186 Mass. 449 | Mass. | 1904
This case is before us on the defendant’s exception to an order of the Superior Court, recommitting a report of a referee, with directions to report, disregarding certain matters which he had considered and included in his decision of the case. The original report was for the defendant; but the referee, in obedience to the order of recommittal and without hearing further evidence, made a supplemental report for the plaintiff. It appears that the judge of the Superior Court has allowed a motion for confirmation of the supplemental report and for judgment, and the case is therefore ripe for hearing on the bill of exceptions.
The original rule of the court to the referee, gave him power to decide finally all questions in the case, both of law and fact. It is not contended by the plaintiff’s counsel that it is open to him to attack the original findings of the referee so far as they were within his jurisdiction under the order of reference. The
The only ground on which the order of recommittal is sought to be justified, is that a part of the decision of the referee related to a matter which was not included in the submission. It becomes necessary, therefore, to consider his findings in this particular, in connection with the pleadings.
The suit is an action of contract upon an account annexed, made up for the most part of items for labor and materials furnished in repairing a machine for generating electricity. The answer, among other things, avers in substance that the persons who performed the work were not competent to do it properly, and that the work was done so improperly that it was worthless. The first item is “ To rewinding generator armature and repairing fields and materials therefor, $345.” The contract for doing this did not definitely fix a price, but only gave an estimate, and the charge was made at what the plaintiff called a reasonable price. One part of the electrical generator was a commutator, which was attached to the shaft and had a bearing upon it from twelve to fourteen inches in length. This shaft was tapering. One Phillips, the plaintiff’s secretary and agent, contracted with the defendant to do the work. The referee found that he went to Conway, the defendant’s place of business, and “ took charge of this work and rewound the armature, repaired the fields, furnished all material therefor, finished the work and started the generator.” While this work was in progress the commutator was sent away to another company which repaired it. “ When
The order recommitting the report directed the referee to find what sum was due the plaintiff under the submission, “without deduction by reason of the matters relating to the tapering of the shaft.” Under this order the referee allowed these items in his supplemental report. The reason for the order, as stated in the motion on which the order was founded, was that these findings are “ of a matter not in issue in said case, and of a matter not within said submission and not referred to said referee.” We are of opinion that the record does not show this statement to be correct. If putting the commutator on the shaft was a part of the work for which the plaintiff seeks to recover, it is plain that negligence in not discovering the condi
Exceptions sustained.