5 Conn. 187 | Conn. | 1823
An action of assumpsit was brought, by the plaintiff in error, against the defendants, to recover the value of certain services rendered ; and on a hearing, by the court and jury, the cause was determined against him. For the purpose of obtaining a new trial, he exhibited his petition to the superior court, alleging surprise, and the production of evidence against him, which, otherwise, he could have disproved ; and on demurrer, it was adjudged against him, for insufficiency. To review this determination, a writ of error is brought to this Court.
A petition for new trial, is an application to the sound discretion of the court, and incapable of being reduced to the standard of fixed and certain rules. The granting or refusing of it, is absolutely in the breast of the court. Smith v. Brampston, 2 Salk. 644. Bull. N. P. 326. and, as was said in Bright Exr. of Crisp v. Eynon, 1 Burr. 390. “it would be difficult, perhaps, to fix an absolutely general rule about granting new trials, without making so many exceptions to it, as might tend rather to darken the matter, than to explain it; but the granting or refusing of it, must depend on the legal discretion of the court, guided by the nature, and circumstances of the particular case, and directed with a view to the attainment of justice.” Hence, the value of the matter in controversy; the nature of the right, whether it be equitable, or a rigorous exaction of extreme legal justice, hardly reconcileable to conscience; and of the evidence, whether it is nearly equal, or strongly preponderates ; and indeed, an infinite variety of considerations, which can never be brought to the test of strict rule, and which must be referred to the discretion of the judge, are the bases of determination. A refusal to continue a cause cannot he assigned for error, because it is merely a matter of discretion. Wood & al. v. Young, 4 Cranch 237. “This,” said Marshall, Ch. J., “ is a case, in which the court cannot look into the merits of the question, whether the court below ought to have granted a continuance of the cause ;" and the same observation applies, with equal force, to the case under discussion.
It is unnecessary to consider at greater length the merits of a question, which, in this state, is clearly settled, by determinations of court, if the maxim stare decisis is any thing more
It is presumed, that the decisions before-mentioned, were not in the knowledge or recollection of the plaintiff in error; and that in the face of such multiplied authority, the present writ of error would not have been brought.
Judgment affirmed