The opinion of the court was delivered at the ensuing June, term in Penobscot, by
The question in the case before the court is, whether they have,, jurisdiction, authorising them to sustain the petition and grant the prayer of it. The original process was a petition for partition, in which the present respondents were petitioners, and Sturdivant, the respondent. To that original petition he demurred specially. The demurrer vras joined ; and the court below decided against Sturdivant, and entered the proper interlocutory judgment. On his appeal to this court, the demurror was again overruled ; the usual interlocutory judgment entered ; and commissioners tvere appointed, whose return was
The statute of this State, authorizing this court and the Court of Common Pleas, to grant reviews in civil actions, is a transcript of several statutes passed by the legislature of Massachusetts, at successive periods, from 1788 to 1791 inclusive, with some unimportant verbal variations and transpositions of sections or provisions; and they were doubtless passed, as the petitioner’s counsel has observed, as gradual improvements in the administration of justice, by furnishing relief in cases which seemed to demand it, and which hew circumstances presented to view. Those provisions of our statute which have a bearing on the question before us are these; Stat. 1821, ch. 67, sec. l,“That whenever there shall be any legal cause for any judicial court before judgment, to set aside any verdict, but nevertheless judgment shall have been rendered on such verdict, the partv aggrieved by such judgment may petition the justices of the court,” &e. &c. “ who are empowered, after due notice, to grant a review of said cause.” It is further provided in the second section as follows. “ And the said justices shall be, and they are hereby vested with discretionary power to grant reviews in all civil actions, in manner as aforesaid, whenever they shall judge it to be reasonable, without being limited to particular cases” — with a proviso that the application be made within three years after the rendition of the judgment complained of. This provision is found at the close of the third section. The fourth section provides that “ whenever a review is granted by virtue of this act, a writ of review shall be sued out and prosecuted to final judgment and execution; and the party bringing such action of review, shall produce in court attested copies of the writ, judgment^and all papers used and filed in the former trial ; and each party
The next question is, whether a point or principle of law can he corrected by a review ? The answer to this seems to be a very plain one. A review of a cause is a re-examination or another trial of the facts. The statute speaks of a judgment rendered on a verdict, of cases where facts are contested, and put to a jury for decision ; not of eases where the facts arc agreed, and the question is settled upon those facts ; being a pure question of laiv. It is impossible for us to admit the construction contended for by the petitioner's counsel; it savors too much of legal inconsistency. But they endeavor to avoid this imputation by saying, that they do not coinplain of the decision of the court on the demurrer; but merely of the doings of the com missioners and the acceptance of their return, on which the fmai judgment was rendered. But here we are met by another difficulty, presented by the fourth section before mentioned. This provides, as we have stated before, that when a review is granted, a writ of review shall be sued out; that each party mr.v
It has been observed, that if by the laws of the land no redress can be had, Mr. Sturdivant must endure the injustice without a hope of remedy, but it is added, that it is believed our law does not merit this reproach. In reference to this remark it may be observed, that if the opinion of the presiding judge, by whom the return of the commissioners was accepted and judgment render^ ed thereon, was incorrect, the petitioner might have obtained redress by alleging an exception to such an opinion, and thus availed himself of the correcting opinion of the whole court. This he did'not do ; but the law is not, on that account liable t« any reproach ; and if the law is not sufficiently comprehensive to embrace the case of the petitioner within its salutary provisions, though we may regret the consequences, we have no authority or disposition to prevent them at the expense of sound principles. We are all of opinion, that we cannot sustain the petition and grant a review. Accordingly it is dismissed.
