Study aid, not legal advice. caselaw is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or engage in the unauthorized practice of law (UPL). All briefs, outlines, and citation tools on these pages are educational summaries for law students; they are not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney admitted in your jurisdiction. Bar-admission rules vary by state. For court filings or client matters, verify every authority against the official reporter and your court's local rules. Use of caselaw does not create an attorney-client relationship.
Railway Company v. Heck, 1880 — 102 U.S. 120 · caselaw · US
General
Railway Company v. Heck
102 U.S. 12026 L. Ed. 58·Supreme Court of the United States·1880
Brief incoming
Hand-reviewed Bluebook brief (procedural posture, facts, issue, holding, reasoning, dissent) ships once the AI generation pipeline runs through this case. Join the waitlist to get notified when 1L briefs go live.
Opinion
Railway Company v. Heck.
Neither the charge, of the court below, if no exception was taken thereto before the final submission of the case to the jury, nor the granting or the refusing a new trial, is. subject to review here.
Error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois.
The facts are' stated in the opinion of the' court.
Mr. JE. Wallcer for the plaintiff in error.
Mr. O. B. Sari sum, contra.
[MAJORITY — Mr.-Chief. Justice Waite]
Mr.-Chief. Justice Waite
delivered the opinion of the court.
It' does' not appear from this record that any exceptions were taken in the progress of the trial to what Was done by the court below. • Nearly three weeks after the "trial was concluded and a verdict "rendered, a motion was made- for a new trial, because of certain alleged errors in the charge; but it is nowhere s.hown that they were noted or brought to the attention of .the-.court before the verdict. Certainly no exceptions were taken. A trial court may, in the exercise of its judicial discretion, grant a new trial, if. convinced that its charge was wrong, even though its attention was not called to the error' complained of before the case was finally submitted to the jury. But not so with. us. . Our power is confined to exception's actually taken at the trial. The theory of a bill of exceptions is that it states what occurred while the trial was going on. Time is usually given tp put what was done, into an appropriate form for the. record;- but, unless objection was!made and exception taken before the verdict, no case is presented for a review here of. the rulings at the trial. This' has been settled in this court since Walton v. United States, 9 Wheat. 651. The cases are numerous to that effect.
We have uniformly held that, as' a motion for new trial in the courts of the United States is addressed to the. discretion of the court that tried the cause, the action of that court in granting or refusing to grant such a motion cannot be assigned for error here. Schuchardt v. Allens, 1 Wall. 359; Insurance Company v. Barton, 13 id. 603.
Judgment affirmed.