133 A. 351 | R.I. | 1926
This is an action of the case in assumpsit.
In the Superior Court the case was answered by the defendants and assigned for trial November 6, 1925. On that day the defendants did not appear, were called, and the case was defaulted. The plaintiff's damages were not assessed on that day and have not been subsequently. On November 20, 1925, the defendants moved that the default entered against them be removed. After hearing, this motion was denied by a justice of the Superior Court on *358 January 18, 1926. To this ruling the defendants excepted, and thereafter, without waiting for the entry of final decision in the case, filed their bill of exceptions which has been certified to this court.
The defendants' bill of exceptions was prematurely filed and certified. After default the case would not reach a final decision until the Superior Court had heard and determined the question of damages.
In Gregson v. Superior Court,
In a long line of cases, of which those cited below make but a partial list, the court has held it to be the intent of the statute that appellate proceedings from the Superior Court to this court by bill of exceptions shall not be taken piecemeal, and that the filing of such bill shall await the entry of final decision in the case, after which within the time prescribed by statute a party may embody in one bill all of the exceptions taken by him throughout the travel of a cause in the Superior Court, upon which he still relies. McDonald v. ProvidenceTelephone Co.,
The papers in the case are ordered to be returned to the Superior Court for further proceedings in that court.