law must be presented by a bill of exceptions. Thompson v. Thompson, 79 Maine, 286.

When the case was about to be argued before this court the irregularity of procedure became apparent and thereupon the following stipulation was presented, signed by counsel for all the parties, and allowed and assented to by the Justice presiding below.

Stipulation.

In as much as it now appears that the docket entries in said case are not in accordance with the fact, and insufficient to give the Law Court jurisdiction to hear the above entitled matter:

It is mutually agreed between counsel for all parties hereto that the record of the printed case shall be taken to read;

“Exceptions taken below to all questions of law material to the decision of the presiding justice as rendered. Failure to seasonably perfect exceptions waived, same to be taken as perfected upon filing in the Law Court of this stipulation assented to by the presiding justice below.” It is further mutually agreed that argument shall be in writing on both sides under the rule 30-30-10. Dated this thirteenth day of June, 1926.

The Law Court in this state is not a constitutional court, but is one created by statute, and has that jurisdiction only which the statute has conferred upon it and that is a limited jurisdiction. It has no other authority. . . . The court cannot properly extend its statutory powers: Stenographer Cases, 100 Maine, 275; Mather v. Cunningham, 106 Maine, 115.

*480The Supreme Court, sitting in banc, as a court of law, is not a court of original jurisdiction, and cannot grant leave to amend. Baker v. Johnson, 41 Maine, 15; Crocker v. Craig, 46 Maine, 327; Mather v. Cunningham, supra. State v. Dondis, 111 Maine, 17.

But further difficulty awaits the plaintiff because, even after the so-called stipulation was filed, he has not presented a proper bill of exceptions. From this stipulation to a bill of exceptions is a far cry. It is such well settled law as to need no supporting citations that the bill of exceptions must set forth enough to show that its points are material and that material error occurred; that it must be specific, giving distinctly the grounds of complaint, and not of a wholesale character.

There is no proper bill of exceptions before us, and as the motion for a new trial is not the correct procedure the mandate will be

Motion dismissed.

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