193 Mass. 455 | Mass. | 1907
On October 12, 1905, the defendant was defaulted, and the next day all papers necessary to make up the judgment were filed in the case. On November 2 the defendant filed a motion for continuance on the ground of his bankruptcy; on Monday, November 6, at half past ten o’clock in the forenoon, this motion was granted by the court. On the same day, at what hour in the day the bill of exceptions does not show, a judgment for the plaintiff was entered by the clerk, under the standing order of the court. Subsequently the plaintiff’s counsel filed a motion to dismiss the motion for continuance which had been allowed, and, upon hearing, the motion to dismiss was disallowed, and the motion to continue was allowed as of November 2, 1905, that being the intention of the court by the order of November 6. The plaintiff excepted to the refusal of the court to-rule that it “had no jurisdiction to grant a continuance of said action ” and that the defendant had “ no standing in court to make a motion for continuance.”
If judgment was wrongly rendered under the general order because the case was not ripe for judgment, the motion for a continuance was rightly granted, and it is unnecessary to consider whether the order of the court might not be sustained on other grounds.
Exemptions overruled.