253 Mass. 122 | Mass. | 1925
This is a writ of error. It is brought to reverse a final decree entered upon a petition for attachment for contempt in a suit in equity which has been before this court in other aspects and is reported in 239 Mass. 70, and in 242 Mass. 69. The case was brought in order to enforce the rights of the plaintiffs to have a strip of land ten feet wide on the defendant’s land, being one half of a twenty foot passageway over which the plaintiffs have rights, kept open and unobstructed. The plaintiffs prevailed on the merits of the main action. The final decree after the last rescript ordered the defendants “to cause the removal . . . of . . . the hatchway about 4 feet square in the concrete sidewalk . . . (and] filling or covering all excavations in such a way as to render the passageway substantially as firm, sound, and convenient for passage on foot and by teams and trucks as it was on April 18, 1899.”
The single justice on the petition for attachment for contempt found and ruled with respect to this matter, “That the hatchway in the concrete sidewalk on the westerly side of the Lenox Hotel building has not been removed and that the decree has not been complied with by ‘filling or covering all excavations in such a way as to render the passageway substantially as firm, sound and convenient for passage on foot and by teams and trucks as it was on April 18, 1899.’ It is
This interpretation of the decree was erroneous. The words of the decree are unequivocal and positive to the effect that the hatchway must be removed. The manifest purpose of the decree in the light of the two opinions of the full court was to assure to the plaintiffs freedom of passage over that part of the way occupied by the hatchway, but not to require the defendants to fill with earth the space underneath the hatchway, provided without doing that the passageway
As to another ground of complaint urged by the plaintiffs, the single justice found that, "the defendants have failed to comply with the terms of the decree which ordered them to 'cause that portion of the passageway on the southerly side of said building occupied by a flight of steps leading downward, being ten feet long by four feet wide, by an open area nine feet long by four feet wide at the foot of the stairs, by the openwork iron grating near the head of the stairs toward Exeter Street covering an open area or air well four feet wide and eight feet long and the curbing or wall which runs around this area, to be filled or covered and strengthened so as to render those parts of the passageway substantially as firm, sound and convenient for passage on foot and by teams and trucks as it was on April 18, 1899, and as reasonably usable for such passage in connection with the rest of the passageway as it was on that date, the level of said portion of the passageway to be so changed as to be made to conform substantially to the level of the passageway on that date, and all structures to be removed so far as necessary to that end.’ I find and rule that the defendants have covered by concrete the open space from the head of the stairs toward Exeter Street in compliance with the decree; that they maintain the stairway with a cover over it, and also maintain an elevator for lowering and raising trunks and other articles to and from the sidewalk and the basement of the hotel; that this elevator is closed with a cover over it substantially on a level with the sidewalk when not in use; that the stairway and elevator well when closed are covered by steel doors; that these covers, while suitable and sufficient for foot passage, are not of the required thickness and strength to make the passageway safe and convenient for heavy trucks; that the defendants have failed to comply with the decree in not placing over said openings suitable and sufficient doors or covers within a reasonable time from and after July 15, 1922, and are in
Nevertheless, the defendants were adjudged guilty of contempt for failing to comply with the terms of the final decree after the last rescript. That finding manifestly was sound even in the view of that decree taken by the single justice. The decree of the court adjudged the defendants guilty of contempt and ordered them to “pay a fine of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150) for such contempt, the same to be paid to the complainants to reimburse them for their costs and expenses incurred in this proceeding.”
It is urged by the defendants that, even though there was error in the rulings, there is no ground in law for reversal of the decree entered on the petition for contempt. This involves some inquiry into practice.
A writ of error does not lie to correct errors of law in a decree in equity. The words “judgment in a civil action” in G. L. c. 250, § 3, do not include proceedings in equity. “A writ of error lies where the proceedings are according to
It was said by Chief Justice Knowlton in Newton Rubber Works v. De las Casas, 198 Mass. 156, 157, that errors of law arising at a hearing on a petition for contempt “are usually presented by a report, or, if a criminal contempt is alleged, by a writ of error.” A citation of supporting authorities follows. White v. White, 233 Mass. 39. Whether appeal lies from such a decree or whether exceptions may be taken at such a trial has never been decided in this Commonwealth, although intimations are to the contrary. Hurley v. Commonwealth, 188 Mass. 443, 444. Kelly v. Morrison, 234 Mass. 382. DeFerrari v. DeFerrari, 220 Mass. 38. It has been said to be open to grave doubt whether exceptions he in proceedings for direct contempt of court. Commonwealth v. McNary, 246 Mass. 46, 48. A complaint for contempt for violation of an interlocutory or final decree in equity “is really but an incident to the principal suit, and all the papers relating to it should be filed with the other papers in the case.” It is irregular to treat such a complaint as a distinct cause. Winslow v. Nayson, 113 Mass. 411, 420. In Cartwright’s Case, 114 Mass. 230, 239, which grew out of a receivership proceeding where the receiver misappropriated funds, it was said: “An apphcation for an attachment for contempt is to be made and filed in the original cause; after the attachment has issued, the proceedings are distinct and are criminal in their nature.” Hamlin v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 170 Mass. 548, 550. The distinction between civil and criminal contempts often has been made, and important results sometimes have been made to turn on that distinction. See, for example, Bessette v. W. B. Conkey Co. 194 U. S. 324; Gompers v. Bucks Stove & Range Co. 221 U. S. 418; In re Nevitt, 54 C.C. A. 622; Terminal Railroad
The frame of the petition for attachment for contempt, the rulings of the single justice and the form of the decree indicate that that proceeding was designed to enforce the property rights of the plaintiffs and was so treated by the court. The defendants were found guilty of contempt in the very particulars for which the plaintiffs contended and now contend. Manifestly the amount of the fine is not open to revision.
All these considerations lead to the conclusion that the petitioners are not entitled to any relief on the present record.
Writ dismissed.