Carilli v. Hersey

20 N.E.2d 492, 303 Mass. 82, 1939 Mass. LEXIS 912
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 18, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 20 N.E.2d 492 (Carilli v. Hersey) 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
Carilli v. Hersey, 20 N.E.2d 492, 303 Mass. 82, 1939 Mass. LEXIS 912 (Mass. 1939).

Opinion

Lummus, J.

This case has been here twice before. The plaintiff was a lessee of one Hersey and had sued Hersey and his agent Hettinger for specific performance of a contract not to sell the premises to another without first offering them to the plaintiff upon equally favorable terms. In the present suit she seeks to set aside a foreclosure sale to one McCarthy upon a mortgage given by Hersey to one Kreuzer prior to the lease to the plaintiff. When the case was first here we affirmed a final decree dismissing the bill. Carilli v. Hersey, 299 Mass. 139.

On the second occasion we affirmed a decree denying a motion for rehearing on the ground of newly discovered evidence, made after our rescript to the court below, and also affirmed with costs a final decree dismissing the bill in accordance with our earlier rescript. Carilli v. Hersey, 300 Mass. 329. This last decision was made on May 25, 1938. On June 13, 1938, the plaintiff moved again for a rehearing, this time on the ground that allegations made by one Murphy in a suit against Hersey tended to show that he and Kreuzer and McCarthy were engaged in a conspiracy to deprive the plaintiff of her contractual rights. The judge denied a rehearing, and on June 14, 1938, entered a new final decree in precise accordance with our second rescript. The plaintiff claimed appeals from the final decree, the refusal to open the case for rehearing, and the refusal to make a report of material facts. There was no evidence in support of the motion for a rehearing, except an affidavit that had been already disposed of when the case was here for the second time. The appeals are frivolous. G. L. (Ter. [84]*84Ed.) c. 211, § 10. Further prosecution of this case in the manner in which it has been prosecuted would be an abuse of the right to litigate. Pepper v. Old Colony Trust Co. 268 Mass. 467, 471. The only remaining question is, What disposition ought to be made of the appeals.

It is true that a rescript afiirming a final decree, or directing the sort of final decree to be entered, is not itself a final decree. Merrill v. Beckwith, 168 Mass. 72, 75. Day v. Mills, 213 Mass. 585, 587. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. T. Stuart & Son Co. 260 Mass. 242, 248. The entry of an appeal in this court vacates a final decree (other than a final decree after rescript); and even though the decree appealed from be affirmed on appeal, a new final decree has to be entered in the trial court in conformity with the rescript. Sunter v. Sunter, 204 Mass. 448, 453. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. T. Stuart & Son Co. 260 Mass. 242, 248. Carchidi v. Kalayjian, 264 Mass. 230. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, §§ 19, 26. Myers v. International Trust Co. 273 U. S. 380. See also Faber v. Hovey, 117 Mass. 107; Cleveland v. Quilty, 128 Mass. 578; Burbank v. Farnham, 220 Mass. 514; Martell v. Dorey, 235 Mass. 35. In entering the new final decree after rescript, interest and costs may be brought down to the date of that decree, in order that equity may do justice completely and not by halves, even though the rescript merely affirmed the final decree appealed from. Day v. Mills, 213 Mass. 585. Phelps v. Lowell Institution for Savings, 214 Mass. 560, 562. Malden Center Garage, Inc. v. Berkowitz, 269 Mass. 303, 307. Hobbs v. Cunningham, 273 Mass. 529, 536. Rudnick v. Rudnick, 281 Mass. 205, 208. Boston v. Dolan, 298 Mass. 346, 352. Baseball Publishing Co. v. Bruton, 302 Mass. 54, 58. See also Atlantic National Bank of Boston v. Hupp Motor Car Corp. 300 Mass. 196, 202-203. If new questions, not previously determined in the suit, arise in carrying out the mandate of the rescript, or in bringing the relief down to the date of the new final decree after rescript, they can be brought here by appeal from that decree; and we need not determine at this time whether that decree is vacated by an appeal in such a case. Dondis v. Lash, 283 Mass. 353.

[85]*85But an appeal from a final decree after rescript, though within the words of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, § 19, stands on a different footing from an appeal from an ordinary final decree. It is not so much an appeal as an opportunity for this court to supervise obedience to its mandate. It does not, ordinarily at least, vacate the final decree after rescript from which the appeal was taken. It brings to the full court the final decree after rescript merely for the purpose of comparison with the rescript; and possibly does that only where the rescript did not prescribe the exact words of the decree as it did in Attorney General v. Williams, 178 Mass. 330, 335, Lambert v. Board of Appeals of Lowell, 295 Mass. 225, Sturtevant v. Ford, ante, 78, and Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. v. Gove, ante, 1. The limited purpose of an appeal from a decree after re-script is recognized by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 133, as amended by St. 1933, c. 300, § 2, which provides that if the judge of the trial court finds that the decree conforms to the rescript and that the appeal is claimed merely for the purpose of delay, he may order the appeal dismissed, and an appeal from that order shall not suspend the execution of the decree. Savage v. McCauley, 302 Mass. 457, 460. “If the decree or judgment is in accordance with the rescript or mandate, ordinarily the appeal will be dismissed and the final decree or judgment will stand as if there had been no appeal.” Boston, petitioner, 223 Mass. 36, 37. Attorney General v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 201 Mass. 370, 371. Boston Bar Association v. Casey, 227 Mass. 46, 50. Crowley v. Holdsworth, 267 Mass. 13, 16. Cole v. Holton, 274 Mass. 238. Dondis v. Lash, 283 Mass. 353, 354-355. Long Beach Dock & Terminal Co. v. Pacific Dock & Terminal Co. 98 Fed. (2d) 833, 835. It is true, that even where the final decree after rescript has conformed exactly to the rescript, the full court has sometimes affirmed the final decree after rescript instead of dismissing the appeal. Such a course may lack precision, but does no practical harm. Compare Snow v. Dyer, 178 Mass. 393, 396, 397; Deming v. Carlisle Packing Co. 226 U. S. 102. If an appeal from a final decree after rescript .could not be dismissed [86]*86by this court, leaving that decree in force, a party by persistent successive appeals could render the litigation interminable, unless the judge entering that decree should exercise his powers under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 133, as amended by St. 1933, c. 300, § 2. See Williams v. Clarke, 182 Mass. 316; Keith v. Marcus, 182 Mass. 320; Richmond Co-operative Association, Inc. v. Gill, 285 Mass. 50, 53; Commonwealth v. Millen, 290 Mass. 406, 411-412. We think that this court is not so helpless nor so dependent upon the action of a judge of another court.

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20 N.E.2d 492, 303 Mass. 82, 1939 Mass. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carilli-v-hersey-mass-1939.