31 Me. 418 | Me. | 1850
This action was irregularly transferred from the District Court.
The Act approved on April 7, 1845, provides, that “it shall be lawful for the Judge, with consent of parties, to draw up a
When judgment is rendered on a report last named, it is always a final judgment. Reports in this court are sometimes made, authorizing actions to stand for trial by jury, upon some contingency, but such an order can in no proper sense be called or considered a judgment.
If the Act should be construed to authorize a point of law, not decisive of the action, to be reported, and the cause to be transferred to this court for its decision, with a stipulation, that it might upon a certain contingency, be remanded to the District Court for trial, the action might be transferred to this court and remanded several times; and causes not appealable upon the facts, might be thus transferred to this court for a trial by jury. Such could not have been the intention, and a correct interpretation of the language, does not authorize a transfer of the action, except for a final disposition of it by a decision of the points of law, presented for decision.
If the point of law presented in this case should be decided in one way, the report provides, that “ the case is to be put again to a jury, either in the S. J. Court or District Court, as