37 Tenn. 155 | Tenn. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the Court!
This is a bill in equity for a new trial, in a suit at law upon these grounds: Hughes sued the complainants' at law for work and labor, and recovered a judgment in Davidson Circuit Court, at January Term, 1855, for $1020. A new trial was asked and refused, and an
It appears from the statement of the Circuit Judge, in attempting to supply the bill of exceptions, that the same was made out and signed by him in Court, and left upon his table on the bench, and he knows not what became of it. He states that he recollects that the question involved was, whether the debt of the plaintiff, which was barred by the statute of limitations, was revived by a new promise by the defendants in that suit, and that the proof on that point was made in the deposition of one witness — Webb. He further says, “ I have no recollection of what I charged the jury; I presume from the facts, that the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and I refused to grant a new trial, that I must have charged that the promise was sufficient to take the case out of the statute.” It does not appear that the deposition of Webb is lost, or if it is, why he was not called before the Court under the power given by the act of 1848, and the same supplied. Without knowing what this proof was, we are unable to determine whether the verdict of the jury or the charge of the Court was wrong, and consequently, whether the
The object of asking a new trial at law in this case is, to enable" the complainants to rely more successfully upon the defense of the statute of limitations, against the claim of defendant for work and labor. They allege that this claim was not only unjust, but that they were deprived of the benefit of this plea, by an erroneous charge of the Circuit Judge to the jury, and that they failed to get the benefit of the judgment of the Court of last resort, on this question of law, by the accident of the loss of the bill of exceptions. Was this accident, without any negligence on their part? We think not.