280 Mass. 395 | Mass. | 1932
A suit in equity was brought by Frank H. Kingsley against the city of Fall River, James Crosson as trustee in bankruptcy of Greany & Sherry, Inc. (hereafter called the contractor) and the Detroit Fidelity & Surety Company to recover for materials furnished to the contractor in the construction of a school building of the city, and to apply, in satisfaction of his claim, the proceeds of a bond given under G. L. c. 149, § 29, by the contractor to the city as security for the payment of all materials and labor used in the construction of the school building. The surety on the bond was the Detroit Fidelity & Surety Company, hereafter called the surety. The American Hardware Company and the Republic Fireproofing Company, Inc., were allowed to intervene in this suit as claimants, St. 1929, c. 110, to recover for materials furnished by each to the contractor in the construction of the school building. The case was referred to a master. Before hearing, the claim of Frank H. Kingsley, the original plaintiff, was settled. The master filed a report in favor of the American Hardware Company and disallowed the claim of the Republic Fireproofing Company, Inc. Separate interlocutory decrees were entered confirming the master’s report as to each intervenor. No appeal was taken by the Republic Fireproofing Company, Inc. The surety appealed as to the American Hardware Company who, as intervenor, is now the only party prosecuting the case against the surety, and will be hereafter termed the intervenor. There was entered under date of October 17, 1930, a decree of the tenor following:. “Frank H. Kingsley vs. City of Fall River, et al. Final Decree. This case came on to be heard at this sitting upon the report of the master and was argued and it appearing that the report of the master has been duly confirmed and it appearing that the defendant,
The decisive question to be determined is whether the decree of October 17, 1930, already recited in full, was in truth a final decree. If it was a final decree, then plainly the interlocutory decree of March 1, 1932, was improperly
The circumstance that the decree of October 17, 1930, is denominated “Final Decree” is not decisive. The nature of a paper entered on the record of a court must be determined according to its essential characteristics and not by its name. Merrimac Chemical Co. v. Moore, 279 Mass. 147. Check v. Kaplan, ante, 170, 176. The surety described it as a final decree in its. appeal. Where deliberate action by a judge of a court of superior and general jurisdiction is under review there is some presumption that familiar words and terms are intended to be used in their common signification and with a purpose to be accurate.
It is argued that that decree was not final because it did not conform to the conventional, accepted and undoubted general rule that “No decree is a final one, which leaves anything open to be decided by the court, and does not determine the whole case,” Forbes v. Tuckerman, 115 Mass. 115, 119, Gerrish v. Black, 109 Mass. 474, 477, Bartlett v. Slater, 211 Mass. 334, 352, 353, Booras v. Logan, 266 Mass. 172, 174, and there are expressions to the effect that there
Applying the principle of these decisions to the decree here assailed we are of opinion that it was final to such extent as to require an appeal in order to correct its defects and that it was not so wanting in essential elements as to be of no substantial effect.
The decree of October 17, 1930, recited that from the report of the master it appeared that the surety was indebted to the intervenor on its contract with the city. That statement necessarily imports that the intervenor had furnished to the contractor materials used in the construction of the school building of the city, that the contractor had failed to pay the intervenor, and that the surety was indebted to the intervenor therefor. The order of the decree, by its adjudication to the effect that the surety was indebted to the intervenor in a specified sum, necessarily imports that that sum is the amount of the indebtedness due from the contractor to the intervenor. The nature of the proceeding, and the obligation of the surety established by G. L. c. 149, § 29, permit of no other conclusion and require this inference. Therefore the decree incontrovertibly established by implication although not in express words that the contractor was indebted to the intervenor in the sum stated and had not
The intervenor has no interest in a decree respecting the claim- of the Republic Fireproofing Company, Inc. That claim has been disallowed by the master and a decree entered confirming that part of the master’s report. There is nothing to indicate that there was any connection between that claim and the claim of this intervenor or that the two claims were not entirely dissociated. The entry of separate interlocutory decrees on the report of the master concerning the two claims indicates that they were separate and distinct. Therefore the circumstance that the decree contained no reference to that other claim did not affect the finality of the decree concerning all the issues raised respecting the claim of the intervenor and the obligation of the surety to pay it. The intervenor has no interest in the suit so far as it concerned the city of Fall River as a party. Here again the finality of the decree touching the claim of the intervenor against the surety is not impaired by the absence of any paragraph in the decree discharging the city from the suit. The same may be said as to the contractor as a party. See Ligget v. Wall, 2 A. K. Marsh. (Ky.) 149. For aught that appears on this record there may be others entitled to intervene under St. 1929, c. 110. So far as disclosed, no decree has been entered with respect to the claim of the original plaintiff. For the reasons already stated, the intervenor has no interest in that subject.
The question presented is not whether the decree of October 17, 1930, was perfect from the point of view of equity draftsmanship or whether on .appeal it might have been somewhat modified. Those matters are not before us and need not be discussed. The only question is whether it was in its nature final as between the intervenor and the surety. It possessed such finality as to be the subject of appeal by the latter as the aggrieved party. That decree
Ordered accordingly.