Osserman v. Jacobs

339 N.E.2d 193, 369 Mass. 200, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 795
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 339 N.E.2d 193 (Osserman v. Jacobs) 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
Osserman v. Jacobs, 339 N.E.2d 193, 369 Mass. 200, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 795 (Mass. 1975).

Opinion

*201 Kaplan, J.

In what circumstances does a judgment for the defendant upon the sustaining of a demurrer to a declaration preclude a second action on the same cause of action? As urged by the plaintiffs-appellants, we deal with this problem of res judicata apart from the possible influence upon it of the new Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure effective on July 1, 1974: here the earlier action was concluded before that date, though the later action — the one under present appeal — was commenced thereafter.

There are in fact five actions here on consolidated appeal but, by stipulation of the parties, one of them is taken to be typical of all as to the question of res judi-cata, and an affirmance of the judgment in that action on the res judicata ground would dispose also of the rest. 2 This bellwether action, commenced in the Superior Court on August 8, 1974, is in two counts, one stressing a contract theory, the other a tort theory. It will be enough to say that the plaintiffs in their complaint seek to charge the defendants, who served as their accountants, for sundry acts of alleged misconduct in carrying out professional responsibilities. The defendants under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (6), 365 Mass. 754 (1974), moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim, basing themselves on a judgment in their favor in a prior action. 3 The judge of the Superior Court allowed the *202 motion and the plaintiffs appealed. We transferred the matter to this court.

The prior action was in the Superior Court between the same parties plaintiffs and defendants, arose from the same transactions, and must be taken to have broached the same cause of action or claim as the present action. The defendants demurred to the declaration and the demurrer was sustained. Leave was granted to the plaintiffs to move to amend the declaration. The plaintiffs duly moved and, leave having been granted, filed an amended declaration. This amended declaration was then demurred to, and the demurrer was sustained. As leave to amend further was not denied, the plaintiffs under Rule 23 of the Superior Court (1954), then in force, had ten days in which to move to file a second amended declaration. 4 They did not so move, judgment entered on May 13, 1974, for the defendants, and the plaintiffs did not appeal. Later, on June 10, 1974, the plaintiffs moved to vacate the judgment with the intention, after vacation, of filing a third pleading exhibited with their motion (and corresponding in its allegations to the complaint filed in the present action). The motion to vacate, presumably to be considered under G. L. c. 250, § 15, 5 was denied, and no review was sought. Then the *203 present separate action was commenced, with the result above stated, leading to the present appeal by the plaintiffs as appellants.

The precise point at issue is the effect of the unappealed judgment of May 13, 1974, resulting from the sustaining of the demurrer to the amended declaration in the prior action. We need not deal at large with the classical question of the judgment on a sustained demurrer as res judicata — often posed, not too helpfully, as a question of when the judgment is to be considered “on the merits” and when not.* *** 6 In this Commonwealth the homespun view was taken that a plaintiff, finding his declaration thrown out on demurrer, ought to have an “ample opportunity” (Whitney v. Whitney, 299 Mass. 547, 551 [1938]) to correct and cure it; if the opportunity was accorded, the plaintiff had to seize it and patch up his pleading in the very action: he would not be allowed to spurn the opportunity, suffer judgment, and, without testing the judgment by appeal, start another action on the same cause. Our court was meticulous — perhaps exaggeratedly so 7 — in making sure that the plaintiff should be informed of his opportunity to move to amend. Thus it was thought not enough that the opportunity should simply be present in the form of a rule like Rule 23 of the Superior Court (1954). Under the cases, the plaintiff must be given express leave to move to amend before his failure to attempt amendment, followed by *204 adverse judgment, would work preclusively against him. See Hacker v. Beck, 325 Mass. 594 (1950); Elfman v. Glaser, 313 Mass. 370 (1943); Whitney v. Whitney, supra; Von Moschzisker, Res Judicata, 38 Yale L.J. 299, 319-320 (1929).

In the present case, the plaintiffs, after the failure of their original declaration, were in fact given express leave to move to amend. They availed themselves of the opportunity but their attempt to state a cause of action failed again. They seem now to argue that they must, after the second failed attempt, also have been given express leave to move to amend, otherwise the judgment against them should not foreclose a fresh action. But that would be too much of a good thing. Our cases have not indulged plaintiffs so far. When there was actually a second amendment and a second sustaining of a demurrer, no express leave was called for at that time in order to bar access to a new action. Indeed, it should not and did not make a difference in such a case whether express leave had been granted when the first demurrer was sustained. Thus the court said in Martin v. Hunt, 352 Mass. 774 (1967), a case where motions to dismiss had been sustained successively as to a complaint and amended complaint, judgment entered for the defendant, 8 and the plaintiff tried to institute a fresh action: “It is established that ‘a judgment in . . . [an] earlier action following the sustaining of a demurrer is a bar to a second action for the same cause of action where the plaintiff had been granted leave to amend his earlier declaration and had neglected or refused to do so.’ Hacker v. Beck, 325 Mass. 594, 597. See Whitney v. Whitney, 299 Mass. 547, 550; Elfman v. Glaser, 313 Mass. 370, 373-374. The same rule should apply where a pleading is dismissed as defective and an amendment is filed which fails to cure it. In each instance the plaintiff *205 has been given two chances to state his case and is not entitled to burden the courts and the opposing parties with further attempts.” 9 See Turner v. Dahlherg, 360 Mass. 854 (1971); cf. McArdle v. Schneider, 228 F. Supp. 506 (D. Mass. 1964).

The conclusion we reach is made the easier because on the motion to vacate the judgment it was open to the plaintiffs to press on the judge any “equities” that might exist: for example, that the omission to move to.

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Bluebook (online)
339 N.E.2d 193, 369 Mass. 200, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osserman-v-jacobs-mass-1975.