Union Fabrics Corp. v. Tillinghast-Stiles Co.

199 A. 700, 61 R.I. 32, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 3, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 199 A. 700 (Union Fabrics Corp. v. Tillinghast-Stiles Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Fabrics Corp. v. Tillinghast-Stiles Co., 199 A. 700, 61 R.I. 32, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 22 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*33 Moss, J.

This action in assumpsit is now before us on a petition filed by the plaintiff, under general laws 1923, chapter 347, sec. 3, for leave to file and prosecute a bill of exceptions. This petition was filed seven weeks after the entry of a judgment in the superior court for the plaintiff for one dollar damages, in accordance with the verdict. of a jury.

Such leave is sought by reason of the following language of the section mentioned: “When any person is aggrieved *34 by any order, decree, decision, or judgment of the superior court . . . , and from accident, mistake, unforeseen cause, or ..., has failed ... to file or prosecute a bill of exceptions, . . . the supreme court, if it appears that justice requires a revision of the case, may, upon petition filed within one year, after the entry of such order, decree, decision, or judgment,-allow ... a bill of exceptions ... to be filed and prosecuted, upon such terms and conditions as the court may prescribe.” The failure of the plaintiff to file a bill of exceptions in this case, within the period limited by the statute which regulates the procedure for having decisions of the superior court reviewed by this court on bills of exceptions, is claimed to have been from accident, mistake or unforeseen cause, under the following circumstances.

The case was tried before a jury in the superior court, and among exceptions taken by the plaintiff at the trial were several to portions of the charge given by the trial justice to the jury and to refusals by him to charge the jury as requested by the plaintiff. At the close of the trial the jury returned a verdict, as above stated, for the plaintiff for one dollar damages. The plaintiff thereupon filed a motion for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was against the law; that it was against the evidence; and that the damages were grossly inadequate. This motion was heard before the trial justice, and on January 24, 1935, it was granted in a rescript filed by him.

The defendant then, within the statutory period of seven days after notice of this decision had been given, filed an exception to the decision and a notice of its intention to-prosecute a bill of exceptions to this court, and otherwise complied with the' statute. Thereafter, in due course, it filed its bill of exceptions and transcript of the evidence, which were duly allowed and transmitted to this- court. The plaintiff, however, did not before the expiration of the seven days, or indeed at any time, file any notice of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions on any of the exceptions which it had taken.

*35 The result was that when the defendant’s .bill of exceptions reached this court and the case came before us for hearing on the bill and transcript, we had no exception before us, except the defendant’s exception to the decision of the trial justice in granting a new trial, its other exceptions having been abandoned. Therefore, we could not consider, in any way, any exception which the plaintiff had taken. After the hearing beforé us, we held that the only exception before us must be sustained, for reasons which were stated fully in our opinion. Union Fabrics Corp. v. Tillinghast-Stiles Co., 58 R. I. 190, 192 A. 205. The case was therefore remitted to the superior court for entry of judgment on the,verdict; and judgment was there-entered accordingly on May 19, 1937.

The plaintiff, in support of its present petition, has contended before us that instead of reversing the decision of the trial justice in granting a new trial, we ought to have sustained it, because, if the jury had been correctly instructed on the law, a verdict for nominal damages would have been against the law and the weight of the evidence. In support of this contention it relies upon what it calls “the oft reiterated rule . . . that if the decision of the trial justice on a motion for a new trial reaches the right result, it will not be disturbed even though reached through faulty reasoning or mistake of law.”

Properly understood, the rule is correct, but it does not apply to a case where a verdict has been set aside by the trial justice and the ground urged in this court for sustaining his decision is that if the jury had been correctly instructed on the law, the verdict would ■have been against the law and the evidence: We have shown in our former opinion that we could not consider the question of the correctness of the law as stated, to the jury in the charge, because that question had not been brought before us by a bill of exceptions by :the plaintiff: Nor had the trial, justice the power to pass upon that question in deciding on the *36 motion for a new trial. Moreover, even if the contention might have been a proper one to urge before us at the former hearing or in support of a motion for a rehearing, it is not a proper one to be presented in support of the petition now before us.

Indeed, by filing the petition, the plaintiff virtually admits that it cannot get a new trial of the case, unless it can do so by reason of a decision by this court that at the trial in the superior court the trial justice committed error which was prejudicial to the plaintiff; and it admits that it cannot bring the question of such error before this court, unless it can do so on a bill of exceptions. It does not deny that under the statute regulating the practice upon bill of exceptions it could, within a period of seven days after notice was given of the decision of the trial justice granting its motion for a new trial, have filed a notice of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions and filed a request for a transcript, etc., and could thereafter have had the bill and transcript allowed and transmitted to this court.

It is well settled that this procedure could have been followed by the plaintiff; that, if it had been followed, we should have had before us, for hearing and decision, the exceptions of both parties; and that then, irrespective of our decision on the defendant’s exception to the granting by the trial justice of the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, we should have had the power to order a new trial or make other appropriate decision on the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions, if we found, therein specified, error prejudicial to the plaintiff which had occurred at the trial. Newhall v. Egan, 28 R. I. 584, 68 A. 471. See also Barker v. Barker Artesian Well Co., 45 R. I. 297, 121 A. 117.

There is nothing in the plaintiff’s petition now before us to indicate that its failure to take the proper procedure for bringing its own exceptions before this court was due to any cause except its confidence, and that of its attorneys, that this court would not, on a bill of exceptions by the *37 defendant, reverse the decision of the trial justice in granting the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. It is stated in the petition that the defendant filed its notice of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions, etc., on the last day within which this could be done, but there is nothing to indicate at what time on that day the filing took place or that the plaintiff was in any way misled because it did not take place earlier.

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Related

Barker v. Barker Artesian Well Co.
121 A. 117 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1923)
Ball v. Ball
41 A. 894 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1898)
Union Fabrics Corp. v. Tillinghast-Stiles Co.
192 A. 205 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1937)
Newhall v. Egan
68 A. 471 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
199 A. 700, 61 R.I. 32, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-fabrics-corp-v-tillinghast-stiles-co-ri-1938.