265 Mass. 396 | Mass. | 1929
Rugg, C.J.
This is a suit in equity. The frame of the bill as originally filed set out ownership by the parties of several parcels of real estate subject to certain mortgage encumbrances, and an exchange of these parcels by deeds which, through the fraud of the defendant, failed to express the agreement of the parties to the effect that each as a part of the consideration should assume and pay existing described mortgages upon the parcels conveyed. The prayers were for a reformation of each deed so as to conform to such agreement and for assessment of the damages sustained by the plaintiffs. The answer admitted allegations as to ownership of the several parcels and the mortgage encumbrances thereon, but denied allegations as to fraud. The answer was insufficient under Equity Rule 6 (1926), Corkum v. Clark, 263 Mass. 378, and cases there collected. But no objection was taken on this point. The case was sent to a master. His findings were to the effect that the agreement was as alleged in the bill, that the deeds did not express that agreement in the respect that the grantees were to assume and pay as part of the consideration the specified mortgage encumbrances on the parcels conveyed, that this omission arose through the mutual mistake of all parties to
In that state of the record the case was entered in the full court and was upon the list at its sitting for the county of Franklin in 1927. A motion was made by the plaintiffs in the full court that the bill be amended by adding a paragraph setting up mjutual mistake of the parties in framing the deeds whereby the agreement that the grantees should assume and pay the mortgage encumbrances upon the granted premises was omitted. This motion was denied; but a rescript under date of October 19, 1927, was sent, of this tenor: “Appeal discharged and case remanded to the Superior Court for the purpose of there applying for an amendment to the record, and when such application shall have been acted upon the case is to be returned to the Supreme Judicial Court for argument upon the record as then constituted.”
. The meaning of this rescript is that the case was discharged temporarily for the strictly limited purpose of enabling the Superior Court to examine and determine whether the record as printed was correct and conformed to the facts of the trial, or whether it ought to be amended in order to be a true record of what had occurred in that court up to the time of the appeal from the final decree. See Harrington v. Boston Elevated Railway, 229 Mass. 421, 432. The case was not discharged as a whole and sent back to the Superior Court for the exercise of its general jurisdiction. Copies and other papers, if any, not connected with the part of the record sought to be corrected,- remained in the full court and the
It is manifest from the allegations of the bill and the findings of the master that the design of the full court in sending a rescript of the tenor described was to enable the plaintiffs to move to amend their bill so that its allegations might conform to the facts found by the master. Such a motion after a hearing ought to be allowed if the judge found that there had been a full and fair trial before the master on the issues covered by the report but not raised by the plead
When this matter was taken up in the Superior Court pursuant to the rescript already described, this is what occurred: The plaintiffs filed a motion reciting that it was necessary to amend the bill in order to make it conform to the master’s report and to enable the plaintiffs to secure equitable relief and sustain the action for the cause for which
In the ordinary case the orders allowing these motions would present only interlocutory steps in equity litigation. They could not be brought before this court for revision until there was appeal from a final decree, unless reported for our determination under G. L. c. 214, § 30. Hutchins v. Nickerson, 212 Mass. 118, 120. Romanausky v. Skutulas, 258 Mass. 190, 192. This, however, is not the ordinary case. It is a case where the only jurisdiction in the Superior Court under the rescript was to decide whether an application for an amendment to the record ought to be allowed, and when that application had been acted on the case was to be returned here for argument on the record as then constituted. We treat the appeal of the plaintiffs as a return of the record to this court in accordance with the rescript.
It is manifest that the limits of the rescript were overstepped by the Superior Court. The motion to amend the bill as filed was imperfect in that it did not set out in substance that the issue of mutual mistake was fully and fairly tried before the master by the implied or express assent of the defendant, and that the allowance of the amendment was to correct the record so as to make it conform to the truth, and was in the interest of expedition of justice. On such a motion the question described in the rescript would have been squarely presented for decision. If such a motion had been allowed, clearly the motion of the defendant ought to
It seems plain to us that all the proceedings in the Superior Court since the rescript have been had under a misconception of what was open for consideration. Therefore both orders of the Superior Court made on December 2, 1927, are set aside. The appeal to this court is discharged and the case remanded to the Superior Court for the purpose of enabling either party to apply there for an amendment of the record in order that it may express the truth respecting the issues fully and fairly tried before the master. If it shall appear after hearing that the issue of mutual mistake as to the terms of the deeds was fully and fairly tried, the bill may be amended so as to conform to the findings made by the master and the case returned to this court for argument upon the record as then constituted. If it shall appear after hearing that that issue was not fully and fairly tried before the master, then it shall be determined whether, in order to do justice between the parties, an amendment ought to be allowed setting up mutual mistake as a ground for relief; if such amendment is not allowed, then the case is to be returned to this court for argument upon the original appeal; if such amendment is allowed, then the final decree dismissing the bill is set aside and further proceedings to settle the rights of the parties on the new issue thus raised may be had in the Superior Court according to usual equity practice; in this event an interlocutory decree is to be entered concerning the master’s report.
It is to be observed that the rescript now sent is somewhat broader than the one hitherto sent. It opens the opportunity for correction of the record and the final disposition of the case in this court on a corrected record or on the original record if that is correct and the bill ought not to be
There has been so much misunderstanding in connection with the earlier rescript that this full statement has seemed necessary and a broadening of the original rescript wise.
Ordered accordingly.