184 Mass. 98 | Mass. | 1903
It has always been a recognized principle of the English law, on the equity as well as on the common law side of the court, that a plaintiff is not bound to prosecute a suit or action to a finish because he has begun it. But on the contrary he is at liberty to abandon it without losing the right of action on which it is founded, and he can enforce that right subsequently on paying the costs of the former proceeding. In this respect a plaintiff is more fortunate than a defendant who has a day in court to interpose his defence if he would not have final judgment given against him.
What is not so clear is how far the plaintiff’s proceeding (whether it be a suit in equity or an action on the common law side of the court) must have gone for it to have reached the stage where this right of abandonment is lost.
In England the plaintiff originally had a right to abandon an action at law and become nonsuit at any time before verdict, if not before judgment. Derick v. Taylor, 171 Mass. 444, 445. That it was before verdict and not before judgment is laid down in Outhwaite v. Hudson, 7 Exch. 380, 381; 2 Tidd’s Practice,
The reason for denying in this Commonwealth the rule of the English common law was the injustice done to the defendant, who was subjected to being harassed a second time on one and the same cause of action on receiving costs, which in this Commonwealth are nominal. In that respect the burden of being subject to a second action is much greater here than in England, where costs are substantial. But the common law rule has now been abolished in England. By Order XXVI. of the Rules of the Supreme Court, 1883, adopted under the judicature act, it is provided that “ the plaintiff may, at any time before receipt of the defendant’s defence, or after the receipt „ thereof before taking any other proceeding in the action (save any interlocutory application), by notice in writing” discontinue the action. Wilson’s Practice of the Supreme Court of Judicature, (7th ed.) 234.
The Massachusetts rule as to when a plaintiff could become nonsuit in a common law action was established when substantially, if not absolutely, all such cases were tried to a jury. No question could arise as to what the rule was when applied to cases tried by the court, as so many cases are now tried since Sts. 1874, c. 248, § 1; 1875, c. 212, § 1; 1894, c. 357, now R. L.
■ A question did arise as to the application of the rule in case of a preliminary trial before commissioners in case of a petition to recover compensation for property taken under the right of eminent domain. It was held that when the hearing before the commissioners was begun the right to become nonsuit was lost. Worcester v. Lakeside Manuf. Co. 174 Mass. 299.
The case at bar presents the question whether the right is lost when a hearing before an auditor has been finished but before the auditor’s report is filed.
The cases relied on at the bar are not decisive of the point. It was held on the one hand in Haskell v. Whitney, 12 Mass. 47, that after an action has been sent to arbitrators under an agreement of submission voluntarily entered into, the plaintiff cannot become nonsuit even before a hearing before the arbitrators has begun. But that is a decision that when the action has by agreement of the parties been sent to arbitrators it ceases to be an action at law and becomes a. submission to arbitration and a party to a submission has no right to become nonsuit. On the other hand it was held in Stone v. Sargent, 129 Mass. 503, that a case could be removed to a court of the United States, on the ground of prejudice, after an auditor’s report had been filed. . But the statute under which the removal in that case was allowed provided that the suit might be removed “ before the final hearing or trial of such suit.” See U. S. St. March 2, 1867, c. 196. As re-enacted in U. S. Rev. Sts. § 639, cl. 3, it provides that the case may be removed “ before the trial or final hearing of the suit.” It is settled that the trial referred to is the final trial. Hess v. Reynolds, 113 U. S. 73. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Bates, 119 U. S. 464. This was the law in 1879, when the petition for removal in Stone v. Sargent was filed, and continued to be the rule until 1887, when U. S. St. March 3, 1887, c. 373, (24 U. S. Sts. at Large, 552,) corrected by U. S. St. August 13, 1888, c. 866, (25 U. S. Sts. at Large, 433,) was enacted, adopting, for removal for local prejudice, the rule as to removal by reason of diverse citizenship alone, to wit, “ before any trial.”
But in spite of the character which auditors’ hearings have now assumed, it is still true that such hearings result in evidence merely and cannot result in an adjudication; and we are of opinion that a hearing which results in evidence and cannot per se result in an adjudication is not a trial within- the rule which has now been laid down for over eighty years, namely, that a plaintiff can become nonsuit at any time before the trial begins and not afterward. Moreover this seems to have been assumed by the Legislature in this very statute, St. 1900, c. 418 (R. L. c. 165, § 59, and c. 173, § 81). It is there provided that if the plaintiff does not comply with the provisions of the act and attend before the auditor, or if he refuses in good faith to put in the testimony relied on by him, the court is authorized to direct
Under these circumstances, we do not feel at liberty to dispose of the question on its merits. If, under the practice which now obtains, the rule, which we feel we are bound by, does injustice to defendants, the remedy is with the Legislature.
jEntry of nonsuit to stand.