Old Colony Street Railway Co. v. Thomas

18 Am. Ann. Cas. 247, 91 N.E. 1006, 205 Mass. 529, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 1055
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 18 Am. Ann. Cas. 247 (Old Colony Street Railway Co. v. Thomas) 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
Old Colony Street Railway Co. v. Thomas, 18 Am. Ann. Cas. 247, 91 N.E. 1006, 205 Mass. 529, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 1055 (Mass. 1910).

Opinion

Knowlton, C. J.

These are appeals and exceptions in two eases brought in the Land Court for the registration of titles. We will consider first the appeal in each case from the order of the Superior Court, made on January 21, 1910, revoking an order of November 29, 1909, that the exceptions be entered in the Supreme Judicial Court on or before January 1, 1910, and in default thereof that they be overruled and the rulings and orders excepted to affirmed, unless the court, for good reason, should extend the time. The respondents having failed to enter the exceptions within the time prescribed, and having entered them afterward without a further order, they were dismissed upon motion by the Supreme Judicial Court. Thereupon the petitioner filed in each case a motion that the final decision be certified to the Land Court, and the respondents filed a motion that the order of November 29 be revoked, and the time for entering the exceptions be extended. The court denied the former and allowed the latter of these motions, and the petitioner appealed in each case.

The cases were pending in the Superior Court after the order of the Supreme Judicial Court dismissing the exceptions. No final judgment or order had been entered in the Superior Court in pursuance of the order of November 29, and the cases were there for disposition. It was therefore in the power of the Superior Court to deal with them in any proper way, and to revoke the former order if good reason was shown for so doing. The appeal is not well founded, and the last order of the Superior Court is affirmed.

In the first of these cases there was a decision in favor of the petitioner and an order for the registration of the title in the Land Court, from which the respondents appealed to the Superior Court. Issues were framed by the Land Court for trial in the Superior Court, as required by the statute. The petitioner filed in the Superior Court a motion for the dismissal of the appeal, which was allowed, and exceptions were taken from the order of dismissal. The reasons for the motion to dismiss were .stated therein as follows:

“ First, because the report of the judge of the Land Court is [534]*534not a full report of the facts found by Mm so far as they relate to, or bear upon, any questions involved in this appeal, and does not comply with the requirements of St. 1905, c. 288, and the petitioner is thereby deprived of the benefit of the presumption in its favor which the statute undertakes to secure to it.
“ Second, because the judge of the Land Court has made no specific finding upon the issues, or either of them, framed for this court upon this appeal.
“ Third, because it does not appear that the issues framed for the jury in this court were material to the decision of the Land Court, from which this appeal was taken.
“ Fourth, because there was no trial in the Land Court upon the facts.
“ Fifth, because it does not appear that the decision of the Land Court was based upon any disputed issue of fact.
“ Sixth, because it appears that the decision of the Land Court was based upon a question of law, and not of fact.
“ Seventh, because it appears that the decision of the Land Court was based solely upon an inspection of the record title to the land described in the petition, and involved only the construction of the conveyances and other instruments forming the chain of that title, and that error, if any, in said decision of the Land Court, was error of law and not of fact, the remedy for which is by appeal or exceptions to the Supreme Judicial Court, and not by appeal to this court.”

The report of the judge of the Land Court

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Bluebook (online)
18 Am. Ann. Cas. 247, 91 N.E. 1006, 205 Mass. 529, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 1055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-colony-street-railway-co-v-thomas-mass-1910.