Kenyon v. Cohen

15 Mass. App. Div. 155
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 30, 1950
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Mass. App. Div. 155 (Kenyon v. Cohen) 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
Kenyon v. Cohen, 15 Mass. App. Div. 155 (Mass. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Riley, P. J.

In this case the trial judge has made a single report at the request of both parties. The plaintiff claims to be aggrieved by the denial of the trial judge of his motion to dismiss a request for report filed by the defendant after a finding for the plaintiff. The defendant claims to be aggrieved by the allowance of a continuance by a judge before whom the case was partially tried and by the denial of certain of her requests for rulings by the reporting- judge who heard the case and by whom a finding for the plaintiff was made. It is an action of contract commenced by writ dated June 3, 1949 in which the plaintiff seeks to recover for an overcharge under the Federal Emergency Price Control Act and the Federal [156]*156Housing and Rent Act of 1947 as amended. The answer is a general denial, a denial under estoppel and a plea of the statute of limitations.

We first consider the denial by the trial judge of the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the defendant’s request for report on the grounds that copies had not been mailed in accordance with Rule 28 (1940) of the Rules of the District Courts. The report recites that on Saturday, December 10, 1949 the defendant seasonably filed a draft report which was received by the Clerk of the District Court of Springfield in the morning mail at about 9:45 a. m. postmarked December 9, 1949. Copies of this draft report were received by the judge who had made the finding for the plaintiff and the attorney for the plaintiff also on December 10, 1949 in the morning mail. On Monday, December 12, 1949 the plaintiff filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court a motion to dismiss the defendant’s draft report on the ground that copies had not been mailed in accordance with Rule 28 (1940) of the Rules of the District Courts. At about 4:45 p. m. Monday, December 12, 1949 the plaintiff’s attorney was personally served by the defendant at the plaintiff’s attorney’s office with a second copy of the defendant’s draft report. The judge that made the finding was also served with a second copy of the defendant’s draft report at his office at approximately the same time. No second draft report was ever filed with the Clerk of the District Court. At no time was any copy of the draft report delivered or mailed to the judge who had allowed the continuance. After hearing, this motion was denied by the judge who had made the finding. The rule in question provides: “A copy of such draft report shall be delivered or mailed postpaid by the party requesting the report to the trial Justice and to the adverse party before the close of the next business day after such filing.”

[157]*157Obviously the notice mailed by the defendant’s attorney to the trial judge and attorney for the plaintiff was not in compliance with this rule. Famigletti v. Neviackas, 324 Mass. 70. The question to be decided is whether the second copy of the defendant’s draft report personally served by the defendant on the judge who heard the case and the plaintiff’s attorney at 4:45 p. m. on Monday constituted a compliance with the rule. It is clear that Monday, December 12th was the next business day after Saturday, December 10th upon which date the draft report was seasonably filed in the clerk’s office and we think the trial judge could find that a copy of such draft report was delivered to the trial justice and to the adverse party before the close of the next business day after the filing. The plaintiff argues that the rule means the business day of the clerk’s office but we think that this is too narrow a construction of the rule. Apparently both the trial justice and the attorney for the adverse party had not concluded their business days and were in their offices at the time the copy of the draft report was personally served. Notwithstanding the decision of the court in Tanzilli v. Casassa, 324 Mass. 113 at 115, holding that where a statute required action within a certain time “after” an event, the action may be taken before that event and that such statutes have been construed as fixing the latest but not the earliest time for the taking of the action, we are bound by the decision in the case of Famigletti v. Neviackas, supra, that a copy of the draft report must be mailed or delivered after the original has been filed in court. In spite of the defendant’s ineffectual attempt to comply with this rule by mailing the first notice, we think that the personal service of copies of the draft report made as above described constituted a compliance with the rule and that there was no error on the part of the trial judge in denying the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the defendant’s request for re[158]*158port. Under the circumstances in this case the failure to send a copy of the draft report to the judge who had made a mere interlocutory order did not require the allowance of the plaintiff’s motion.

We pass now to the grievances claimed by the defendant. It appears the case was first brought to trial before Judge Collins, a Special Justice of the District Court of Springfield. At that trial the plaintiff attempted to offer evidence under a Demand to Admit Facts but upon objection Judge Collins excluded this evidence on the ground that the statutory requirements had not been complied with by the plaintiff. At the request of the plaintiff the judge then allowed a continuance endorsing on the plaintiff’s Demand to Admit Facts the following: “Demand for admission of Facts excluded for failure on the part of the plaintiff to file affidavit of notice thereof. Case continued generally to permit the plaintiff to secure records of the Housing Expeditor by an Executive Order.”

The defendant objected to this continuance and filed a request for report on that issue. The defendant now argues that Judge Collins erred in that he did not allow compensation to the defendant’s attorney by reason of the delay caused by this continuance. There was no reversible error in granting this continuance as continuances with or without costs are within the discretion of the trial judge. Bules 15 and 16 of the Buies of the District Courts (1940). At the trial upon which a finding was made by the second judge, the plaintiff introduced evidence through an employee of the Housing Expeditor that the defendant had filed a rent registration certificate in 1942 showing the rent to be $25.00 per month without a garage as well as testimony by the plaintiff and his wife that they paid $33.00 per month for the tenement and garage beginning May 2, 1944. While the defendant objected to the admission of this evidence and claimed a report, it is stated in [159]*159the report allowed by the trial judge that the defendant filed no written request for report based upon the admission of testimony by the plaintiff and his wife and the employee of the Housing Expeditor over his objection and that the same was reported only so far as it may be material to the defendant’s request for report originally filed on the conditional continuance granted by Judge Collins at the time of the first trial, and so far as the facts herein reported involve Judge Collins, he joined in this report. The defendant argues that the evidence of the plaintiff and his wife and that of the records on file in the Housing Expeditor’s Office should have been excluded by Judge Barry at the trial before him since it was contrary to Judge Collins’ assumed order on the granting of a continuance before him. We do not think that the notation made by Judge Collins on the Demand for Admission of Facts was intended to or had the effect of restricting the plaintiff from offering any competent evidence on the issue involved.

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Related

Woods v. Stone
333 U.S. 472 (Supreme Court, 1948)
Famigletti v. Neviackas
84 N.E.2d 458 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1949)
Tanzilli v. Casassa
85 N.E.2d 220 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Mass. App. Div. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenyon-v-cohen-massdistctapp-1950.