78 Vt. 188 | Vt. | 1905
Action for alleged breach of promise to» marry. Upon an examination of the defendant’s exceptions we find none of them sustainable as ground for a reversal of the judgment rendered by the court below. It was competent for the plaintiff to» show by her own testimony what the defendant told her, and by the testimony of a witness who claimed to have knowledge upon the subject, what the amount of the defendant’s property was at the time of the alleged promise.
An Italian priest was permitted to testify that a marriage by religious ceremony alone did not constitute a legal marriage in Italy. In this there was no» error, as the record shows that the court first found that the witness was duly qualified to testify upon the subject. See Reg. v. Parry, 14 Eng. Eaw & Eq. 549; Watson v. Walker, 23 N. H. 472, cited by defendant.
Judgment affirmed.
petition for a new triae.
The suit was brought for an alleged breach of promise of marriage; it stood for trial at the March Term, 1903, Washington County Court, and the defendant came from Italy to make defence, but the plaintiff not being ready for trial when the case was reached, it was displaced, and the pressure of other business prevented its being tried at that term. At the following September term it was continued upon proof of the defendant’s sickness in Italy, besides it was not reached in its order. At the March Term, 1904, several cases before it having been disposed of, it was second for trial. The defendant’s counsel applied to the court to» have the trial postponed until a later day in the term so that the defendant could arrive from- Italy, but the court denied the application and held that the trial must proceed. The case was tried in the defendant’s absence and the plaintiff obtained a large ver
The plaintiff testified at the trial that a few months after the death of the defendant’s wife, who was her sister, the defendant went to the village in Italy where she resided with her father, paid attentions to her for some time and then proposed a marriage with her; that she assented, and, upon the advice of a priest whom they consulted, a church ceremony was performed upon an agreement between themselves and their promise to the priest that they would be legally married upon their arrival in this country; that soon after their arrival in Montpelier, the plaintiff requested the defendant to have the marriage legally performed, but the defendant delayed the marriage on the pretence that he must receive a certain paper from Rome before they could be lawfully married, and that he put off the marriage for a year with this excuse, though she constantly urged its performance; that during this time she lived with the defendant as his wife, worked in his store, kept his house and cared for his children; that at the end of a jrear they returned to Italy and lived there in the same relations' about ten months, she urging the marriage and he delaying it with various excuses; that she then left him and returned to St. Albans in this State with her sister and her sister’s husband, who was the defendant’s brother. She denied making any settlement with the defendant and denied receiving any money from him or from his brother. It appeared that soon after the plaintiff returned to' this country the defendant married another woman. Testimony was given in behalf of the plaintiff at the trial tending to show that the defendant was worth $30,000 when he made the promise of marriage.
The material facts set out in the petition and the other affidavits attached are, that about six months after the death
It appears that the parties are at variante in respect to the promise of marriage, their relations while they lived together, the settlement and the petitioner’s financial means. The petitioner was entitled to a reasonable opportunity to make a defence in the court below. He did not have his day in court and a large verdict was rendered against him. The question is whether he is entitled ho have the verdict set aside and a new trial granted him.
The petition is not based upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, but upon the claim that the petitioner -yras, by accident, prevented from making a defence to- the action.
Questions of continuance and assigning cases for trial, must, as a rule, rest in the discretion of the trial courts, and we do not revise the action of the court below based upon the evidence that was before it. At the time the trial began the court doubtless had reason to believe that the defendant’s
The jury lawfully assessed the damages in view of what they understood to be the defendant’s pecuniary ability. It was for this purpose that the plaintiff introduced evidence in respect to the defendant’s property. If it is true and the jury had known the fact, as the petitioner deposes, that he was not worth more than five thousand dollars, it is reasonable to suppose that the verdict would have been for a smaller sum.
The question is whether the case presented comes within V. S. 1662, which reads:
“The Supreme Court may grant a new trial in a cause determined by such Court, or by a county court, on petition of either party, subsequent to the term of the court at which the original judgment was rendered.”
The Legislature has placed no limitation upon the power of the court to grant new trials under this section of the statute, nor prescribed the grounds for new trials. The Court has repeatedly construed the statute and fixed the boundaries of its power. It is evident that both the Legislature and the Court have intended to give a “broad scope” to this power, as was said in Nelson v. Marshall, 77 Vt. 44. In that case
Webster defines accident as an event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation; an event which proceeds from' an unknown cause, and therefore not expected; chance, casualty, contingency. The word has often received judicial construction. In Bostwick v. Stiles, 35 Conn. 198, it is said that it includes not only inevitable casualties, such as are caused by the act of God, but also those that arise from unforeseen occurrences, misfortunes, losses, and acts or omissions of other 'persons without the fault, neglect or misconduct of the party. Alexander v. Bailey, 2 Lea 639; State v. Lewis, 107 N. C. 978. See 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. 272 and notes. In the same line of reasoning are Webster v. Smith, 72 Vt. 12, and Bradley Fertilizer Co. v. Fuller, 58 Vt. 315. Rowell, J., in Kopper v. Dyer, 59 Vt. 478, aptly quotes from 2 Pom. Eq. § 823, n. 1: “Accident is an unforeseen and unexpected event, occurring external to ’ the party affected by it, and of which his own agency is not the proximate cause, whereby, contrary to his own intention and wish he loses some legal right or becomes subjected to some legal liability, and another person acquires a corresponding legal right, which it would be a violation of good conscience for the latter person, under the circumstances, to retain.” In that opinion the writer proceeds to say: “And the chief point of the thing is, that because of the unforeseen and unexpected character of the occurrence by which the legal relation of the parties has been unintentionally changed, the party injuriously affected thereby is in good conscience entitled to relief that will restore those relations to their original character, and place him in his former position.”
Judgment:reversed, verdict set aside and a new trial granted.