274 Mass. 268 | Mass. | 1931
The plaintiffs in this action seek to recover from the defendant a sum alleged to be due for legal services rendered and disbursements made on its behalf. The declaration contains one count upon an account annexed. In the answer there is pleaded general denial, payment and recoupment.
The defendant at the trial on the merits did not file any requests for rulings. The concluding part of the report, after stating the finding for the plaintiffs, continues in these words: “The defendant having duly filed his claim for report and being aggrieved by this exclusion of evidence [earlier set out in detail] and the finding for the plaintiffs, I hereby report the case to the Appellate Division for determination.”
The defendant has argued at some length that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the burden of proof resting on the plaintiffs and to support the finding in their favor. That point is not open to it. It is provided by Rule 28 of the District Courts (1922), as amended on
The record in the case at bar is bare of anything to show compliance with said Rule 28 as amended. There was no request for a ruling in favor of the defendant on all the evidence. Under a rule of that tenor a party can put himself in position to argue that a finding ought to be directed in his favor as matter of law only by first filing a requést for a ruling to that effect with specification of the grounds as full as the nature of the case permits.
If, however, this branch of the case be considered on the assumption that appropriate request for ruling was seasonably filed, the defendant shows no error. There was ample evidence, which need not be narrated or summarized, to warrant a finding that a contract was made between the parties upon a legally sufficient consideration; that pursuant thereto services were rendered and disburséments made as alleged, and that the amount specified was due to the plaintiffs from the defendant.
The plaintiffs were attorneys at law associated as co-partners for the practice of their profession. The services were rendered and disbursement made on behalf of the defendant during January and February, 1929. The part-, nership came to an end on February 28, 1929. The defendant offered evidence under its answer in recoupment tending to show that Cole, one of the plaintiffs, after the termination of the partnership had prepared to send out announcements that he was familiar with patents relating to the defendant’s product; that the defendant instituted litigation against Cole and procured an injunction against him from interfering with the property and business of the defendant, and that in a suit touching the dissolution of the copartnership between the plaintiffs a final decree was entered restraining the plaintiff Cole from
These offers of proof were excluded rightly. The doctrine of recoupment is not applicable to the facts thus shown. It does not authorize the setting off of claims arising out of separate and independent transactions but authorizes only those which spring from the same subject matter, and it must concern the same parties. The acts of Cole of which complaint is made occurred after the dissolution of the partnership. They were not done in the course of and within the scope of the business of the partnership, and the other partners were not responsible or legally liable for those acts. Plainly as to the matters here in issue there is no ground for recoupment under settled principles. Austin v. Foster, 9 Pick. 341. Sawyer v. Wiswell, 9 Allen, 39, 42. Home Savings Bank v. Boston, 131 Mass. 277, 280. Brighton Five Cents Savings Bank v. Sawyer, 132 Mass. 185. Teague v. Martin, 228 Mass. 458.
Cole was a necessary party plaintiff in the present action because it was brought to collect a contract obligation due to the partnership. That does not warrant the recoupment of claims by the defendant against Cole arising out of independent matters subsequent to the end of the partnership.
Order dismissing report affirmed.