165 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1895
In each of these cases the plaintiff asked for the framing of issues for a jury trial. The motions were denied, and the plaintiff appealed. The same question arises in the two cases, and they were argued and have been considered together.
The motions related to an interlocutory matter, and the orders denying them were therefore interlocutory decrees, Eames v. Eames, 16 Pick. 141. The statute, gives the right of appeal, but expressly provides that it shall not suspend the decree appealed from, nor transfer the entire cause to the full court, nor any matter therein, except whether the order appealed from should be affirmed, reversed, or modified. Pub. Sts. c. 151, § 16.
The practice in regard to hearing appeals from orders allowing or refusing issues in equity or probate causes does not seem, from the reported cases, to have been entirely uniform in this State. In some cases the appeal appears to have been heard before the case was ripe for final disposition. Stockbridge Iron Co. v. Hudson Iron Co. 102 Mass. 45. Ross v. New Ingland Ins. Co. 120 Mass. 113. Merchants' National Bank v. Moulton, 143 Mass. 543. And we infer that such is the practice in England. Williams v. Guest, L. R. 10 Ch. 467. In other cases the appeal, or the exceptions, where exceptions were taken, do not seem to have been heard till the case was ready to be finally disposed of. Newell v. Homer, 120 Mass. 277, 281. Doherty v. O'Callaghan, 157 Mass. 90. Bourke v. Callanan, 160 Mass. 195. The same want of uniformity seems to have prevailed in regard to appeals from decrees overruling or sustaining demurrers, and in other interlocutory matters. In some cases the appeal appears to have been heard before the case was ready to be finally disposed of; Forbes v. Tuckerman, 115 Mass. 115 ; Hassam v. Barrett, 115 Mass. 256, Fay v. Vanderford, 154 Mass. 498; and in others, not until that stage of the case was reached; Cheney v. Gleason, 125 Mass. 166, 180; Parker v. Flagg, 127 Mass. 28; which seems to be the English practice. London, Chatham, & Dover Railway v. Imperial Mercantile Credit Association, L. R. 3 Ch. 231. When the question raised is of such a character that it might be a bar to further proceedings, there is certainly a good deal of propriety in hearing it before compelling parties to go into the case at large. Greene v. Harris, 11 R. I. 5, 10. So also where the effect of delay would be to subject the appel
No doubt the trouble and expense to which the parties might be subjected by being obliged to proceed with the case on the assumption that the decree was valid, if afterwards it should be reversed or modified on appeal, has had something to do with the apparent readiness of the court to hear interlocutory appeals from orders allowing or disallowing issues before the case was ripe for a final decree. But we think that all interlocutory appeals must stand on the same footing, so far as regards the right to a summary hearing. The same considerations would exist oftentimes in favor of an early hearing upon an appeal from an order overruling a plea or demurrer, or in some other interlocutory matter, as upon one from an order allowing or disallowing issues, and would have much the same force at law as in equity, although the statutes relating to appeals and exceptions are not the same at law as in equity. It is settled, however, at law, for reasons which are stated in Lowd v. Brigham, 154 Mass. 107, that, generally speaking, no appeal from or exception to an interlocutory ruling or order will be heard “ in this court until the case is either finally disposed of in the court in which it is pending, or is in a condition to be finally disposed of there, if the exceptions are overruled,” though in that case it was held that the reason for the rule did not apply, and that the exceptions might be entered and heard. Where it is provided by statute, as it seems to be in Maine, (Call v. Perkins, 65 Maine, 439,) that the court shall order issues to be framed when requested by either party, or, as in Rhode Island, that questions of fact raised by the bill shall be tried by the jury upon demand in writing by any party, (Pub. Sts. of R. I. c. 192, § 9,) the case would stand differently. But our statute relating to appeals from interlocutory decrees plainly contemplates that the progress of the case is not to be embarrassed or delayed as of right by appeals affecting interlocutory matters,
We discover nothing in these cases showing that the discretion of the justice who made the orders appealed from was not wisely exercised, nor any reason for advancing the hearing upon the appeals. They will stand for hearing, therefore, when the cases are ready to be finally disposed of. This disposition of the cases renders it unnecessary for us to consider now the question which the plaintiff has argued, of his right to a jury trial.
Appeal to stand for hearing when the case is ready for final disposition.