We granted the defendant’s application for further appellate review, see
Brown
v.
Quinn,
The plaintiffs brought this action, alleging breach of contract and violations of G. L. c. 93A, in the Natick Division of the District Court Department. After trial, the District Court judge found for the plaintiffs and awarded damages. A notation on the trial court docket indicates “Entry of judg & finding Findings (mailed 1/17/86).” After the denial of the defendant’s motions to amend the judge’s findings and judgment and for a new trial, the defendant timely filed a draft report pursuant to Dist. Mun. Cts. R. Civ. P. 64, on October 1, 1986. The court clerk never sent the requisite notice to the parties that the three-month period for the allowance of a draft report was to expire within fourteen days. Counsel never filed a petition to establish a report and did not ask the Appellate Division for further time.
The draft report was allowed by the judge on July 1, 1987, nine months after it was filed. The case proceeded to the Appellate Division, which ordered the report dismissed pursuant to Dist. Mun. Cts. R. Civ. P. 64 (c) (5). The opinion of the Appellate Division notes: “Neither a request for an extension of time for draft report settlement, nor a petition to establish a draft report was submitted by the defendant to preserve the viability of his appeal.” The defendant appealed to the Appeals Court, which affirmed the dismissal of the report.
The defendant argues that the Appellate Division erred in dismissing the tardily-settled draft report, because the District Court clerk failed to send timely notice, as was required by Dist. Mun. Cts. R. Civ. P. 64 (c) (5) (see note 3, supra), *643 that the three-month period was to expire within fourteen days. He also contends that judgment never entered, and that the appeal is, therefore, premature.
1. The propriety of dismissal of the report. The defendant argues that it is “unduly harsh” to hold him “accountable for his one procedural misstep” in not taking action to establish the report, because the court clerk failed to provide the parties with the notice required by the rule. We disagree. The defendant’s counsel was not absolved of his procedural responsibilities by the clerk’s error.
The provision in rule 64 (c) (5) that the “cause shall proceed as though no request for report had been made” if the judge has not taken action on the report is not contingent on the clerk’s sending notice. The two provisions are separate and independent. The notice provision is merely for the convenience of litigants and does not relieve the parties of their procedural obligations or otherwise affect their rights. See
Home Owners’ Loan Corp.
v.
Sweeney,
Despite the clerk’s omission, the defendant’s failure to preserve his rights on appeal by filing a petition to establish the report or by taking other action is a “ ‘serious misstep,’ not a ‘relatively innocuous one,’ the appropriate . . . penalty for which is presumptively dismissal of the appeal.”
Vyskocil
v.
Vyskocil,
Our cases and Federal cases make it clear that it is the responsibility of the bar, not the court staff, to attend to the progress of pending matters. See, e.g.,
Locke
v.
Slater,
The defendant’s delay cannot be characterized as excusable neglect simply because the clerk also failed to perform the duties required by the rule. An appellant cannot claim excusable neglect simply because a clerk has committed an error.
Hawkins
v.
Hawkins,
2. Judgment. The defendant contends that judgment never entered and that the appeal is, therefore, premature. We do not reach this issue because we conclude that, in the circumstances of this case, the defendant is estopped from asserting that his own appeal is premature.
*646
Both parties operated below under the assumption that the judge’s findings and award of damages was a final judgment. The defendant made various postjudgment motions and subsequently filed a draft report in which he assumed that judgment had entered. He never argued that his appeal was premature until he reached the Appeals Court. Thus his current posture is inconsistent with his position below. In such circumstances, litigants are estopped from reversing their earlier positions.
Elfman
v. Glaser,
In
Lewis
v.
Emerson,
Order of the Appellate Division affirmed.
Notes
Rule 64 (c) (5) of the District/Municipal Courts Rules of Civil Procedure provides, in relevant part: “If final action by the trial judge upon any draft report ... is not taken within three months after the filing thereof, and no petition for establishment of a report has been filed, the cause shall proceed as though no request for report has been made, unless the appellate division for cause shown shall allow further time. Notice under this rule shall be sent by the clerk to the parties in the case fourteen days at least before the three months . . . expires.”
See, for examples of “innocuous” procedural mistakes,
Simpson
v.
Director of the Div. of Employment Sec.,
The plaintiffs’ counsel also contended at oral argument that the defendant failed to comply with Dist. Mun. Cts. R. Civ. P. 64 (c) (3), because he did not mail a copy of the draft report to the trial judge but merely delivered the draft report to the clerk. The record before us does not indicate that the plaintiffs raised this issue at any prior stage in the proceedings. Therefore, it was not timely raised and we do not reach it. If it could be established that the defendant erred in this manner, it simply would add weight to our conclusion that his other procedural error was fatal to his appeal.
Although we affirm the order of the Appellate Division, we shall ask the District Court to revise its rules and simplify its Appellate Division procedures within a reasonable time.
