305 Mass. 476 | Mass. | 1940
This is an action of replevin by a conditional vendor of machinery against a firm that acquired the place
The rule
The rule requires a warning notice by the clerk after failure to obtain action by the judge within three months after the filing of the bill of exceptions. After that warning notice, thirty days are allowed during which there may be filed an affidavit of presentation which will prevent the automatic dismissal of the bill of exceptions though it has not been allowed or disallowed. Even where the clerk delays in giving the warning notice, the excepting party has thirty days after the notice in which to get the bill of exceptions allowed or file the affidavit of presentation. The word “thereafter,” in the first paragraph of the rule, means after the warning notice, not after the end of the initial period of three months. The same meaning was given to the same word when used in Rule 53 of the Superior Court (1923). Bath Iron Works, Ltd. v. Savage, 262 Mass. 123, 127. See also Flynn, petitioner, 265 Mass. 310; Blank v. Krinsky, 288 Mass. 59. The form of Rule 53 appears in Russell v. Foley, 278 Mass. 145, 147. Some of the language used in Graustein v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. 293 Mass. 207, might lead to a contrary conclusion; but the point of practice actually decided in that case was merely that under the circumstances further time, beyond the thirty days, had been allowed under the provisions of the rule for filing the affidavit of presentation. The question whether the period of thirty days runs
It follows that the exceptions of the defendants to the dismissal of their first bill of exceptions must be sustained.
That bill of exceptions was allowed conditionally upon the sustaining of the exceptions to its dismissal. It discloses uncontradicted evidence of the conditional bill of sale, of nonperformance of the conditions, of demand by the plaintiff for the machinery sold, and of the taking from the defendants upon the writ of replevin of the very machinery covered by the conditional bill of sale. But the defendants did not concede the facts of which there was evidence. The judge, subject to the exception of the defendants, ordered a verdict for the plaintiff. This was erroneous, for the plaintiff had the burden of proof and the defendants had a right to ask the jury to disbelieve the evidence. Lindenbaum v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 197 Mass. 314, 323. McDonough v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 228 Mass. 450, 452. Topjian v. Boston Casing Co. Inc. 288 Mass. 167. Pearson v. O’Connell, 291 Mass. 527, 529.
Normally the result of this error would be a new trial. But the parties apparently have stipulated that “if the direction to find for the plaintiff was wrong, judgment is to be entered for the defendants for a return of the goods.” Such a stipulation seems to us so improvident, and so little likely to do justice, that we vacate it, (Symmes Arlington Hospital, Inc. v. Arlington, 292 Mass. 162, 165; Schiller v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 295 Mass. 169, 178), and simply sustain the exceptions of the defendants contained in both bills of exceptions, with the result that there must be a new trial.
So ordered.
The first two paragraphs of the rule, those material to this case, are as follows:
“If within three months after filing, a bill of exceptions has not been allowed or disallowed by the justice to whose opinion, ruling, direction or judgment the exceptions were taken, the clerk shall forthwith notify the parties interested and such justice that unless within thirty days thereafter, or within such further time as may be allowed, an affidavit is filed with the clerk that
"If, within such time, the bill of exceptions is neither allowed nor disallowed, and no such affidavit is filed, the exceptions shall be dismissed by the clerk without further notice or order.”