This is a petition for a writ of error whereby is drawn in question a sentence of imprisonment imposed upon the petitioner by a judge of probate upon a finding that
Therefore, in order to ascertain whether a writ of error will lie in the case at bar, inquiry must be made to ascertain the precise nature of the proceeding sought to be reviewed. That is a proceeding for contempt. It was not instituted by a party to the litigation concerning the proof of the will, but by the judge himself, who, in open court ordered the arrest of the petitioner for the commission of the acts later found by him to constitute contempt. It was not a part of the original petition pending in the Probate Court, but was an independent proceeding. Its sole purpose was to punish the petitioner for an offence committed directly against the authority and dignity of the court and to vindicate the rights of organized society and the majesty of the law. Hurley v. Commonwealth,
It is not open to doubt that the Probate Courts of this Commonwealth have jurisdiction over contempts of this nature. They are courts of record and of superior and general jurisdiction, ' Cr.'L, c, -215, §§ 1, 2. As such, they
The process of attachment for contempt is used by probate courts to enforce orders and decrees within strictly probate jurisdiction. The use of that process in aid of distinctively probate jurisdiction, for example, concerning separate support, alimony, support of children and other aspects of domestic relations, has never been regarded as partaking of criminal features. Contempt proceedings to that end are remedial and coercive, are not according to the common law, are not of a criminal nature, and come within the general principle that they cannot be reviewed by writ of error. Contempt proceedings of that nature differ radically from the case at bar, where the contempt proceeding is not remedial or coercive, but exclusively punitive. It is designed wholly to punish an attempt to prevent the course of justice.
In our opinion it follows from all these considerations that a proceeding for contempt such as is disclosed on this record is a proceeding at common law. It is in exercise of a jurisdiction with which the common law of this Commonwealth clothes all its courts. It is a proceeding which in its essential résults upon the contemner is like a criminal proceeding,
“At common law it was undoubted that no court reviewed the proceedings of another court in contempt matters. In Crosby’s Case, 3 Wils. 188, Mr. Justice Blackstone said: ‘The sole adjudication of contempts, and the punishment thereof, in any manner, belongs exclusively, and without interfering, to each respective court.’” Bessette v. W. B. Conkey Co.
It follows that this judgment of the Probate Court may be reviewed by writ of error. This conclusion is reached without impairing in any degree the force of the general principles declared in Smith v. Rice,
The plaintiff in error has argued that on this record as matter of law she was not guilty of contempt. That ques-
The plaintiff in error cannot by any means secure a rehearing upon the merits of the. facts established by the findings of the probate judge. A matter of fact once tried and established by a tribunal having jurisdiction cannot be retried by writ of error. In these writs such error of fact cannot be assigned. As was said by Chief Justice Shaw in Riley v. Waugh,
The error of fact in a judgment which may be reviewed upon writ of error under G. L. c. 250, §§ 3, 9, and which is mentioned in Perkins v. Bangs,
Evidence heard at the trial on the merits is no part of the record and hence cannot be considered on a writ of error. Storer v. White,
The argument that the judge is prevented from dealing with perjury, when committed in such circumstances as to constitute contempt, by G. L. c. 268, § 4, cannot be supported. That section confers an ancillary and additional power upon courts. It was not intended to cut down the inherent jurisdiction to deal with contempts. Walton Lunch Co. v. Kearney,
The ruling that the plaintiff was not entitled to a writ of certiorari was right. The evidence heard at the trial before the judge is no part of the record in the case even though it was taken stenographically by a commissioner. Moran v. Murphy, 230 Mass. 5. De Propper, petitioner,
Certiorari is not designed in any event to secure a report of evidence. Such report would be an encumbrance and no part of the record. The proper function of the writ of certi-orari, as often has been pointed out, is to bring before a superior court, for examination as to errors of law apparent on its face, the true record of an inferior judicial or quasi judicial tribunal. Findings of fact are not open to revision. Bradley v. Zoning Adjustment Board of Boston,
The question, whether the inquiry ought to have been continued to enable the plaintiff in error to secure further evidence, rested in the sound discretion of the probate judge. Noble v. Mead-Morrison Manuf. Co.
The specifications filed by the Attorney General
The two questions reported for our consideration have been determined. We do not go beyond those two questions and the matters and arguments connected therewith, because no hearing under Rule 30 of the Supreme Judicial Court (1926) for the regulation of practice at common law,
Order dismissing writ of error reversed,.
Order denying motion for writ of certiorari affirmed.
Notes
On July 31, 1925, the judge of probate on his own motion ordered Ida May Blankenburg to show cause on August 4 why she should not be adjudged in contempt for perjury in the hearing before him, and requested “the Attorney General (as he is the chief prosecuting officer of the Commonwealth) to appear at said time and place to assist this court in presenting specifications of the charge of perjury, and to apprise the said parties thereof and to assist in presenting the evidence against them.”
