Burbank v. Farnham

220 Mass. 514
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 220 Mass. 514 (Burbank v. Farnham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burbank v. Farnham, 220 Mass. 514 (Mass. 1915).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

This case comes before us on an appeal from a decision of the Appellate Division of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston dismissing a report. During the oral argument before this court it was suggested that the record did not set out all the material evidence upon which the findings of the single judge of that court were based. Opposing counsel not agreeing upon this point, a motion was made that the appeal be discharged, not on its merits but in order that the report might be corrected in this regard so that it might state the fact whether it did contain all such evidence.

The motion should be granted. An appeal from the Municipal Court of the City of Boston in this respect stands the same as exceptions from the Superior Court. By St. 1912, c. 649, § 8, any party aggrieved by any ruling on a matter of law by a single judge of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston "may, as of right, have the ruling reported for determination by the Appellate Division.” That court also is given authority to make rules to regulate the preparation and submission óf reports and the allowance of those disallowed by a single judge. Pursuant to that authority a rule has been adopted which puts upon the party requesting a report the burden of preparing a draft to be submitted to the judge, who is required to “allow such report or such amended form thereof as may be necessary to conform to the facts, or disallow the same, in whole or in part.” Rule 38. Provision also is made by Rule 41 for the establishment of reports by the'Appellate Division which have been disallowed by the single judge.

The statute and rules do not prevent this court in proper cases from discharging a case pending here when there is reason to believe that through mistake, inadvertence or oversight the record does not present fairly the question of law of which review’ is sought. It sometimes, though rarely, happens that exceptions or a report or reservation from the Superior Court or the Supreme Judicial Court are discharged for the purpose of correcting the record in order that justice may be done. Tighe v. Maryland [516]*516Casualty Co. 216 Mass. 459. In strictness the exceptions, or in an equity case the appeal, are no longer pending in the Superior Court after entry in this court and there is nothing left in that court upon which a judge can act, even for the correction of errors. Commonwealth v. Suffolk Trust Co. 161 Mass. 550. Robinson v. Brown, 182 Mass. 266. The exceptions or appeal must get back into the trial court before anything more can be done there. It has been the uniform practice of this court for many years, when it seems likely that justice requires it, on motion to discharge exceptions, report, reservation or appeal, in order that corrections may be made in the record by the court from which the case comes here. In such instances the names of the cases have been continued in this court for re-entry of the proper papers without the payment of another entry fee. This is the accurate and correct practice. Another course, however, sometimes has been taken in England. Both parties by consent have gone before the trial judge and obtained from him a certificate to the effect that there is error in the record transmitted to the appellate court, setting forth its nature and making the correction, and such certificate agreed to by the parties has been presented to the appellate court and treated as a part of the record. This course was followed in Culley v. Doe, 11 Ad. & El. 1008, 1013. It was sanctioned by citation in Perry v. Breed, 117 Mass. 155, 164. See also McCarren v. McNulty, 7 Gray, 139. But of right the trial court judicially can consider the subject of mistake or amendment only after authority obtained from this court. That authority must be given, using terms accurately, by remanding the record to the trial court for correction or for hearing upon correction. The case thus temporarily is sent back from this court, although the copies and other papers, if any, not connected with that part of the record in which correction or amendment is sought, remain here. Hence, the case is not here in any substantial sense, although it has not been decided on its merits. This is an amplified statement of the effect of Perry v. Breed, 117 Mass. 155.

On principle like procedure should be followed as to cases from the Municipal Court of the City of Boston. This method of procedure must be modified slightly to conform to the practice established by statute for appeals from the Appellate Division. Hence, when the appeal is discharged it must go back to that [517]*517tribunal. As the record alleged not to be correct was not made by that tribunal, but by the single judge, it should be remanded to him by the Appellate Division for amendment of the report by stating whether the report, which was made by him, contained all the material evidence. Then the report in usual course should come to the Appellate Division, which should make a decision upon the report in its amended form and its decision should be brought by appeal to this court. In cases where the form of the report is established by the Appellate Division, after having been disallowed by the trial judge, there is no occasion to send it to him, for then the Appellate Division is qualified to pass on the question of mistake or omission. This is a simple and direct method. It need involve no delay if the omission in the record was only one of form and not of substance. It conforms to all the requirements of St. 1912, c. 649. If in any instance a change of substance is made in the report, a rehearing on the merits and not a formal re-entry of its earlier decision would be required.

Let the appeal be discharged, not on its merits but to enable the defendants to move for correction of the report by adding thereto the statement that it contains all the material evidence.

So ordered.

In pursuance of the order contained in the rescript accompanying the foregoing decision, the Appellate Division of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston remanded the report in the action to the trial judge, and upon a motion of the defendants that judge amended the report by adding thereto the words, “January 1, 1915. The foregoing report contains all the material evidence.” The judge then returned the report to the Appellate Division, who made an order that the report as amended be dismissed, and the defendants appealed from the order.

Thereafter this court considered the case upon its merits. It was an action of contract brought on November 28, 1913, against two defendants, Farnham and Nelson, as copartners doing business under the name of Farnham and Nelson Company, for the sum of $450 alleged to have been received by the defendants to the plaintiff’s use. There was a declaration in set-off on a counterclaim of the defendants for $46.57. The evidence before the single [518]*518judge of the Municipal Court is stated in substance in the opinion on the merits^ The first ruling requested by the defendants and refused by the judge, which is referred to in the opinion, was that upon all the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The defendants also asked the judge to rule that, if the Maine Products Company, mentioned in the opinion, was a defacto corporation and the defendant Farnham was its de facto treasurer, the defendants were not liable to the plaintiff. The judge found that the Maine Products Company “was not a de facto

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Bluebook (online)
220 Mass. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burbank-v-farnham-mass-1915.