The court below, of original jurisdiction in this case, had
authority, upon newly discovered evidence, to grant to the railway
company a new trial, after the final decision of this case at law
in that court.
It was competent for Congress to confer upon such court,
established under the authority of the United States, the power to
grant a new trial in an action at law upon grounds discovered after
the expiration of the term at which the verdict or decision was
rendered.
The statute does not declare that the right to apply for a new
trial upon newly discovered evidence after the term shall be any
the less when the original term is superseded, nor that a new trial
of an action at law shall not be applied for or granted while the
case is pending in the appellate court.
The statute of Arkansas in question is applicable only to
actions and proceedings at law in the courts of that territory, as
distinguished from suits or proceedings in equity, and as
application under that statute, within the time prescribed, for a
new trial in an action at law, upon grounds discovered after the
term at which the verdict or decision was rendered was a matter of
right which did not require leave of any court.
Page 182 U. S. 563
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Orange Fuller, assignee of Butler Brothers, brought an action on
the 23d day of January, 1892, in the United States Court in the
Indian Territory against the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway
Company, to recover the damages alleged to have been sustained in
consequence of the negligence of the defendant resulting in the
destruction of certain property of Butler Brothers by fire.
On the 1st day of May, 1894, the venue of the case was changed
to the Second Judicial Division of the territory, now the Central
District, and the result of a trial before the court and a jury was
a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $8,500.
The judgment was superseded, and the cause was taken to the
United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit,
where the record was filed April 3, 1895. In that court, the
judgment was affirmed on the 30th day of December, 1895. 72 F.
467.
The judgment of affirmance was superseded, and the case was
brought to this Court upon writ of error sued out by the railway
company, the transcript of record being filed here on March 10,
1896. In this Court, the judgment of the circuit court of appeals
was affirmed January 3, 1898. 168 U.S. 707. Our mandate was issued
March 3, 1898, and filed in the United States Court in the Indian
Territory on July 22, 1898.
On the 20th day of April, 1896, while the case was pending in
this Court, the railway company filed in the United States Court in
the Indian Territory a petition for rehearing upon the ground of
newly discovered evidence. Subsequently, at different dates,
amended petitions were filed by the company for a new trial. To
those amended petitions answers were made, and it was objected that
the court was without jurisdiction or authority to grant a new
trial and that it could not consider the alleged newly discovered
evidence.
Page 182 U. S. 564
On the 15th of January, 1900, after the filing in the court of
original jurisdiction of the mandate of this Court, Judge Clayton
of that court granted the application of the railway company and
made an order for a new trial.
It should be here stated that, in that court, there were other
cases of a like character with the present case, all growing out of
the fire on account of which the present action was brought. One of
those cases was
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company v.
Wilder. In that case, the United States Court of Appeals for
the Indian Territory adjudged that the plaintiff was not entitled
to recover. 53 S.W. 490.
In the order granting a new trial in the present case, it was
stated:
"Now at this day comes the above-named defendant, and in support
of the fourth amended petition for a new trial in this case, files
certified copy of opinion of the United States Court of Appeals for
the Indian Territory in the case of
Missouri, Kansas &
Texas Railway Company v. Wilder, and the court having fully
considered the said amended petition for a new trial in this case,
which was heretofore continued by agreement between counsel to
this, the December, 1899, term of this court, together with the
evidence thereon and the briefs of counsel filed both in support of
and in opposition to said amended petition for new trial, and the
court, having been fully advised in the premises, find that the
original petition for new trial was filed on the 20th day of April,
1896, in accordance with section 5155 of Mansfield's Digest of the
Statutes of Arkansas, extended over the Indian Territory by act of
Congress, May 2, 1890, and that summons was duly issued and served
upon the plaintiff as required by said statute, and that the said
plaintiff has duly entered his appearance in these proceedings and
filed answer to the original petition for new trial, as well as to
the different amendments thereto, as such amendments have been
based upon such additional evidence as the defendant alleges was
discovered subsequent to the filing of the original petition for
new trial and amended petitions for new trial respectively, and the
court further finds that the evidence fully sustains the said
petition for new trial, and that, under the statute hereinbefore
referred to,
Page 182 U. S. 565
and in view of the opinion of the United States Court of Appeals
for the Indian Territory in the case of the
Missouri, Kansas
& Texas Railway Company v. Wilder, a companion case to
this, that said petition should be sustained. Wherefore the court
orders that the said petition be sustained, and a new trial be
granted."
After setting out the above, the return made by Judge Clayton to
the rule herein continued:
"Respondent would respectfully further show that it appeared
upon the hearing of the petition for new trial in the
Orange
Fuller case that the defendant railway company had used all
possible diligence to discover the actual origin of the fire upon
which that suit was founded, prior to the time of the trial of that
case, and that it was to a large extent prevented from so doing by
the strong influence which the plaintiffs in said case exerted over
the minds of the people in the community where the fire occurred,
and also by the actions of one of the plaintiffs who, it was shown,
urged several of the witnesses to conceal what information they had
with reference to the origin of the fire, and that, after the trial
of the
Orange Fuller case in the district court, the said
railway company continued its efforts to discover the real origin
of the fire, and, as the result of its efforts, it produced
reliable new witnesses who proved by newly discovered and strong
circumstantial evidence that the fire was set out through accident
by one Dole Baugh, and also proved by the admission of the said
Dole Baugh, made while the fire was burning, that he had so set it
out, and it was this evidence which largely induced the United
States Court of Appeals for the Indian Territory to render the
opinion of reversal heretofore cited in the said
Wilder
case, as well as induce the plaintiffs in the companion cases to
dismiss their cases, and that not only the judges of the district
court and the United States Court of Appeals for the Indian
Territory, but the plaintiffs in the above suits, became satisfied
that these suits were all matters of great injustice and wrong, and
satisfied this respondent that the original judgment in the
Orange Fuller case was also a great injustice and
wrongfully obtained, and had the actual truth been fully known, and
not purposely concealed, that the judgment in the
Orange
Fuller
Page 182 U. S. 566
case would not have been affirmed by the United States Circuit
Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit or this honorable court,
and your respondent further realized that a greater injustice and
wrong would be done by permitting the plaintiffs in this said
Orange Fuller case to recover when the truth had been
suppressed and when all other plaintiffs were prevented from
recovering because of the fact that the whole truth had come to
light."
The present proceeding is an application for leave to file a
petition for a mandamus commanding the judge of the United States
Court in the Indian Territory to set aside the above order of
January 15, 1900, granting a new trial, and to execute the mandate
of this Court.
The question presented is whether the court of original
jurisdiction had authority, upon newly discovered evidence, to
grant to the railway company a new trial after the final decision
in this Court.
By the Act of Congress of May 2, 1890, providing a temporary
government for the Territory of Oklahoma and enlarging the
jurisdiction of the United States Court in the Indian Territory,
and for other purposes, it was declared:
"§ 31. That certain general laws of the State of Arkansas
in force at the close of the session of the general assembly of
that state of 1883, as published in 1884 in the volume known as
Mansfield's Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, which are not
locally inapplicable or in conflict with this act or with any law
of Congress, relating to the subjects specially mentioned in this
section, are hereby extended over and put in force in the Indian
Territory until Congress shall otherwise provide -- that is to say,
the provisions of the said General Statutes of Arkansas relating .
. . to pleadings and practice, chapter 119."
26 Stat. 81, 94, c. 182.
In Mansfield's Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, c. 119, will
be found the following sections under the head of "Pleadings and
Practice:"
"§ 5151. A new trial is a reexamination in the same court
of an issue of fact, after a verdict by a jury or a decision by the
court. The former verdict or decision may be vacated and a
Page 182 U. S. 567
new trial granted on the application of the party aggrieved for
any of the following causes affecting materially the substantial
rights of such party: . . . Second. Misconduct of the jury or
prevailing party. . . . Seventh. Newly discovered evidence,
material for the party applying, which he could not, with
reasonable diligence, have discovered and produced at the
trial."
"§ 5153. The application for a new trial must be made at
the term the verdict or decision is rendered, and, except for the
cause mentioned in subdivision 7 of section 5151, shall be within
three days after the verdict or decision was rendered, unless
unavoidably prevented."
"§ 5154. The application must be made by motion, upon
written grounds, filed at the time of making the motion. The
grounds mentioned in the second, third, and seventh subdivisions of
section 5151 must be sustained by affidavits showing their truth,
and may be controverted by affidavits."
"§ 5155. Where grounds for new trial are discovered after
the term by which the verdict or decision was rendered, the
application may be made by petition filed with the clerk not later
than the second term after the discovery, on which a summons shall
issue, as on other complaints, requiring the adverse party to
appear and answer it on or before the first day of the next term.
The application shall stand for hearing at the term to which the
summons is returned executed, and shall be summarily decided by the
court. The evidence may either be by depositions or by witnesses
examined in court. But no such application shall be made more than
three years after the final judgment was rendered."
Many of the cases cited by the petitioner have no application to
the present proceeding. They relate to suits in equity and to the
power of the court of original jurisdiction in an equity suit to
prevent or stay the execution of the mandate of an appellate court.
There can be no doubt as to what is the rule recognized in cases of
that kind in the courts of the United States or in courts
established by its authority.
In
Southard v.
Russell, 16 How. 547,
57 U. S. 571, it
was said:
"Nor will a bill of review lie in the case of newly
discovered
Page 182 U. S. 568
evidence after the publication or decree below, where a decision
has taken place on an appeal, unless the right is reserved in the
decree of the appellate court or permission be given on an
application to that court directly for the purpose. This appears to
be the practice of the Court of Chancery and House of Lords in
England, and we think it founded in principles essential to the
proper administration of the law and to a reasonable termination of
litigation between parties in chancery suits."
So, in
United States v.
Knight, 1 Black 488,
66 U. S.
489:
"The defeated party, upon the discovery of new evidence, may,
after a final decree in this Court, obtain leave here to file a
bill of review in the court below to review the judgment which this
Court had rendered."
In
Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 160 U.
S. 247,
160 U. S. 255,
the Court said:
"When a case has been once decided by this Court on appeal and
remanded to the circuit court, whatever was before this Court and
disposed of by its decree is considered as finally settled. The
circuit court is bound by the decree as the law of the case, and
must carry it into execution according to the mandate. That court
cannot vary it, or examine it for any other purpose than execution,
or give any other or further relief, or review it, even for
apparent error, upon any matter decided on appeal, or intermeddle
with it further than to settle so much as has been remanded.
Sibbald
v. United States, 12 Pet. 488,
37 U. S.
492;
Texas & Pacific Railway v. Wnderson,
149 U. S.
237. If the circuit court mistakes or misconstrues the
decree of this Court, and does not give full effect to the mandate,
its action may be controlled either upon a new appeal (if involving
a sufficient amount) or by a writ of mandamus to execute the
mandate of this Court."
See also In re Potts, 166 U. S. 263,
166 U. S.
267-268.
The action against the railway company was one at law, and
whether the court in the Indian Territory had authority to grant
the new trial of which complaint is made depends upon the Arkansas
statute, which, by the act of Congress, was made a law of the
Indian Territory. Sections 5153 and 5154 evidently refer to the
ordinary motion or application for a new trial made during the term
at which the verdict of the jury or the decision of the court is
rendered. Section 5155 relates to
Page 182 U. S. 569
new trials for grounds disclosed after the term, and requires
such grounds to be set forth in a petition, summons upon which
shall issue against the adverse party. A proceeding under that
section is, in form, a new, independent suit, although the statute
requires the application to be summarily decided by the court.
These statutory provisions apply to actions at law, not suits in
equity. This view is supported by the decision of the Supreme Court
of Arkansas in
Jacks v. Adair, (1878) 33 Ark. 161, 167.
Referring to the statute giving authority to grant a new trial
after the term upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, that
court said:
"The correct view of the statute in question seems to be this:
that it extends to cases at law a new remedy, without taking away
any which existed in equity, but as to the latter being cumulative
where any difference might exist. It is noticeable that the word
'decrees' is not used, which is the apt and ordinary designation of
final orders in equity, and there are other indications in the
language and context of the provisions in question that they were
primarily intended for cases at law and for new trials of facts
found by a jury, or a court sitting as such.
*"
We perceive no reason to doubt that the action of the court of
original jurisdiction was justified by the statute. So that the
only question remaining is whether it was competent for Congress to
confer upon such court, established under the authority of the
United States, the power to grant a new trial in an action at law
upon grounds discovered after the expiration of the term at which
the verdict or decision was rendered. Some light is thrown upon
this question by the cases in this and in other courts.
Ex Parte
Russell, 13 Wall. 664,
80 U. S. 668,
was an action in the Court of Claims to recover compensation for
the seizure and use by the United States military authorities of
certain steamers belonging to the claimant. The case involved the
construction and effect of the second section of the Act of June
25, 1868,
Page 182 U. S. 570
which provided that the Court of Claims,
"at any time while any suit or claim is pending before or on
appeal from said court, or within two years next after the final
disposition of any such suit or claim, may, on motion on behalf of
the United States, grant a new trial in any such suit or claim, and
stay the payment of any judgment therein, upon such evidence
(although the same may be cumulative or other) as shall reasonably
satisfy said court that any fraud, wrong, or injustice in the
premises has been done to the United States; but until an order is
made staying the payment of a judgment, the same shall be payable
and paid as now provided by law."
In the Court of Claims, an application for a new trial was made
by the United States when the case was pending in this Court. The
former court dismissed the application for want of jurisdiction on
the ground, in part, that, after it was made, the mandate of this
Court affirming the original judgment against the United States was
filed in the Court of Claims. From that order, an appeal was
allowed to this Court, and one of the questions presented was
whether the Court of Claims should have dismissed the application
for a new trial for want of jurisdiction. This Court observed that
the Court of Claims erred in dismissing the application, and after
referring to the causes which probably induced the passage of the
Act of June 25, 1868, said:
"But, whatever reason Congress may have had for passing the act,
of its right to pass it there is no question. The erection of the
Court of Claims itself, and the giving to parties the privilege of
suing the government therein, though dictated by a sense of justice
and good faith, were purely voluntary on the part of Congress, and
it has the right to impose such conditions and regulations in
reference to the proceedings in that court as it sees fit. The
section in question was undoubtedly intended to give the government
an advantage which, in respect to its form, is quite unusual, if
not unprecedented, but which Congress undoubtedly saw sufficient
reason to confer. It authorizes the Court of Claims, on behalf of
the United States at any time while a suit is pending before, or on
appeal from, said court, or within two years next after the final
disposition of such suit, to grant a new trial upon such evidence
as shall satisfy the
Page 182 U. S. 571
court that the government has been defrauded or wronged. . . .
It has been objected that the granting of a new trial after a
decision by this Court is, in effect, an appeal from the decision
of this Court. This would be so if it were granted upon the same
case presented to us. But it is not. A new case must be made; a
case involving fraud or other wrong practiced upon the government.
It is analogous to the case of a bill of review in chancery to set
aside a former decree or a bill impeaching a decree for fraud. We
are of opinion, therefore, that the Court of Claims had
jurisdiction to grant a new trial notwithstanding the filing of the
mandate of this Court."
Chief Justice Chase and Mr. Justice Clifford dissented from the
opinion because, in their judgment,
"the act of Congress did not warrant the granting of a new trial
on a petition filed subsequent to an appeal and the return of the
mandate from the court."
In
Ex Parte United
States, 16 Wall. 699,
83 U. S. 703,
the above case was again before this Court, and a peremptory
mandamus was awarded requiring the Court of Claims to hear and
determine the application for a new trial.
In
United States v. Young, 94 U. S.
258,
94 U. S. 260, it
appeared that a new trial was granted by the Court of Claims, in a
suit as law, while an appeal was pending here from the original
judgment. This Court said:
"The Court of Claims, by granting a new trial, has resumed
control of the cause and the parties. This it had the right to do.
Such a power may be somewhat anomalous, but it is expressly given,
and every person, when he submits himself to the jurisdiction of
that court for the prosecution of his claim, subjects himself to
its operation. The proceedings under which the new trial was
obtained are now a part of the record below, and, after judgment is
finally rendered, may be brought here by appeal for review."
In
Belknap v. United States, 150 U.
S. 588,
150 U. S.
590-591, the Court observed that, while ordinarily the
Court of Claims would be without power to grant a new trial at a
term subsequent to that at which the original judgment was
rendered, it had such power under section 1088 of the Revised
Statutes, which is the same in substance as the second section of
the above Act of June 25, 1868. The Court said:
"In order to give full effect
Page 182 U. S. 572
to this statute, the Court of Claims must have power to grant a
new trial at a term subsequent to that at which the judgment was
rendered, for it explicitly provides that it may be exercised at
any time within two years."
In Iowa, there is a statute giving the court power to grant a
new trial on grounds discovered after a verdict or decision is
rendered, the petition for the new trial to be filed not later than
one year after final judgment, and the case made by it tried as
other cases. In
Cook v. Smith, 58 Ia. 607, 608, the
supreme court of that state said:
"The right to apply for, and the power of the court to
entertain, jurisdiction of the application during the time limited
in the statute are absolute and unconditional. There is no such
inconsistency between the two proceedings as to require the one to
be abated because the other is pending. It may be both should not
be actively prosecuted at the same time, for the determination of
one may render a decision in the other unnecessary. Upon
application, this would no doubt be controlled by the courts.
Suppose the ground upon which a new trial was asked was not
discovered until after the appeal was taken, on the last day
allowed therefor, would such appeal deprive the court of the power
to entertain jurisdiction of a petition for a new trial? Clearly
not, we think, for, during the time limited in the statute, the
power of the court and the right of the party are unconditional.
There are cases where neither party is satisfied with the judgment
below. Would an appeal by one party oust the court of the power to
entertain and grant a new trial on the application of the other
party? We think not."
In a case arising under a statute similar to the one in
Arkansas, the Supreme Court of California said: "The appeal from
the judgment did not divest the trial court of jurisdiction to hear
and determine the motion for a new trial."
Naglee v.
Spencer, 60 Cal. 10. In
Rayner v. Jones, 90 Cal. 78,
81, the same court said:
"A notice of motion for a new trial was served and filed in due
season, and, upon the hearing of the motion, the trial court
dismissed it upon the theory, evidently, that as the judgment made
and entered had been appealed from when the motion for a new trial
came on for hearing, the court below
Page 182 U. S. 573
had lost jurisdiction to determine it. This view of the matter
is untenable, and the court should have heard the motion, and
either granted or denied it, upon the bill of exceptions presented,
which is a part of the record here on the appeal from the order of
dismissal."
See also Carpentier v. Williamson, 25 Cal. 154, 167;
McDonald v. McConkey, 57 Cal. 325;
Chase v. Evoy,
58 Cal. 348;
Scott v. Scott, 82 Ky. 328;
Duffitt v.
Crozier, 30 Kan. 150;
Hines v. Driver, 89 Ind. 339;
Railroad Co. v. O'Donnell, 24 Neb. 753.
The same principles have been recognized in criminal cases. In
State ex Rel. Turner v. Circuit Court for Ozaukee County,
71 Wis. 595, which was a criminal case, an application was made for
a new trial after the affirmance of the original judgment. In that
state, it was provided by statute that
"the circuit court may at the term in which the trial of any
indictment or information shall be had, or within one year
thereafter, and in either case before or after judgment on the
petition or motion in writing of the defendant, grant a new trial
for any cause for which, by law, a new trial may be granted, or
when it shall appear to the court that justice has not been done,
and on such terms or conditions as the court may direct."
The Supreme Court of Wisconsin said:
"It appears that a proper motion was made within one year from
the judgment, upon the grounds addressed to the discretion of the
circuit court, and a new trial was undoubtedly granted under the
special authority conferred by the above statute, and the question
now is had the court power to grant it? We can only consider the
question of the power or jurisdiction of the court in the matter,
not whether it exercised that power wisely or granted the motion on
insufficient grounds; for the court may have erred, but error does
not affect its jurisdiction. This statute was probably borrowed
from Massachusetts.
See Pub.Stat.Mass. 1882, c. 114,
§ 128;
Commonwealth v. Peck, 1 Met. 428;
Commonwealth v. McElhaney, 111 Mass. 439;
Commonwealth
v. Scott, 123 Mass. 418.
Also Terr.Stat.Wis. 1839, p.
377, § 6; Rev.Stat. 1849, c. 149, § 6; Rev.Stat. 1858, c.
180, § 6. We do not well see upon what grounds the power of
the court to grant the new trial can be denied if the provision is
valid. The fact that the judgment has been affirmed by this court
furnishes no sufficient
Page 182 U. S. 574
reason for denying that power. It is said by the affirmance of
the judgment, it became a finality, a final determination of the
cause and sentence of the law. That view certainly would be correct
had not the legislature conferred this special authority to grant a
new trial upon a proper cause shown. On affirmance of a judgment in
a civil case, no new trial could be granted unless the statute
authorized it. Only where the statute does authorize it can a new
trial after affirmance be granted, either in a civil or criminal
cause. In actions of ejectment, the circuit court can grant a new
trial even after affirmance by this Court, and this by virtue of a
statute upon the subject.
Haseltine v. Simpson, 61 Wis.
427. Consequently, we can perceive no sufficient grounds or reasons
for denying the validity of the statute to grant a new trial after
judgment has been affirmed in this Court, any more in a criminal
than in a civil cause."
In
Commonwealth v. McElhaney, 111 Mass. 439, 441, 443,
which was an indictment for murder, an application was made by
petition for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered
evidence. The question was raised by the commonwealth whether the
application could be entertained after the accused had been
sentenced to death and the executive warrant for execution thereof
issued. The question depended upon section 7 of the General
Statutes of Massachusetts, c. 173, providing that
"the Supreme Judicial Court and superior court may at the term
in which the trial of any indictment is had, or within one year
thereafter, on the petition or motion in writing of the defendant,
grant a new trial for any cause for which by law a new trial may be
granted, or when it appears to the court that justice has not been
done, and on such terms or conditions as the court shall
direct."
The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts said:
"At the time of the passage of the General Statutes, therefore,
this court had no original criminal jurisdiction except of capital
cases, and in these cases, sentence has always been passed within a
very short time after the trial and conviction, and a copy of the
record of the conviction and sentence forthwith transmitted to the
governor in accordance with the Revised Statutes, c. 139, §
11, and the General Statutes, c. 174,
Page 182 U. S. 575
§ 24, and yet the General Statutes, c. 173, section 7, in
terms authorize a petition for a new trial to be presented to this
Court at any time within one year after the trial. The unavoidable
conclusion is that, so long as that year has not elapsed and the
sentence has not been carried into execution, the court is
authorized to entertain a petition for a new trial."
In no one of the above cases, nor indeed in any case to which
our attention has been called, was there any suggestion of the want
of power in the legislature to authorize the granting of a new
trial in an action at law upon evidence discovered after the term
at which the verdict or decision was rendered. So far as the power
of Congress is concerned, we cannot conceive that legislation of
that character in respect of cases at law, as distinguished from
cases in equity, infringes upon any right secured by the
Constitution of the United States.
In the case now before us, it appears that the operation of the
original judgment was suspended by a supersedeas. But the statute,
reasonably construed, does not declare that the right to apply for
a new trial upon newly discovered evidence after the term shall be
any the less when the original judgment is superseded. Nor does it
declare that a new trial of an action at law shall not be applied
for or granted while the case is pending in the appellate court. It
is true that, in the absence of legislation to the contrary,
neither the filing of a petition for new trial nor the granting of
a new trial by the court of original jurisdiction, after the term
and upon newly discovered evidence, interferes with the power of
the appellate court to proceed with the hearing and determination
of the case upon the record before it. But the operation and effect
of its final judgment may be ultimately controlled by the
disposition made by the court of original jurisdiction of an
application for a new trial made in conformity with a statute. If
this be regarded as an anomalous rule of procedure in actions at
law, it is sufficient to say that Congress, in its wisdom and in
order to promote the ends of justice, saw proper to prescribe it,
and we know of no reason to question the authority it has exercised
upon this subject. All embarrassment in the present case was
avoided by the fact that the new trial of which petitioner
complains
Page 182 U. S. 576
was not granted while the original case was in this Court, nor
until after our mandate had been filed in the court of original
jurisdiction.
Our conclusions are: (1) that the statute of Arkansas in
question, which was made by Congress the law of the Indian
Territory, is to be held applicable only to actions and proceedings
at law in the courts of that territory, as distinguished from suits
or proceedings in equity; (2) that an application under that
statute, within the time prescribed, for a new trial in an action
at law upon grounds discovered after the term at which the verdict
or decision was rendered was a matter of right, and did not require
the leave of any court, the application constituting, on appeal, a
new action in which summons or process would regularly issue
against the adverse party, and which must be heard and determined
by the court upon evidence adduced by the parties.
It results that the court of original jurisdiction acted within
the authority conferred upon it, and the rule for a mandamus
compelling it to set aside the order granting a new trial must be
discharged.
It is so ordered.
* That case was based upon sections 4688, 4690, 4691, and 4692,
Gantt's Digest (1874), which are the same as the above sections in
Mansfield's Digest.