Zatsky v. Zatsky

627 N.E.2d 474, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 7, 1994 Mass. App. LEXIS 95
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1994
Docket92-P-1299
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 627 N.E.2d 474 (Zatsky v. Zatsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zatsky v. Zatsky, 627 N.E.2d 474, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 7, 1994 Mass. App. LEXIS 95 (Mass. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Kass, J.

What the husband particularly presses in his appeal from a divorce judgment is that the time between the conclusion of the trial and when his appeal was ripe for entry in this court was so long — an aggregate forty-four months *8 — that he was denied due process of law. Obviously, the tortuous progress of this case casts no luster on the judicial system. To a large extent, as the husband’s counsel conceded at oral argument, the consequences of the delay are now irretrievable — water over the dam. We think it worthwhile to venture some comments about how judges and parties may at least limit delay as inordinate as that which bedeviled this case. There are several other claims of error by the husband that warrant consideration.

Our conclusion is that the interests of the parties will best be served by allowing the existing judgment to stand, not least because the financial circumstances of the husband appear to have altered substantially since the conclusion of the trial. The appropriate next step for the husband is to petition for modification of the divorce judgment and then to attempt to prove to the satisfaction of a judge that his and his former wife’s circumstances are in fact materially altered.

1. The time delays. Although the Zatskys lived together for thirteen years, for the last nine their marriage was more than ordinarily troubled. Laurence Zatsky, the husband, brought an action for divorce on June 19, 1987. Lorna Zat-sky, the wife, counterclaimed. The case came to trial on December 19, 1988, adjourned after a day to January 3, 1989, and concluded January 6, 1989. Eleven months later, on December 1, 1989, the trial judge issued findings of fact and a judgment issued the same day.

Three postjudgment motions were timely served on December 7, 1989, 1 on behalf of the husband: a motion for a new trial, a motion for relief from judgment, and a motion to stay operation of the judgment pending appeal. The first of those motions, the new trial motion under Mass.R.Dom.Rel.P. 59(a) (1975), served to stay appellate proceedings. The notice of appeal previously filed became a nullity once the rule 59 motion was filed, and Laurence could not file a notice of appeal that would trigger the appellate machinery until the motion for a new trial had been granted *9 or denied. Mass.R.A.P. 4(a), as amended, 393 Mass. 1239 (1985). Anthony v. Anthony, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 299, 300-302 (1985). None of the postjudgment motions was acted on until April 10, 1991, sixteen months after service and filing, and they were all denied. Until disposition of the motion for a new trial, the judgment was only semifinal, and the party aggrieved by the judgment, the husband, was thwarted in his ability to appeal from it. He was also hampered in bringing a petition to modify a judgment he desired to attack as erroneous on motion and on appeal. For the litigant there is a tactical dilemma in bringing a proceeding under G. L. c. 208, § 37, to modify a judgment on the basis of materially changed circumstances while also challenging the lawfulness of the underlying judgment. All the same, a complaint to modify under § 37 is an available remedy if a material change in circumstances has already occurred since the time the judgment was entered, i.e., a Probate Court has power to entertain such a complaint. See Kindregan & Inker, Family Law & Practice § 898 (1990). Cf. Ryan v. Ryan, 371 Mass. 430, 432 (1976). Here the aggrieved party chose to await disposition of the postjudgment motions. By the time the judge acted on the postjudgment motions, an aggregate twenty-seven months had passed since the end of the trial.

During this period of delay, the parties were in a suspended state: the husband could not appeal and the wife’s various complaints for contempt were encumbered by uncertainty whether there was a final judgment to be performed. A contempt judgment against the husband did issue on April 6, 1992, i.e., a year after the denial of the husband’s motion for a new trial.

After the motion for a new trial was denied on April 10, 1991, 2 the husband, conformably with Mass.R.A.P. 4(a), filed a fresh notice of appeal. Now further unwarranted delay, this time on the part of the register of probate for Essex County, obstructed progress of the case. The record of the Probate Court proceedings was not assembled until Septem *10 ber 18, 1992, a period of seventeen months to accomplish a ministerial act. 3 That lassitude stalled the appeal because the time for docketing the appeal — or entering it — in the appellate court is “[w]ithin ten days after receiving from the clerk of the lower court notice of the assembly of the record.” Mass.R.A.P. 10(a)(1), as amended, 378 Mass. 937 (1979) 4 We have thought the outer limit for performing the task of assembling a record in the trial court to be forty days, Westinghouse Elec. Supply Co. v. Healy Corp., 5 Mass. App. Ct. 43, 55 n.24 (1977), although adherence to that time limit is not a requirement of maintaining an appeal, Superintendent of Worcester State Hosp. v. Hagberg, 374 Mass. 271, 273-274 (1978), i.e., a failure to assemble the record within forty days will not trigger dismissal of the appeal. There is no suggestion in the record that the appellant, i.e., the husband, contributed to the delay in assembling the record and his counsel claims to have telephoned and written repeatedly, as well as having made three personal visits to the register’s office, to call attention that the record had yet to be assembled. 5 Contrast Onello v. Twomey, 35 Mass. App. Ct. 671, 677 (1993). If forty days is a yardstick for the maximum time it should take to assemble a record, more than *11 510 days is unpardonably slow. The public is entitled to better.

Concerning the findings of fact, which took eleven months after trial to emerge, the time standard is in Mass.R.Dom.Rel.P. 52(a), as amended, effective July 1, 1984, which directs 6 that findings of fact and conclusions of law be issued within sixty days of filing the notice of appeal from a judgment pursuant to G. L. c. 208, § 34. The rule does not anticipate what occurred in this case, that no judgment will be entered (thus precluding the filing of a notice of appeal) for a very substantial time, but surely the rule establishes an aspirational goal for a judge not only to accomplish the task of deciding a divorce case but also to make the findings under G. L. c. 208, § 34. See also Mass.R.Dom.Rel.P. 58(a), as amended, effective July 1, 1984, which directs that “[a] 11 judgments in cases governed by these rules shall enter within thirty days after completion of trial.” Rule 58(a), when observed, acts as a mechanism for tripping the clock under rule 52(a). Eleven months, compounded with sixteen months for the postjudgment motions, is seriously over the target range.

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Bluebook (online)
627 N.E.2d 474, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 7, 1994 Mass. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zatsky-v-zatsky-massappct-1994.