112 Me. 202 | Me. | 1914
Exceptions by appellant to the ruling of the presiding Justice accepting the report of the referee to whom the pending cause had been referred by agreement of the parties and under rule of court in the ordinary form.
Whether or not the referee states in his report his findings of law and whether upon examination the Court might deem them unsound is entirely immaterial. The finality of the award upon questions of both law and fact rests not upon whether the grounds of the decision are discoverable and if so reviewable, but upon the fact that the independent tribunal, from which no appeal lies to the Court, has determined the issues and that determination, in the absence of fraud, prejudice or mistake, must stand. The word “mistake” used in this connection does not mean an error in judgment either upon the facts or the law, but some unintentional error, as for instance in a mathematical computation. It is used in much the same connection as in R. S., Chap. 89, Sec. 1, Par. VII, authorizing the Court to grant reviews. Pickering v. Cassidy, 93 Maine, 139.
It was formerly the frequent practice to refer cases under a Rule of Court, both parties reserving the right to except in matters of law. This practice however was prohibited by the Rule of Court adopted in 1908, Rule XLV, which reads: “In references of cases by rule of Court no stipulation will be allowed for a review by the Court of the decision of the referee upon any question of law or fact submitted; but the referee may find the facts and report questions of law for decision by the Court.”
The parties were therefore bound by the award and the report was properly accepted.
Exceptions overruled.