145 A. 305 | R.I. | 1929
This is an action of the case for an alleged breach by the defendant of his promise of marriage made with the plaintiff.
The case is before us upon a bill of exceptions stating exceptions taken by the plaintiff to certain rulings of a justice of the Superior Court made before a trial of said cause upon its merits.
It appears from the record certified to us that the case was on the continuous calendar of causes to be tried before a jury in the Superior Court sitting at Woonsocket; that when the case was reached for trial the plaintiff's counsel stated that the plaintiff was not present, was unprepared for trial, and moved that the case be passed. This motion was denied by the justice. The plaintiff, through her counsel, then submitted to a nonsuit. This submission was disregarded by the justice who caused a jury to be impaneled in the cause and then, without receiving testimony for either plaintiff or defendant, directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant upon the merits of the cause. Whereupon the jury returned a verdict that "the defendant did not promise in manner and form as the plaintiff has in her declaration thereof complained against him." To all of those rulings and directions of said justice the plaintiff *96 excepted and is relying upon her exceptions before us. It appears that during these proceedings the plaintiff was not in court, and that her counsel represented her solely in the matters of asking that the case be passed, and in submitting to a nonsuit.
We will first consider the action of the justice in disregarding the plaintiff's submission to a nonsuit. Our statute (Section 4, Chapter 341, Gen. Laws 1923) by implication recognizes the right of a plaintiff in a cause to become nonsuit before "the trial of the same shall have been begun to the court or jury." The case at bar was one for trial to a jury, and not to the court upon jury trial waived. When the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit, the case which preceded it on the calendar had been concluded, and counsel for plaintiff had requested the justice to pass this case of the calendar. In our opinion solely from those circumstances it can not fairly be said that the trial of this case had been begun to a jury, as no proceedings had been commenced for the impaneling of a jury for its trial.
The subsequent action of the justice in impaneling a jury after the plaintiff had voluntarily become nonsuit, and in directing a verdict for the defendant upon the merits of the cause, although no evidence on either side had been presented, should be treated as nullities. It appears from the record that the justice directed the verdict expressly for the purpose of closing the rights of the plaintiff as alleged in her declaration.
Section 9, Chapter 334, Gen. Laws 1923, provides, among other things, that if an action duly commenced within the time limited shall be avoided "for any matter" the plaintiff may commence a new action for the same cause against the same defendant at any time within one year after the determination of the original suit. The court has given a liberal construction to that remedial statute. In Pesce v. Mondare,
The defendant cites in support of the action of the justice the case of King v. Ross,
We overrule the plaintiff's exception to the rulings of the justice denying the plaintiff's motion that the case be passed off the trial calendar. The plaintiff's exception to the subsequent rulings and orders of the justice are sustained. The case is remitted to the Superior Court with direction to enter upon its record, as of January 16, 1929, the plaintiff's submission to a voluntary nonsuit, to vacate the order of the justice directing a verdict for the defendant and to enter a *99 decision, as of January 16, 1929, for the defendant for costs upon the plaintiff's submission to a nonsuit.