39 Me. 169 | Me. | 1855
— If the facts offered to be shown should be established, and the Court have no power to grant the review, the party Who made the offer is not prejudiced by the exclusion of the evidence, but must abide the loss arising from the mistake of the commissioners. If on the other hand the review prayed for may be legally granted upon proof of the facts offered, and they should be deemed a good cause for a new trial, the matter is to be heard.
Reviews may be granted in all civil actions, including petitions for partition, whenever the Court shall deem it reasonable, and for the advancement of justice, without being limited to particular cases. R. S., c. 123, § 1. The statute of 1821, c. 57, § 2, contained a similar provision; and the case of Sturdivant v. Greeley & als., 4 Greenl. 534, which
Under the statute of 1821, and the pleadings of that case, we think the views taken by the Court were correct.
This case is materially unlike the one cited by the defendant. It is to be understood, from the petition for review, that there was no denial that the land was owned and occupied in the proportions alleged in the petition for partition, but no expression admissive of those facts was made. Consequently on a review, no such “judicial novelty” would be presented, as in the case cited. If there were pleadings on the original petition, they were those presenting an issue to the country, upon which issue the parties could introduce their evidence as at the former trial. If the cause was disposed of by default, or without any issue joined, the proper pleadings could be made on the trial of the review, and the cause be tried thereon. § 7. Here is given the full authority-on a review of a case like the present, to introduce all the evidence, in the same manner that it could have been done in the trial of the original action; and the petitioner for review has agreed to no facts, which should restrict him in presenting his whole case.
2. We are next to see, whether the evidence offered by the present petitioner, if true, presented a good cause for a new trial. The commissioners supposed they made an equal division of the land according to their intention. But the land being of an irregular shape, they adopted an erroneous principle of calculation, by taking an improper base line.; .and it was found after the acceptance of their report, that they had given the present respondent a considerable quantity of land more than was assigned to the other party. The land, we suppose was valuable, and in the small parcel •divided, this -excess given to the one party more than to the other was too important to be disregarded.
The Court having the power to grant a review in this case, and it not being perceived that the present respondent can be injured by any exposure to a less favorable interlocutory judgment, it is thought, as the only mode in which the error can be corrected, that the prayer of the petition should be granted, as being reasonable and for the advancement of justice. Review granted.