Oakwood Living Centers, Inc. v. Saquet
This text of 2003 Mass. App. Div. 98 (Oakwood Living Centers, Inc. v. Saquet) 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.
Opinion
The plaintiff, Oakwood living Centers, Inc. d/b/a Easton Lincoln Nursing & Rehabilitation Center (“Oakwood”), filed this appeal pursuant to Dist/Mun. Cts. R. A D. A, Rule 8C, claiming that the trial judge’s finding that the defendant, Robert Saquet (“Saquet”), was not individually liable to Oakwood for his late mother’s debt was clearly erroneous. In response, Saquet argues that this Rule 8C appeal is “defective” since Oakwood supplied this Court no record of the proceedings, and the issue Oakwood presses is not based solely upon the pleadings.2 For the reasons set out [99]*99below, we affirm the finding of the trial judge and dismiss the appeal.
Oakwood elected in this appeal to forego requesting the transcript of the court proceedings required by Rule 8C. Such a request, obviously followed by this Court’s review of the transcript, is critical to proper appellate review under that Rule. Wine v. Tak Hing Wu, 1996 Mass. App. Div. 157, 158. The burden was on Oakwood to ensure an adequate record for this Court’s evaluation. Id,:, see also, e.g., Cassford v. Massachusetts Port Auth., 1998 Mass. App. Div. 240, 241. An appellant may proceed under Rule 8C without a transcript, but only if the issues are based solely on the pleadings. Wine, 1996 Mass. App. Div. at 159. The issues Oak-wood raises, however, are not grounded in the pleadings, but rather in purported admissions by Saquet’s (predecessor) counsel in a brief filed in the previous Appellate Division decision of Oakwood Living Centers, Inc. v. Saquet, 2000 Mass. App. Div. 207,3 in a letter Saquet wrote to Oakwood in 1997, and in the Admission Agreement Saquet signed when his mother entered Oakwood’s Easton Lincoln facility in 1995. This Court is hobbled in rendering a decision without an opportunity thoroughly to examine the full transcript. Wine, 1996 Mass. App. Div. at 159. Had such a transcript been provided, this Court would have been able to consider Oakwood’s appeal on the narrow ground of whether the trial judge’s findings of fact were so devoid of support in the record that they were “clearly erroneous.” See Lindquist v. Garrett Auctioneers, Inc., 1999 Mass. App. Div. 107, 108.4 As matters stand, this Court cannot determine whether it, “on the entire evidence, [would have been] left with the ‘definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’” Id., quoting in part Demoulas v. Demoulas Super Mkts., Inc., 424 Mass. 501, 509 (1997) (further citations omitted) (emphasis supplied); see also, e.g., Diranian v. Diranian, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 605, 608 (2002) and cases cited.
The appeal is dismissed.
So ordered.
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2003 Mass. App. Div. 98, 2003 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakwood-living-centers-inc-v-saquet-massdistctapp-2003.