Chelmsford Foundry Co. v. Shepard

92 N.E. 75, 206 Mass. 102, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 763
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 75 (Chelmsford Foundry Co. v. Shepard) 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
Chelmsford Foundry Co. v. Shepard, 92 N.E. 75, 206 Mass. 102, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 763 (Mass. 1910).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

This was an action of contract to recover for ironwork furnished and set upon a building. The case is before us upon two separate bills of exceptions filed by the defendant, the first arising out of the action of the judge who heard the motions as to the auditor’s report before the trial by jury, and the second arising out of the action of the judge who presided at the trial.

1. As to the first bill of exceptions. After the auditor had made his report the defendant moved that it be recommitted to the auditorwith instructions to hear counsel further and to report further findings of fact necessary for the proper determination of the question of this defendant’s liability.” In the motion the defendant set forth specifically the various matters upon which findings were not made by the auditor and upon which the defendant thought findings ought to have been made. Upon this motion the judge recommitted the report in order that the auditor should make certain additional findings in certain matters specified in the order of recommittal. By the terms of this order the auditor was allowed at his discretion to hear arguments of counsel, but no additional evidence was to be received by him unless such evidence is not merely cumulative and is newly disclosed since the close of the hearings.” To this order no exception was taken.

At the hearing before the auditor certain additional evidence was heard by him, and when the supplemental report came in the defendant moved that both reports, original and supplemental, be set aside “ and that said cause be recommitted to some other [107]*107auditor for a hearing de nova, or in the alternative, that such other order may be made as to the court . . . may seem meet.” The grounds set forth in the motion were in substance that in the hearing the auditor had violated the order of recommittal by receiving evidence and by failing to make findings upon the matters therein specified. The judge after a hearing upon this motion found that the auditor had admitted evidence in violation of the order of recommittal and that such conduct was prejudicial to the defendant; and ordered that the supplemental report be recommitted to the auditor, who was directed to report anew his findings of fact upon the matters set out in the first order for recommittal. The auditor was directed to base this second supplemental report solely upon the evidence upon which his original report was based, and if upon such evidence he was unable to make a finding of fact upon any of the matters thus specified he was to so state. He was also directed not to hear further arguments of counsel. The defendant excepted to this order so far as the judge failed to order the report set aside. A second supplemental report was afterwards made.

It is to be noted that in neither motion to recommit is there any allegation that the auditor admitted incompetent evidence at the hearings upon which the original report was based. The first motion to recommit was based solely upon his failure to make certain findings. And in the second motion the charge of the wrongful admission of evidence is manifestly confined to the hearing under the first order of recommittal under which the first supplemental report was made. The second order of recommittal directing the auditor to make the additional findings upon the evidence received under the original hearing was in substance an order directing him to reject all the evidence admitted at the hearing under the first order of recommittal and to make his findings as though there had been no such hearing. It simply cut out from the proceedings the first supplementary report, and the evidence received at the hearing under the first order, and recommitted the case for decision upon the evidence received at the original hearing. The record fails to show that at that hearing any objection was made to the evidence. It is to be presumed that the auditor has obeyed the order of the court, and hence that the original report and the second supplemental report [108]*108are based only upon the evidence received without objection at the original hearing. We have therefore no occasion to consider what would be the proper course to pursue when the findings of the auditor are based upon incompetent evidence seasonably objected to before him. See Sullivan v. Arcand, 165 Mass. 364; Collins v. Wickwire, 162 Mass. 143, and cases cited.

It is argued however by the defendant that after hearing the evidence introduced at the hearing upon the first order of re-committal, and after making his first supplemental report, the auditor could not have come to the performance of his duty under the second order of recommittal with an unbiassed mind, and that both supplemental reports show clearly that he had “ lost his judicial poise and was laboring heavily to find even a flimsy foundation of facts to support his original finding for the plaintiff.” Whether the auditor had “lost his judicial poise” so that he was no longer in a mental condition to perform his duty fairly was a question for the judge of the Superior Court who heard the motions, and we see no error of law in the conclusion which he reached. It not unfrequently happens at a trial of facts, even when the trial is by a jury, that incompetent evidence is received and afterwards stricken out; and, when thé legal interpretation of the record is that the evidence is so stricken out and a decision or verdict finally reached, there is no error of law in refusing to allow the conclusion thus arrived at to stand. The -question whether under such circumstances the decision or verdict shall stand is solely within the discretion of the trial court. Such is this case. The original report and the second report must therefore both stand. The first bill of exceptions is overruled.

2. As to the second bill of exceptions. For reasons above stated, the original report and the second supplemental report were properly read to the jury, and the request of the defendant that the order for the second recommittal be also read was properly refused. That order had no bearing on the issues before the jury.

In considering the remaining exceptions it will be convenient to take up first those relating to the effect to be given to the auditor’s report. We shall consider the original report and the second supplemental report as forming together one report [109]*109which, except where hereinafter otherwise specified, will be included under the general term “ report.” The third ruling requested by the defendant was that “the auditor’s finding for the plaintiff does not in this case make a prima facie case for the plaintiff, for that the auditor has reported the facts upon which said finding is based, and said facts do not as a matter of law warrant the conclusion reached.”

There is no dispute that on June 24, 1898, the contract in question was made, and that by its terms the plaintiff, as one of the contracting parties, agreed to furnish and set up certain ironwork upon a building in Providence, all as called for in plans prepared by the architect Pope. The only question was whether the defendant was the other contracting party. It is strenuously urged by the defendant that the general finding for the plaintiff is not warranted by the findings as to the subsidiary or underlying facts.

It becomes necessary to look into the report. The circumstances attending the making of the contract are quite fully stated by the auditor and may be thus summarized: The.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 75, 206 Mass. 102, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chelmsford-foundry-co-v-shepard-mass-1910.