Priest v. Inhabitants of Groton

103 Mass. 530
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 103 Mass. 530 (Priest v. Inhabitants of Groton) 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
Priest v. Inhabitants of Groton, 103 Mass. 530 (Mass. 1870).

Opinion

Gray, J.

These motions present important questions of practice as to the time and manner of bringing before this court exceptions alleged to the rulings and instructions of the superior court.

1. The plaintiff in the first place objects that the exceptions were not duly allowed by the superior court. But the docket of that court of June term 1869, at which the verdict wTas returned, shows that the exceptions were filed by agreement, and does not show that judgment was rendered on the verdict; and by the existing laws no judgment could be entered, unless the exceptions were adjudged immaterial, frivolous, or intended for delay. Gen. Sts. c. 115, § 9. The case was therefore continued with other unfinished business to the ensuing September term; and at that term the exceptions appear to have been allowed and filed by the presiding judge. The objection that they were not duly allowed cannot therefore be sustained.

In Barstow v. Marsh, 4 Gray, 165, cited for the plaintiff, the docket of the term at which the trial was had stated that no exceptions were filed, and contained nothing from which a continuance of the case could be inferred; and by the laws then in force a formal judgment was entered on the verdict in the court below, under the general order at the close of the term, even in rases in which exceptions had been taken. Rev. Sts. c. 82, § 13

2. The plaintiff in the next place objects that the exception» were not seasonably entered. In support of this objection, she relies upon the provision of the Gen. Sts. c. 115, § 12, that copie» and papers relating to a question of law, raised by bill of excep[533]*533tians or otherwise, “ shall, within twenty days from the adjournment of the court for that term without day, be transmitted to and entered in the law docket of the supreme judicial court for the proper county.” But by the St. of 1864, c. Ill, such copies and papers shall be so transmitted and entered “ as soon as may be after such question of law is reserved and duly made matter of record in the court where the action is pending,” and so much of the Gen. Sts. c. 115, § 12, “ as is inconsistent herewith, is hereby repealed.” The effect of the St. of 1864 is to change the corresponding provision of the General Statutes in two important particulars. It enables questions of law to be transmitted to, and entered on the law docket of, this court at any time after they become matter of record in the court in which they are reserved, without waiting for the close of the term of that court; and by the words “as soon as may be” it also substitutes, for the definite period of twenty days, a reasonable time, which may under some circumstances exceed that period.

The copies of papers are to be prepared and transmitted by the clerk of the court in which the question of law arises. Gen. Sts. c. 114, § 14. But the case is to be entered by the party taking the exceptions. Gen. Sts. c. 112, §§ 11, 16. The clerk of this court is not bound to enter any case without payment of his entry fee. Knapp v. Lambert, 3 Gray, 377. In practice, the mere name of the case is often transmitted by the clerk of the other court to the clerk of this, and entered upon the law docket, without insisting upon previous payment of the fees for copies or entry, and the papers themselves are not actually copied and transmitted for some time afterwards. This course oi proceeding is found convenient by the clerks and the counsel, in the pressure of other business, and is open to no just objection, if the cases are seasonably entered and the copies are completed and furnished to this court in time for the argument.

In this case, the exceptions were allowed and returned to the files of the superior court by the judge at September term; and in the absence of any evidence, either upon the exceptions or on the docket, of the day on which this was done, it may fairly be presumed to have been on the last day of that term, which [534]*534was the 15th of October. The case was actually entered on the law docket of this court on the 11th of November, twenty-seven days afterwards, and more than a month before the next law term, at which in the usual course the case would be argued. There does not appear to have been such unreasonable delay in entering the exceptions as to require the court to dismiss them.

3. The petition of the defendants for leave to establish the truth of the allegations contained in their bill of exceptions as presented to, but disallowed by, the superior court, stands upon different grounds; and in disposing of this petition it becomes necessary to state the provisions of the statutes more fully.

Power to entertain such petitions and to prescribe rules about them was first given to this court by the St. of 1851, c. 261. Under the power thus conferred, the court established a rule requiring the petition to be filed “ at the term of the court at which the exceptions would by law have been entered, if duly signed and allowed.” 4 Gray, 570 note. At the time of the passage of that statute and of the establishment of that rule, that term for each county in the Commonwealth was the next term for the county, whether a law term or not, although the case, when entered, was placed on the law docket. Rev. Sts. c. 82, §§ 6, 7, 14. Commonwealth v. Marshall, 15 Gray, 202. Upon the abolition of the court of common pleas and creation of the superior court, like powers in relation to proving exceptions alleged in the superior court were given to this court; a law term of this court for the Commonwealth was established, with a clerk of its own, at which questions of law arising in the nine eastern counties should be entered and heard; and it was provided that the copies and papers relating to any question of law arising in the superior court should, within fifteen days, at first, and afterwards twenty days, after the final adjournment of that court for the term, be transmitted to and entered in this court; but the same statutes declared that questions of law arising in the five western counties should (unless specially agreed or ordered to be entered in the law term for the Commonwealth) be entered in the separate law terms for those [535]*535counties. St. 1859, c. 196, §§ 34, 36, 44. Gen. Sts. c. 112, §§ 11, 26, 27, 33; c. 115, §§ 11, 12, 13. After the passage of these statutes, this court, in revising its rules, included the rule requiring a petition to prove exceptions to be filed “ at the terra of the court at which the exceptions would by law have been entered, if duly signed and allowed.” Rule 32; 14 Gray, 349. And it was held, taking these statutes and the rule together, that in the nine eastern counties a petition to establish the truth of exceptions must be filed not only at the same term, but at the time -in the term at which the exceptions, if duly allowed, should have been entered; Elwell v. Dizer, 1 Allen, 485; while in either of the five western counties such a petition might be entered at the next law term for the county. Whitford v. Knowlton, 6 Allen, 557.

Since the General Statutes, separate terms for the entry and hearing of questions of law have been established in the counties of Bristol, Plymouth and Essex. Sts. 1861, c. 206; 1862, c. 215; 1868, c. 168. But questions of law arising in the counties of Middlesex, Norfolk, Barnstable, Nantucket and Dukes County, as well as in the county of Suffolk, are still to be transmitted to and entered at the law term for the Commonwealth at Boston; by virtue of the St. of 1864, c.

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Bluebook (online)
103 Mass. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priest-v-inhabitants-of-groton-mass-1870.