106 Me. 115 | Me. | 1909
"To the Honorable, The Justices of the Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as a Law Court at Bangor, in and for the State of Maine, on the first Tuesday of June, A. D. 1909.
"The plaintiffs, petitioners to Your Honors, respectfully represent in the above entitled matter, that Court did on the tenth day of April, 1909, send to the Supreme Judicial Court in and for the county of Waldo, its mandate reversing the decree of the lower court in the matter in which said appeal was taken; and did render its opinion therein, sustaining the contention of the plaintiffs in said appeal; but that said mandate and the opinion were silent upon the question of costs; and that so far as said mandate affects the same, the plaintiffs would not have the right to have costs taxed in their favor therein.
"Wherefore, inasmuch as this Honorable Court, sitting as a court of law, has in other cases made an allowance of costs prior to the mandate of its decision, which mandate in that respect it has been the practice of the supreme court to follow, your petitioners pray that .this Honorable Court will recall its certificate of decision and mandate, in said case and restore the case to the docket of this court sitting as a court of law, for the purpose of hearing the parties in said matter as to the costs therein, and that upon such hearing it will order that the costs of such appeal to be taxed by the court shall be paid by the appellees.”
It would appear from this petition and prayer that the case had already gone to judgment when the petition was filed. R. S., chapter 79, sec. 49. We know of no statute or rule of law which authorizes the Law Court to recall judgment in this case and reinstate it upon the docket of the Law Court.
"The Supreme Court, while sitting as a court of law, is not a court of original jurisdiction,” Baker v. Johnson, 41 Maine, 15,
"Under the present organization of our judiciary, the Law Court is not a court for trials, and has such and only such jurisdiction as is conferred upon it by statute.” State v. Gilman, 70 Maine, 333.
"The Law Court in this State is not a constitutional court. It is not a court of original or of common law jurisdiction. The court is 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 State has the right in creating the Law Court, to limit its power and to determine upon what conditions they shall be exercised. The court cannot properly extend its statutory powers nor dispense with the conditions imposed.” Stenographer Cases, 100 Maine, 275.
Petition dismissed.