Ingraham v. Berliawsky

147 A. 227, 128 Me. 307, 1929 Me. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 A. 227 (Ingraham v. Berliawsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingraham v. Berliawsky, 147 A. 227, 128 Me. 307, 1929 Me. LEXIS 106 (Me. 1929).

Opinion

Farrington, J.

The case comes up on an agreed statement. On April 20, 1926, Marcia A. Burch recovered a judgment for eighteen hundred seventy-six dollars and eighty-nine cents ($1,876.89) against Isaac Berliawsky the defendant. This judgment was on October 22, 1926, assigned by Marcia A. Burch to Frank H. Ingraham, the plaintiff. Suit was brought on the judgment and the action was entered at the January Term, 1927, of the Supreme-Judicial Court for Knox County.

At that Term this case, No. 4304, was, together with two other-cases, referred to as No. 4163 and No. 4345, and a bill in equity, the nature of none of which last three cases nor the parties thereto-are disclosed by the record, referred to referees, to whom the Commission was issued January 27, 1927. A hearing on No. 4304 was-held on March 11, 1927, after final adjournment of the January Term. At the hearing the defendant asked leave to file a brief statement alleging certain set-offs, as to which there is nothing before the court to show the other parties concerned, and also set-off of a judgment in No. 4345, and also a judgment in No. 4163.

The referees in their report found that “said brief statement-alleging set-offs aforesaid was not filed during the term to which the writ in this case was returnable and that said referees can not now receive it, and set-off can not be allowed.”

The referees also found that the assignment of the judgment above mentioned by Marcia A. Burch to Frank H. Ingraham, the-plaintiff, was for a valuable consideration and was not colorable. The report of the referees on the instant case, received and filed [309]*309on the fourth day of the April Term, 1927, awarded judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of eighteen hundred and seventy-six dollars and eighty-nine cents ($1,876.89), together with interest from April 20, 1926, the date of judgment, to the amount of one hundred three dollars and fifty-four cents ($103.54).

The presiding Justice on the tenth day of the April Term, 1927, re-committed the report to the referees “for the purpose of modifying report in such manner as they deem necessary to present any questions of law that they desire for consideration of the Court.”

Pursuant to this re-commitment the referees again met and reported that they desired to have the Court determine (1) whether or not the hearing before the referees was a continuation of the January, 1927, Term of entry of the writ; (2) whether the brief statement, not having been filed in Court during said January Term before final adjournment, could be received and considered by the referees, and (3) whether the assignment from Marcia A. Burch to the plaintiff was for a valuable consideration or was colorable.

If the Court should decide that the assignment was for a valuable consideration and not colorable and if the various items of set-off were not legally before them, judgment was to be awarded for the plaintiff in the sum of eighteen hundred seventy-six dollars and eighty-nine cents ($1,876.89) with interest from April 20, 1926, the date of judgment.

The doctrine of set-off did not exist at common law. At common law if a defendant had accounts or claims against the plaintiff, he could enforce them only by an independent action commenced by him against the plaintiff. 24 R. C. L., p. 801, Sec. 10, and cases cited.

The right in this state, therefore, to set off one demand against another is wholly regulated and determined by statute and the rights of parties must depend upon the provisions of law by which it is regulated. Houghton v. Houghton, 37 Me., 72; Robinson v. Safford, 57 Me., 163; Call v. Chapman, 25 Me., 128; Smith v. Ellis, 29 Me., 422.

Sec. 74, Chap. 87, Revised Statutes, provides as follows: “Demands between plaintiffs and defendants may be set off against each other as follows :

[310]*310The defendant during the term to which the writ is returnable, must file a brief statement of his demand, in substance as certain as in a declaration, which by leave of court may be amended. The clerk shall enter on it and on the docket the date, and on the docket, under the action, notice of the filing.”

It is undisputed and in the record that the defendant did not, prior to the final adjournment of the January Term, 1927, file any brief statement of any demand in set-off.

The time of the commencement of a term of court is fixed by statute, and the end of a term is fixed by the final adj ournment of the court for that term. Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S., 410; Parsons v. Hathaway, 40 Me., 132; Moreland v. Vomilas, 127 Me., at p. 499.

The hearing before the referees was, therefore, not a continuation of the Januarjr Term, 1927.

If the instant case had not been referred at the January Term of entry and had been tried at that Term, or if it had been continued to the April Term following and at that Term, or at a subsequent Term, it had come to trial before a jury or before the presiding Justice, without jury, the failure on his part to have filed the brief statement required by the provisions of the foregoing Sec. 74, of Chap. 87, would have prevented the defendant in that suit from receiving any advantage from demands he may have had against the plaintiff.

It is well settled that a defendant can not avail himself of any demand he may have against the plaintiff, unless it has been filed in set-off pursuant to the provisions of the statute. Wood v. Warren, 19 Me., 23; School District v. Deshon, 51 Me., 454.

And where there is not a strict compliance with the provisions of the statute, the Court is not authorized by it to allow a set-off to be made. Pond v. Niles, 31 Me., 131.

Does the fact that this case was by agreement of parties referred to referees, instead of being tried before a jury or heard by the Court, relieve the defendant, if he wishes to claim set-off, from the necessity of filing, during the term to which the writ ivas returnable, a brief statement of his demand in set-off as required by the statute?

We believe that the defendant is not relieved from the necessity [311]*311under the statute of filing his brief statement of set-off during the return Term of the writ. There was ample time, after the reference, and before final adjournment of court, for the defendant to have filed his brief statement so that in any event he would have been protected. He failed to do so.

If a cause be referred before any plea in set-off has been filed, and the rule of reference does not provide for the adjustment of claims in set-off, the referee has no authority to consider any such claim. Fulton v. Wiley, 32 Vt., 762.

In Fulton v. Wiley, Pierpont, C. J., says, “If this case had been tried in the County Court, it is very clear that the defendant could have availed himself of the note only by a plea in set-off. But it is said that upon the trial before the referee, the same rule does not apply,” and further on he continues, “An off-set can not be said to be an answer to the plaintiff’s claim or to his right of action; it is conceding the claim of the plaintiff, and his right to recover thereon, and then setting up a counter claim in his favor against the plaintiff and asking the court to make the application.

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Bluebook (online)
147 A. 227, 128 Me. 307, 1929 Me. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingraham-v-berliawsky-me-1929.