2 Vt. 573 | Vt. | 1830
Said Loomis heretofore commenced his action of debt on judgement against Starkweather, before a justice of the peace, and the action was appealed to, and tried in, the county court, and exceptions were taken to the decisions there, and carried up to the Supreme Court; and, after a hearing Upon the exceptions, the Court came to a conclusion to affirm the judgement ; yet did not suffer the affirmance to be then entered, but permitted the defendant to move for a new trial On the ground of surprise. That motion was filed, and lay till this term for a hearing and for the preparation of affidavits. These have been procured, and the motion concisely argued without any written briefs. The ground of surprise was this. The action was debt, predicated upon a judgement recovered by default before a justice of the peace in JVeio-Hampshire. The counsel for Starkweather pleaded nil debet, relying upon impeaching the judgement as a foreign judgement, and, also, relying upon a case reported by Daniel Chipman, Esq. (see page 59, King, Adm’r of Ingersol vs. Van Gilder,) to shew that justice’s judgements do not come within the act of Congress ; and that this judgement of the justice in JVew-Hampshire, must be treated as a foreign judgement. But, upon the jury trial, the record of the judgement was produced, certified by the justice ; and the same contained the copy of the return of "the officer on the original writ, which return was of a service in Coos county, in JVew-Hampshire, by a deputy sheriff of that county, stating, as to notice, that he handed a summons to the said Starkweather, &c. and when said Starkweather, in defending this action, offered to impeach the original judgement, by showing that Loomis had no cause of action, this was objected to and rejected ; because he appeared by the record to have had regular notice of the suit in JVew-Hampshire, and ought to have made his defence there. This is the decision that was carried up on exceptions, and affirmed by the Supreme Court; 3ret the judgement of affirmance not entered, as before mentioned. Now, at this term, the affidavits of several of Starkweather's family, and of the officer who served the original writ in JVew-Hampshire, abundantly show, that the only copy of the writ handed to said Starkweather, was handed to him in Canaan, in Vermont,where
The testimony now adduced is not in a technical sense newly discovered evidence, because the petitioner himself knew the fact, and knew who else would most probably remember it, also. 0» this ground a new trial could not be granted. But the fact is, so long as he and his counsel expected to be let into the merits of the original judgment without evidence to this point, upon the authority of the case cited, there was no reason why they should think of procuring testimony to this fact, of the copy’s being delivered in Vermont. It is the surprise occasioned in this way, that claims the attention of the Court.
Whether this testimony should come in under the plea of nil debet, or whether there should.be a special plea,-is not a ques-
A new trial is granted, on the terms, that Starkweather pay all taxable cost, so far back as to include the cost of the last jury trial; and that he take no cost so far back as to include that trial, should he eventually recover in the suit.
New trial granted.