House v. Wright

Perkins, J.

Complaint ‘for a new ‘trial after the term. Demurrer to the complaint overruled; trial of the question; new trial granted; appeal from the award of a new trial to this Court. The judgment granting a new trial was an interlocutory, not a final judgment; and it was not one of those interlocutory judgments from' which an appeal will lie by statute. The appeal, therefore, will have to be- dismissed. It may be observed that a new trial may be granted after the term, on a proper case made, for any cause for which a new trial might be granted in term- 2 GL & H. 277,.

Jason B. Brown and Martin Ferris, for the appellant. William K. Marshall, for the appellee.

2. That the Supreme Court will much more reluctantly reverse the final judgment in a cause for error in granting, than for error in refusing a new trial. 2 GL & H. p. 211, cases cited in note j.

3. The rule, that where a new trial is applied for after term, on account of newly discovered evidence, the evidence given on the trial had must be set forth, does not apply, necessarily, where the new trial is applied for on other grounds. See the cases of Hitchens v. Ricketts et al., at this term; McKee v. McDonald, 17 Ind. 518; Glidewell v. Daggy, 21 Ind. 95; Cox v. Hutchens, id. 219; Ruddick’s Adm’r v. Ruddick’s Adm’r, id. 163.

Per Curiam.

The appeal is dismissed, with costs.