This was a petition to this Court, under V. S. 1662, for a new trial of an action tried by jury at the June Term, 1903, of the Windsor County Court. The case
Unless this petition lies, the excepting party is without remedy. V. S'. 1662 provides that “the Supreme Court may grant a new trial in a cause determined by such court, or a county court, on petition of either party subsequent to the term of the court at which the original judgment was rendered.” Nothing is said in this section with reference to the grounds on which a new trial may be granted; but V. S. 1664, which limits the timе for bringing the petition, shows the broad scope of the statute. The reasons assigned may be matter of law; or such reаsons may be the discovery of new evidence, or other matter of fact. The phrase “or other matter of faсt” appears for the first time in the General Statutes, enacted in 1862, and was obviously intended to make apparent the breadth of scope of the section which is now V. S. 1662. The statute, under which this petition is brought, is remedial and equitable in its nature, is limited by no restrictions of language, and should be liberally construed.
It is not deemed proper for this Court to¡ hear and determine the questions presented by the bill of exceptions accompanying the petition, and to grant or refuse a new trial .according as error is or is not discovered. To' pursue such a course, would be to negate the statute and to' overrule our decisions with respect to the effect of a failure to have a bill •of exceptions signed and filed within the time limited by law. The bill of exceptions not having been seasonably filed, the entry of exceptions must have been struck from the clerk’s docket, the clerk could not file, or receive the bill and the .statement signed as a bill of exceptions became a nullity, so far as concerned the bringing of the questions therein stated before this Court for determination.
Nor should the principle here apply which requires the petitioner for a new trial in some way to satisfy the Court that the result of а new trial would probably be different from that of the former one. To preserve intact the due administration of the law a broader principle may sometimes be successfully invoked. Such broader principle is recognized in Walden v. Clark,
In Wright v. Judge,
In another Michigan case, Crittenden v. Schermerhorn
The case of Taylor v. Simmons,
The principle which governed the cases above referred to is applicable here. Under the system by which, in this State, justice between parties is administered and upheld, the petitioner had a right to have her exceptions heard in this Court. That right was a substantial one, and it having been lost in the way set out in the petition,
A new trial is grafted.
