Perma-Home Corp. v. Nigro

25 Mass. App. Dec. 85
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 1, 1962
DocketNo. 45333
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Mass. App. Dec. 85 (Perma-Home Corp. v. Nigro) 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
Perma-Home Corp. v. Nigro, 25 Mass. App. Dec. 85 (Mass. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Kalus, J.

This matter is before us on two separate reports. One report raises a procedural issue, wherein the plaintiff (who has a finding) claims to be aggrieved by alleged error of the trial court in refusing to dismiss the defendant’s claim for report and draft report, on the grounds that the defendant failed to comply with Rule 28 of the District Courts (1952), relating to the requirements of said rule as to the time of filing a draft report with the clerk’s office with reference to the time of sending notice and copy thereof to opposing counsel and the trial judge. The other report raises a substantive issue wherein the defendant claims to be aggrieved by alleged error of the trial [87]*87judge in the disposition of the requests for rulings and the subsidiary findings and the finding in favor of the plaintiff.

We shall first .consider the procedural question, for in the event that the plaintiff’s contention that the defendant failed to comply with Rule 28 is sustained, then the defendant’s claim for report and draft report are not properly on the files of the court and we do not reach the questions raised by the defendant. See Wind Innersole & Counter Co., Inc. v. Gelick, 317 Mass. 327.

The report relating to the procedural issue sets forth the following sequence of events. At the trial the defendant duly filed requests for rulings, and after notice of a finding for the plaintiff, on November 28, 1961, the defendant duly filed a claim for a report. On December 7, 1961, at 6:00 p.m. the defendant mailed from Boston the original draft report to the .clerk’s office at Dedham, and on the same day a few moments later, he mailed a copy of his draft report to the plaintiff’s counsel at Boston, and a copy to the trial judge. The draft report to the clerk’s office was placed in a mail box “with post office schedules for regular pick-up twenty-four hours a day.” The copies mailed to counsel and to the judge were simultaneously placed in a mail box “with post office schedules for no pickups after 5:15 p.m.” The original draft report was received and filed with the clerk’s office in Dedham on December 8, 1961, at 9:00 a.m. The trial judge received his copy sometime [88]*88after 1:00 p.m. of the same day, with the post mark on this envelope, “Dec. 8, 1961, 1:00 p.m.” There was no direct evidence when the plaintiff’s counsel received his copy.

The plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss the defendant’s draft report and at the hearing on said motion the defendant filed the following request for ruling:

"That if the court finds that the original draft report was filed (with the clerk’s office) before the plaintiff’s attorney actually received the copy, the plaintiff’s motion must be dismissed as a matter of law . . . .”

The court granted the defendant’s request and denied the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss, whereupon the plaintiff duly claimed a report and filed a draft report on the court’s dismissal of his motion.

The pertinent provisions of Rule 28 are as follows:

"A copy of such draft report shall be delivered or mailed postpaid by the party requesting the report to the trial Justice and to the adverse party before the close of the next business day after such filing,” (of the draft report).

The requirements of this Rule, as in the statute and the rules governing a bill of exceptions, are judged with strictness, and unless there has been literal compliance, the right to appellate review is lost. Famigletti v. Neviackas, 324 Mass. 70; Saunders v. Shoe Lace Co., Ltd., 293 Mass. 265; Check[89]*89away v. Cashman Bros. Co., 305 Mass. 470. An analysis of the decisions on this point compels the conclusion that the draft report must be filed with (received by) the clerk of court before the copy is received by opposing counsel. This may be accomplished, as the rule states, by delivering the same personally or by mailing postpaid. If the party seeks to deliver through the post office and is willing to take the chance that it (copy) will actually reach the opposing party or his counsel after the report has reached the clerk’s office, there is compliance, if, in fact, the sequence set out in the rule actually occurs. As bearing on this sequence, the Court said, in the Checkaway case, (cited supra) . . When the notice was mailed it did not speak the truth for the report has not been filed, but it spoke the truth at the time of delivery . . . .”

From the facts in the instant case (they are not controverted) the trial justice rightly determined that the clerk’s office actually received the draft report before the copy was received by the judge, and while there was no direct evidence as to when the plaintiff’s counsel received his copy, the court .could properly infer from the sequence of the respective mailings that the same was true as to the receipt of the opposing counsel’s copy.

We conclude that the court’s ruling was correct. The defendant’s draft report is, therefore, properly on the files of the court, and [90]*90we now proceed to the defendant’s claim of error on the trial of the merits.

In this action of contract the plaintiff seeks to recover for “money had and received by the defendant to the plaintiff’s use.” The following is a summary of the evidence. After a two week trial period, on May 1, 1960, the plaintiff employed the defendant as a “lead man” to .canvas home owners to install the plaintiff’s products, “materials for exteriors of houses.” The “leads” would be turned over by the plaintiff to “a closer”, and upon the closing of the sale, the defendant would be entitled to a commission of ten percent of the total contract price. The defendant was to work on a “drawing account against commissions,” of $100.00 per week, to be advanced by the plaintiff; that all other “lead men” worked under the same arrangement; that the defendant did not “expressly agree” to repay any of the advances except from the commissions earned; that the plaintiff did not “consider” the amounts advanced to the defendant as a salary but “considered” the amounts as drawn against commission.

The evidence further indicates that each week the defendant was shown a written account kept by the plaintiff, which indicated how the advances corresponded to the commissions to that point; that at these weekly meetings the defendant was “silent” as to the accounting and he did not deny “owing” the plaintiff the difference. The defendant was credited with total sales of $21,480.00, and [91]*91he received from the plaintiff the sum of $3,458.00, leaving a deficiency of $1,310.00, which is the amount of this suit; that after the termination of the employment in February, 1961, the plaintiff and the defendant met, and the defendant stated “he appreciated getting $100.00 per week and would make it up later.”

The parties duly filed requests for rulings among which and pertinent to the issues are the following:

Plaintiff's Requests:

1. “That if the court finds that the plaintiff paid to the defendant a draw against commission earned and not a salary then the defendant owes the plaintiff the sum of money stated in the plaintiff’s declaration.”
2. “That money advanced or loaned is due on demand where there is no stipulated date of payment.”
3.

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Related

Galeano v. City of Boston
80 N.E. 579 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1907)
Schon v. Odd Fellows Building Ass'n
152 N.E. 55 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1926)
Saunders v. Shoe Lace Co.
199 N.E. 909 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1936)
Checkoway v. Cashman Bros.
26 N.E.2d 374 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1940)
Boyer v. Bowles
37 N.E.2d 489 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1941)
Wind Innersole & Counter Co. v. Geilich
58 N.E.2d 134 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1944)
Famigletti v. Neviackas
84 N.E.2d 458 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
25 Mass. App. Dec. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perma-home-corp-v-nigro-massdistctapp-1962.