Gill v. Stretton

1 Mass. App. Div. 408

This text of 1 Mass. App. Div. 408 (Gill v. Stretton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill v. Stretton, 1 Mass. App. Div. 408 (Mass. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Pettingell, J.

This is an action of contract in which the defendant filed interrogatories to be answered by the plaintiff. The interrogatories as prepared and filed were twenty-seven in number; with the following possible exceptions each of the interrogatories was single in form and substance.

1. Please state your full name and address.
19. With reference to the error and mistake alleged in your declaration, please state in detail what it was, how it was made, when it was made, who made it, and when you discovered it.
[409]*40921. Please state whether the contract referred to in yonr declaration was oral or written. If you state the contract was in writing, please attach a copy thereof to your answer to these interrogatories. If you state the contract was oral, please state its terms and when and where it was made.. If you state the contract was partly written and partly oral, please answer accordingly.
22. Please state whether you claim Mr. Stretton did not perform all the work he was supposed to perform under the contract referred to in your declara^tion; and if so, please set out in detail what work you claim was not performed.
24. If your answer to interrogatory No. 23 is in the affirmative, please state how much you paid him, when, where, how, and to whom payments were made.

The defendant before filing these interrogatories did not first obtain permission of the court, nor show adequate cause for filing more than thirty interrogatories.

Within twenty days the plaintiff filed the following answer which was not sworn to.

“Bridget M. Gill 42 Prospect Street, Woburn, Massachusetts
“The plaintiff respectfully declines to answer any of the interrogatories as filed to her to answer unless ordered to do so by the Court on the ground that it appears that the defendant had filed without leave of the Court and without showing cause therefor more than the limited number of interrogatories including subdivisions thereof permitted to be filed under the interrogatory statute as amended.”

After due and proper notice to the plaintiff’s attorney, but in his absence, the defendant moved that the court order the plaintiff to answer all of the interrogatories except No. 1. The court entered the following order.

“The defendant’s motion for further answers allowed, answers to be filed on or before February 15,1936.”

[410]*410‘The day following this order the plaintiff received notice of it and requested a report to the Appellate Division.

. February 18, 1936, the defendant without notice to the plaintiff, applied under Rule XIII A (District Court Rules, 1932 Ed. as amended January 20, 1934) for a nonsuit for failure to file answers as ordered. An order was entered on this application, nonsuiting the plaintiff, “nonsuit to be removed without further order if answers are filed within ten days.” The plaintiff was notified of this order the next day and on February 21,1936 duly made a request for a report.

'■ Under Gr. L. (Ter. Ed.) C. 231, §61, the defendant’s right to file interrogatories is limited, as to number, to thirty. If the plaintiff believed that the interrogatories as filed ex-céeded that number her remedy was to move to have the interrogatories dismissed. Bevmett v. Powell, 284 Mass; 246, at 248. The plaintiff, however, did not do this. She answered one interrogatory, No. 1, and refused to answer any others. She then continued in her refusal after the court’s order for further answers. The nonsuit which followed came in the regular course of events.

As there are two claims of report and two assignments o,f error, there are two distinct issues raised, the validity of the interrogatories filed, and the authority of the court to order a nonsuit for failure to answer.

The plaintiff’s status as an appellant, upon the first part of the case, depends wholly upon whether or not there ‘were more than thirty interrogatories in the set filed by the defendant. If there were not more than thirty, then the plaintiff in no event can justify her refusal to answer and cannot object to the nonsuit entered against her.

- If the defendant had first applied to the court for permission to file the interrogatories, the court could have author[411]*411ized the filing although the number exceeded thirty.. The statute does not prohibit the filing of more than that number but prohibits such filing without permission from the Court.

The plaintiff attempted definitely to raise the issue of the improper number of interrogatories by her “answer”. The defendant’s motion for further answers which followed the plaintiff’s answer brought the issue to the attention of the trial judge, and his order for further answers must be held to imply an authorization to the defendant to proceed with the interrogatories as they were prepared and filed. Hastings v. Merriam, 117 Mass. 245, at 251; Regan v. Keyes, 204 Mass. 294, at 305; Murphy v. Hanright, 238 Mass. 200, at 204.

If the determination of the number of interrogatories was a question of fact, then the plaintiff has no standing as an appellant; if the judge had authority to authorize the use of the interrogatories after they were filed, as distinguished from the authority which he had under the statute to authorize their filing, then again the plaintiff has no standing as an appellant.

It has already been pointed out that the plaintiff could properly have raised the issue of the improper character of the interrogatories by a motion to dismiss. Bennett v. Powell, 284 Mass. 246, at 248. It has been held that a refusal to compel answers to interrogatories is a matter subject to review, even after a trial of fact; Cutter v. Cooper, 234 Mass. 307, at 315; conversely, the law must be that an order for further answers must be subject to review, even after a trial of fact. Cunningham v. Lexington Trust Co., 259 Mass. 181, at 188.

Although the plaintiff did not file a motion to dismiss, she could have claimed a report on the order for further answers and then could have made the answers. That would [412]*412have raised in this court the issue whether the judge had authority to make such an order which would rest entirely upon the character of the interrogatories, Macausland v. Taylor, 220 Mass. 265, at 269, 270; Downing v. Downing, 227 Mass. 7, at 9. If the plaintiff had followed that procedure, the only issue before us would have been the propriety of the interrogatories. As it is now, we have not only that issue but a further issue whether the plaintiff’s complete refusal to answer puts her out of court regardless of the issue of the number of the interrogatories.

- When a ruling is made to which a party seasonably objects by exception or claim of report, he does not lose any rights by proceeding with the trial and accepting the ruling as the law of the trial. Walking v. Beers, 120 Mass. 548, at 550; Commonwealth v. Retkovits, 222 Mass. 245, at 253. It remains the law of the trial only until reversed. Cheshire National Bank v. Jaynes, 224 Mass. 14, at 19, 20.

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Related

Hastings v. Merriam
117 Mass. 245 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1875)
Walling v. Beers
120 Mass. 548 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1876)
Harding v. Noyes
125 Mass. 572 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1878)
Wetherbee v. Winchester
128 Mass. 293 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1880)
Harding v. Morrill
136 Mass. 291 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1884)
Fels v. Raymond
28 N.E. 691 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1885)
Regan v. Keyes
90 N.E. 847 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1910)
MacAusland v. Taylor
220 Mass. 265 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1915)
Nickerson v. Glines
107 N.E. 942 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1915)
Commonwealth v. Retkovitz
222 Mass. 245 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1915)
Cheshire National Bank v. Jaynes
224 Mass. 14 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1916)
Downing v. Downing
227 Mass. 7 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1917)
Cutter v. Cooper
234 Mass. 307 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1920)
Davis v. Boston Elevated Railway Co.
235 Mass. 482 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1920)
Murphy v. Hanright
130 N.E. 204 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1921)
Telch v. Hamburger
155 N.E. 658 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1927)
Cunningham v. Lexington Trust Co.
156 N.E. 1 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1927)
Bennett v. Powell
187 N.E. 559 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1933)

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1 Mass. App. Div. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-stretton-massdistctapp-1936.