It's the same reason you would create different exit codes for a non-.NET application: to specify different application-specific errors. Like...ConnectionBrokenException or um...UserSmellsBadException...or something.
This way you can know exactly what went wrong and act appropriately. For example, if you try to send some data and the data transport class throws a ConnectionBrokenException, you can pop up a reconnect dialog and try to reconnect. Then the reconnect method would throw a ConnectionTimeoutException if it times out, and you can again act appropriately.
