delivebed the opinion op the court.
After judgment by default against ber the appellee appeared at same term and, tendering a good defense, moved to set .aside the judgment. The motion was taken under advisement and at a subsequent term, after hearing evidence on the motion, the court, sustained it, and ordered the answer filed. On a trial of the case on its merits judgment resulted in favor of the defendant. No bills of evidence or exception respecting either the motion to. set aside the judgment or the trial of the case are presented in the record. 'We are, therefore, not asked to consider any question raised on the final trial; but it is insisted that, a judgment by default- — like one rendered after a trial — can not be set aside after the expiration of three days, from its rendition. We dlo not so understand our Code, and this is ■certainly not the general practice.
“A new trial is a re-examination in the same court, of an issue of fact after a verdict by a jury or a decision by the court” * * * (section 340, Civil Code.) ‘‘The application for a new trial must be made at the term in which the verdict or decision is rendered; and, except for the cause mentioned in section 340, subsection 7 (newly-discovered evidence), shall be within three days after the verdict or decision is rendered, unless unavoidably prevented.” (Section 342, Civil Code.)
■ .Upon a default judgment there has manifestly been no trial, verdict or decision within the meaning of the foregoing provisions as to new trials, and we think, therefore, the provision as to application within three days is inapplicable. There being mo provision controlling the matter *610the common law rule must prevail by which courts have, control over their judgments during the term at which they are rendered, and consequently motions to set aside such judgments may be made at any time during such term. There would seem to be, moreover, no special reason for (requiring motions of this kind to be made within three-days. • This court has several times said there is good reason ior requiring motions for a new trial after verdict of a jury Or trial by a court to be made speedily; that is the -danger that the incidents of the trial may be forgotten or remembered differently. No such reasons exist as to- default, judgments, and while a .contrary view seems to have been taken in Harris v. Ray, 15 B. M., 628 (1855), we are not disposed to follow it and extend the application of technical-rules when not required to apply them either by the letter or the reason of the law. 'The case cited has long eeasedi to be generally followed and is overruled. •
As aptly said by Chief Justice Ewing-, when considering’, prejudicial instructions, although exceptions -to them had niOit been -saved in due form (3 B. M., 421), "justice should never be entangled in the- cobwebs of technical forms.”
'The -failure of the appellee in this case to file her answer-on the calling- of the case was. due to; the necessary absence of her attorney and the unexpected call of the civil docket because the indictments in criminal cases had been, stolen, and the call of that docket postponed.
The judgment is affirmed.