135 A. 600 | Vt. | 1927
This is a tort action based on an accident that resulted in such injuries to the plaintiff, a child about three years and eight months old, that amputation of her left leg was necessitated. The case was first tried by jury at the March Term, 1925, of the Chittenden county court. That trial resulted *171
in a verdict for the plaintiff for $2,000. This verdict, on the plaintiff's motion, was set aside as to damages, and a retrial was ordered on that issue. This motion was contested by the defendants, who insisted that if any part of the verdict was to be set aside, it should all be set aside and a full retrial granted. Various exceptions were saved by the defendants during the trial, and one of these was to the order of the court setting aside the verdict in part. But nothing was done by the defendants under these exceptions; either by preparing and filing a bill of them, or otherwise. At the following term of the county court, the case came on for trial before another presiding judge — a fact of which we take judicial notice, Hancock v. Worcester,
The right to an appellate review is purely statutory (MilesBlock Co. v. Barre Chelsea R.R. Co.,
This being so, we are left with nothing to consider, for the exception saved by the defendants when the second court denied their motion for a full retrial is not discussed in their brief.
Judgment affirmed.