This is a petition under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 250, § 15, to vacate a judgment recovered by the respondent against the city in an action of tort.
The judgment was entered upon the filing of an agreement for judgment in the sum of $1,800 signed by W. E. Fitzgerald as “Attorney for Plaintiff” and by John Howard as “Attorney for Defendant.” Upon the hearing of the petition to vacate there was evidence “that the former city solicitor of the city of Medford, John Howard, had no specific recollection of the original action having been referred to committee on claims of the board of aldermen of the city of Medford.” The petitioner presented to the judge, and the judge denied, a number of requests for rulings the gist of which was that Howard as city solicitor had no power or authority to agree to the entry of judgment against the city, and that the judgment should be vacated for that reason.
No reversible error appears in the denial of the petitioner’s requests or in the refusal to vacate the judgment.
In Dalton v. West End Street Railway, 159 Mass. 221, at page 223, this court said, “In practice the assumed authority of attorneys of record to agree upon the amount of judgment to be entered, or to any other disposition of the suit, must be recognized by the court, and when entered of record such agreements are binding upon the parties, unless the court for good cause shown permits them to be withdrawn, or vacates any order founded upon them. But when the court is informed that they have been made against the express prohibition of the client, and the parties can be put in statu quo, we are of opinion that the court has the power to vacate any judgment founded upon them, and to order such an agreement off the files, if the application is seasonably made.” It follows that the judgment was rightly entered in the first instance upon the filing of the agreement signed by counsel. The judgment could be vacated only when the court should be “informed” (i.e. when
In the absence of any evidence of lack of authority the prima facie effect of Howard’s signature remained uncontrolled, and the case afforded nothing to which the rulings requested were properly applicable and no basis upon which the judgment could be vacated.
This decision is in no respect at variance with Precious v. O’Rourke, 270 Mass. 305. In that case there was a find
Exceptions overruled.