Miller v. Norton

232 N.E.2d 351, 353 Mass. 395, 1967 Mass. LEXIS 745
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 232 N.E.2d 351 (Miller v. Norton) 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
Miller v. Norton, 232 N.E.2d 351, 353 Mass. 395, 1967 Mass. LEXIS 745 (Mass. 1967).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Miller brought this action (the principal action) in the Superior Court to recover for personal injuries and property damage arising from an automobile accident. Norton answered by a general denial and alleged contributory negligence. Norton also brought a cross action against Miller in a District Court to recover for property damage arising from the same accident. Miller’s answer in the cross action was a general denial and an allegation of contributory negligence.

On Miller’s motion the cross action was transferred on November 29, 1961, to the Superior Court. 1 A Superior Court judge on November 15, 1962, referred both the principal action and the cross action to an auditor whose find *397 ings were not to be final. The auditor found for Miller in the cross action and for Miller in the principal action in the sum of $3,500 on count 1 (personal injuries), and $100 on count 2 (property damage). He also, after somewhat vague subsidiary findings, found expressly that Miller was in the exercise of due care and that Norton was negligent.

Norton, in the principal action, filed his insistence upon jury trial but did not do so in the cross action. On April 3, 1963, judgment for Miller was ordered in the cross action “upon the [aluditor’s [rleport alone.” Norton did not claim any exception. No effort to obtain modification or review of the order for judgment in the cross action was made by Norton within twenty days after the order for judgment.

The principal action was tried before a jury. Norton testified at the trial that he was the same person who, as plaintiff, had brought the cross action against Miller. The dockets and pleadings show that Miller was represented by the same attorney in both actions, but that Norton was represented by one attorney in the cross action and by different attorneys in the principal action.

The trial judge, subject to Miller’s exceptions, denied Miller’s motion for judgment in the principal action on the auditor’s report and refused to admit in evidence the motion and order of November 29, 1961, for consolidation of the two cases and the order of April 3, 1963, for judgment for Miller in the cross action. The two documents were marked for identification. The jury returned sealed verdicts for Norton in the principal action shortly after court convened at 10 a.m. on April 29, 1963. The cross action had gone to judgment on that day at 10 a.m. 2

Miller thereafter filed a written motion for a new trial of the principal action on the ground of newly discovered evidence in that there would be inconsistent judgments on the docket. This motion the trial judge denied.

In June, 1963, in the principal action, Miller presented *398 to another judge a motion for judgment for him nunc pro tune on the ground that the issues of Norton’s negligence, Miller’s alleged contributory negligence, Miller’s due care, and Norton’s lack of it had been raised and finally determined in the cross action, which had gone to judgment prior to the return of the verdict in the principal action. This motion was denied, subject to Miller’s exception, on June 14, 1963.

Miller is before us on two bills of exceptions, one allowed by the judge who denied the motion for judgment nunc pro tune; the other allowed by the trial judge, who denied Miller’s motions for judgment on the auditor’s report and for a new trial. Both bills present for decision the question whether, on principles of collateral estoppel, judgment for Norton in the principal action is now barred by the determination of the same issues of fact in the cross action. See Restatement: Judgments, § 68, comment c. 3

1. The consolidation order of November 29, 1961, was that “these cross actions be removed to the . . . Superior Court and there be consolidated for trial.” It may be that the ambiguous consolidation order meant no more than that the two cases were to be tried together. Even, however, if the intention was to “fuse the . . . proceedings into a single one” in which the “original actions [would] lose . . . identity” (see Lumiansky v. Tessier, 213 Mass. 182, 189), 4 we interpret the action of the judge on April 3, 1963, in ordering judgment for Miller in the cross action, as again separating the cases.

2. We interpret the auditor’s report as determining, both for the purposes of the principal action and for those of the *399 cross action, (1) that the accident was not caused by the negligence of Miller and (2) that it was caused by Norton’s negligence. Those determinations became binding on the parties, when judgment was entered in the cross action and that case was no longer subject to ordinary appellate review. See Biggio v. Magee, 272 Mass. 185, 187-188; Willett v. Webster, 337 Mass. 98, 102-103; Nantucket Exp. Lines, Inc. v. Woods Hole, Martha’s Vineyard & Nantucket S.S. Authy. 350 Mass. 173, 175-176. 5 See also Dearden v. Hey, 304 Mass. 659, 661-664. Cf. Petruzziello v. Borselli, 321 Mass. 749.

At the trial of the principal action, as noted above, Miller offered in evidence not only a certified copy of the motion and order for consolidation (fn. 1) of that case with the cross action, but also a certified copy of the order for judgment in the cross action. At that time, we assume, they need not have been received. Judgment had not yet been entered in the cross action. 6 There was thus then no basis for a contention that Norton was bound by collateral es-toppel on the issues of negligence and contributory negligence.

At the hearing on the motion for a new trial of the principal action, these documents had become relevant and the trial judge reasonably should have taken cognizance of the fact that judgment had been entered for Miller in the cross action on the basis of the earlier order for judgment. A judge may regard himself as having knowledge of the entries upon the dockets of the court in which he sits, and also of the papers there recorded, at least where certified copies of those papers are before him. See Assessors of Lawrence v. Arlington Mills, 320 Mass. 272, 273-274; Gordon v. Gordon, 332 Mass. 210, 213; Poland v. New Bedford, Woods Hole, Martha’s Vineyard & Nantucket S.S. Authy. 342 Mass. 75, *400 77, fn. 2. The circumstances relating to the judgment in the cross action were also before the judge who heard the motion for judgment nunc pro time. Each judge, in deciding any issue properly before him, should have recognized that the judgment in the cross action then established Norton’s liability to Miller in the principal action.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
232 N.E.2d 351, 353 Mass. 395, 1967 Mass. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-norton-mass-1967.