Graves v. Hicks

80 N.E. 605, 194 Mass. 524, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 1018
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 605 (Graves v. Hicks) 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
Graves v. Hicks, 80 N.E. 605, 194 Mass. 524, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 1018 (Mass. 1907).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

1. After a rescript from this court to the Superior Court ordering that the decree from which the defendant Hicks had appealed be, with a certain modification, affirmed, (Graves v. Hicks, 191 Mass. 102,) the defendant filed a motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, and that the hearing might be reopened to receive further evidence “ by reason thereof.” The hearing upon the- motion took place on March 28, 1906, before the judge before whom, sitting without a jury, the case was originally tried. It appears from the certificate of the judge disallowing the exceptions that he filed his decision overruling the motion on March 27,1906, and written notice thereof was mailed by the clerk and received by counsel on the same day; that at the hearing “ no exception was taken nor in any way saved nor was there any intimation of a desire to save any exception ” ; that the “ first step toward claiming or saving an exception was the filing by defendant Hicks on April 4, 1906, of a paper entitled ‘ Claim of Appeal [525]*525and Exception,’ in which he recites that he ‘ both appeals . . . from and excepts to the order, finding, decision and ruling . . . denying his prayers in his petition ’ ”; and further, that “ this was filed after the defendant Hicks counsel had received notice of the plaintiff’s intention to present for entry a final decree after rescript and only a few hours before the time set for presenting said decree.”

There is a difference between saving exceptions and filing them; and the statute which, provides that exceptions may be filed within twenty days from the act excepted to has no reference to the time when they should be alleged. In the Superior Court, in actions at common law, the matter is regulated by Rule 48 (now Rule 45) of that court: “ No exception shall be allowed by the presiding justice, unless the same be alleged and saved at the time when the opinion, ruling, direction, or judgment excepted to is given. And all exceptions to any charge to the jury shall, unless previously saved, be alleged before the jury are sent out. When further instructions are given in the absence of counsel after the jury have retired, the presiding justice may permit exceptions thereto at any time within twenty-four hours next following. All requests for instructions shall be made in writing before the closing arguments unless special leave is given to present further requests later.” As to the meaning of this rule reference may be had to Keohane, petitioner, 179 Mass. 69. As said by Bigelow, C. J. in Joannes v. Underwood, 6 Allen, 241, “ this rule is a wise and salutary one ”; and we think that the principle should be applied to orders in equity proceedings, especially in a casé where, as here, the suit as between the plaintiff and principal defendant is in substance an action at law.

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Related

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160 N.E. 303 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1928)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.E. 605, 194 Mass. 524, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-hicks-mass-1907.