Migliore v. Purity Supreme Supermarkets, Inc.

1992 Mass. App. Div. 164
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 26, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1992 Mass. App. Div. 164 (Migliore v. Purity Supreme Supermarkets, Inc.) 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
Migliore v. Purity Supreme Supermarkets, Inc., 1992 Mass. App. Div. 164 (Mass. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Sherman, PJ.

This is an action in tort to recover for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff in a fall on the defendant’s allegedly unsafe business premises.

lilis case is before this Division upon the plaintiffs appealfrom the allowance of the defendant’s motion to dismiss on Statute of Limitations grounds. Our review of this straightforward question of law was needlessly hampered by the critical deficiencies of the trial court docket. Not the least of the docket’s significant omissions is the absence of any indication that it was the defendant, rather than the plaintiff, who ultimately prevailed in the trial court on the limitations issue.

The report indicates that the following constitutes the relevant chronology of procedural events in this case.

On January 28,1988, the plaintiff slipped and fell on what she alleges were the negligently maintained business premises of the defendant.

On January 24, 1991, plaintiff’s counsel mailed the complaint by first class mail, postage prepaid to the Lynn Division by depositing it in a mailbox in his office building. The box had a next scheduled United States mail pick-up the next morning, Friday, January 25,1991.

The G.L.c. 260, §2A three year limitations period for the commencement of this action expired on January 28,1991.

The plaintiff’s complaint was date-stamped and entered on the docket of the Lynn Division on February 4,1991. The One Hundred and Eleven ($111.00) Dollar check [165]*165written by plaintiff s counsel for the filing fee was entered on the trial court books and deposited in the bank on February 11,1991.

On April 23,1991, the defendant filed an answer, request for jury trial and “notice of removal to the Superior Court.”2 The defendant’s answer included the affirmative defense that the action was time-barred by the Statute of Limitations.

On July 18,1991, the defendant filed a Dist./Mun. Cts. R Civ. P., Rule 12(b) (6) motion to dismiss based on the Statute of Limitations, together with a supporting memorandum. In an affidavit in opposition to the defendant’s dismissal motion, plaintiffs counsel outlined the chronology of events from his mailing of the complaint on January 24,1991 through the trial courf s deposit of his filing fee check on February 11,1991.

The defendant’s dismissal motion was allowed, after hearing, on July 26,1991. No notice of the court’s action was sent by the trial court clerk.

On September 3,1991, the plaintiff filed a motion, supported by affidavit, for the rehearing and reconsideration of the courf s dismissal order, and requested a hearing on Friday, September 6,1991. The motion, with notice of the requested September 6,1991 hearing date, was served on defendant’s counsel. The clerk’s office instead marked the motion for hearing on September 9,1991, on which date a second judge of the Lynn Division endorsed the following order on the plaintiffs motion:

Plaintiff s motion for rehearing and reconsideration of court order allowing defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted. On rehearing, motion to dismiss is denied.

The plaintiffs motion was apparently allowed without oral.argument by either party.

The docket is devoid of any reference to the courf s September 9,1991 action. The docket does contain a September 18,1991 entry showing the filing by the defendant of a request for a report and draft report.

More significantly, the docket shows no subsequent activity in the case until November 22,1991, at which time the plaintiff filed a request for the report which is now before us. However, the report indicates that in early November, 1991, the second judge reconsidered his September 9,1991 order, and this time allowed the defendant’s motion to dismiss.

1. No issue of law arises as to the authority of the second judge to reconsider and reverse not only his own order of September 9,1991, but also the July 26,1990 order of the first judge. See discussion in Gianelli v. Vatco Indus. Inc., 1986 Mass. App. Div. 10, 12-13 and cases cited.

Massachusetts case law is sparse on a successor judge’s reconsideration and modification of the decisions of aprior judge who is not absent orwho has not recused himself. Although, as a general rule, there is no lack of judicial power prior to final judgment3 to overrule, vacate or modify the rulings of a another judge in the same court, the established judicial policy in this area is that “a judge should hesitate to undo his own work. ... Still more should he hesitate to undo the work of another judge.” Peterson v. Hopson, 306 Mass. 597, 603 (1940). Such reconsideration may, of course, be occasionally warranted “in the light of subsequent events, the public interest or the interests of the parties,” Commonwealth v. Carrunchio, 20 Mass. App. Ct. 943, 944 (1985).

2. Our review of the merits of the court’s order requires an initial, procedural note. Given the trial courf s consideration of plaintiff counsel’s affidavits, and an affidavit of [166]*166an employee in the trial court clerk’s office,4 we treat the judge’s allowance of the defendant’s dismissal motion as a grant of summary judgment in the defendant’s favor pursuant to Dist./Mun. Cts. R. Civ. P., Rule 56.5 Cousineau v. Laramee, 388 Mass. 859, 868 n.2 (1983).

3. The plaintiff s sole argument on this appeal is that summary judgment should not have been entered for the defendant because there exists a genuine issue of fact as to whether her complaint was actually received by the Lynn Division on a date both prior to the date of docket entry and within the applicable limitations period. It is clear from the pleadings and affidavits on file, however, that the plaintiff has failed to advance specific facts sufficient to raise any issue concerning the commencement of this action prior to the expiration of the Statute of Limitations period.

The plaintiff’s averments are limited to counsel’s posting of the complaint by first class mail on Thursday, January 24, 1991, four days prior to the running of the limitations period. It is elementary that Massachusetts law presumes the regularity of the mails, Federal Insurance Co. v. Summers, 403 F.2d 971 (1st Cir. 1961), and that the deposit of a properly addressed, postage-prepaid letter in the post office or other mail box6 is primafacie evidence that the addressee received it in the ordinary course of the mails. United Interchange Inc. of Mass. v. Austin, 21 Mass. App. Dec. 125, 129-130 (1961). Receipt in “the ordinary course” of the mails is not, however, receipt at a particular time. There is no legal presumption that a letter mailed on a given date is actually received on a specific, subsequent date. It is in fact common knowledge that delays of varying lengths often occur in the course of mail delivery. Oxford Bank v. United States, 44 F.2d 253, 254 (Ct. Claims 1930).

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Mass. App. Div. 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/migliore-v-purity-supreme-supermarkets-inc-massdistctapp-1992.