This is аn action of contract by which the plaintiff seeks to recover a balance of $970 allegedly for dental services rendered by him to the defendant at various dates in 1972. The action was entered in the Central *470 District Court of Northern Essex, in Haverhill, on March 11, 1974. The plaintiff’s declaration stated each date оn which he treated the defendant, the nature of the treatment rendered on each date and the amount due therefor, the various payments made by the defendant on account and the date of each payment, and the balance of $970 due. The defendant demurred to the declaration for thе several grounds set forth in the margin. 1 The demurrer was heard by a judge of the District Court on September 27, 1974, and overruled by him on October 4, 1974. The defendant requested a report of that ruling to the Appellate Division of the District Courts, Northern District, which, after hearing the parties, concluded that the plaintiff’s declaration was legally sufficient and, on April 14, 1975, ordered the report dismissed.
The case is now before us on the defendant’s attempted appeal from the decision and order of the Appellate Division dismissing her report. We conclude, on the basis of the discussion which follows, that the appeal is not properly befоre us and that it should be dismissed without considering the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s declaration.
1. For reasons which we are unable to discern, litigants continue to besiege this court with premature requests for appellate review of interlocutory rulings or orders of trial judges. Clearly it is not because of any failure by this cоurt to restate and apply “the general rule of practice so early announced, so frequently reiterated and so constantly followed, and so manifestly in the interest of parties litigant and the general public, as the rule that... [interlocutory rulings] will not be considered until the case is ripe for
*471
final judgment.”
Weil
v.
Boston Elevated Ry.,
2. Parallel to the development of the basic rule that interlocutory matters are not subject to apрellate review until the entire case is ripe for final judgment, and perhaps as a part of the same rule, there also developed a body of law, posited at least in part on statutes, to the effect that an order overruling a demurrer was not subject to appellate review until the case was in all other respects ripe for final disposition in the trial court. For a history of appeals from orders disposing of demurrers, and in particular the history of statutes relating thereto, see
Keljikian
v.
Star Brewing Co.,
In
Bennett
v.
Clemence,
In
Kellogg
v.
Kimball,
In
O’Connell, petitioner,
By St. 1918, c. 257, § 432, the statute then applicable to appeals from orders on demurrers, R. L. (1902) c. 173, § 96, was amended tо read in pertinent part as follows: “A party who is aggrieved by any order of the superior court sustaining or overruling a demurrer which alleges that the facts stated in the pleadings demurred to do not in law support or answer the action... may appeal therefrom to the supreme judicial court;
but.. .no appeal or exception shall be entered in the supreme judicial court until the case is in all other respects ripe for final disposition by the superior court”
(emphasis supplied). The addition of the new language underscored above had the effect of “convert [ing] what was formerly ‘a rule of practice established by the court’ into a rule of statutory law, compliance with which is a prerequisite to jurisdiction in this court.”
Driscoll
v.
Battista,
Because the order overruling the defendant’s demurrer was entered on October 4, 1974, the procedure for appellate review thereof is governed by the new rules. Mass. R. A. P. 1A,
The statement by counsel for the defendant in oral argument that he found many decisions by this court granting appellate review of orders sustaining demurrers to declarations but that he found none granting such review of orders overruling demurrers is quite understandable. This court has held in numerous decisions that if an order sustaining the demurrer denies the plaintiff leave to amend, or if the plaintiff elects not to amend but to rely on his declaration, the order on the demurrer is appealable. Some of these decisions are cited in the margin. 4 On the other hand, we *475 are not aware of any decision in which we have held that an order overruling a demurrer to a declaration is appeal-able before the action is tried or оtherwise in order for disposition by the trial court.
3. Our discussion to this point has concentrated on the question whether interlocutory matters arising in a trial court are subject to appellate review by this court before the prosecution of the case to a conclusion in the trial court. However, this discussiоn would not be complete unless we noted that at all times since the establishment of the Appellate Division in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston by St. 1912, c. 649, § 8, and in the District Courts by St. 1922, c. 532, § 8 (see now G. L. c. 231, §§ 108-110), this court has applied the same rule to interlocutory rulings by those Appellate Divisions. The interlocutory rulings involved were usually in the form of orders remanding cases to the Municipal or District Courts for new trials. All of the attempts, and there have been many, to have this court review such orders before returning the case to the trial court have been rejected as premature.
It seemed reasonable to hope, and further to expect and conclude, that this issue was disposed of with finality in the first such case to reach this court on an attempted appeal from an order of an Appellate Division that a case be retried in the Municipal Court. That case was
Real Property Co.
v.
Pitt,
Despite that very clear statement, which has never been questioned, criticized, or reversed, identical appeals have continued and still continue to bе’entered in this court. The following are examples.
Matson
v.
Sbrega,
Nothing contained in this opinion is intended to apply to decisions by the Appeals Court with respect to the question whether they may be the subject of further appellate review although they may not be “final decisions” within the meaning of those words as defined in thе decision in the Real Property Co. case, supra.
4. The defendant was entitled to question the legal sufficiency of the plaintiff’s declaration by demurrer, and she did so. The demurrer was overruled and the case was then in order for trial on the merits. The defendant instead appealed the ruling on the demurrer to the Appellate Division. For substantially all of the same reasons which we have discussed above as the basis for our conclusion that the defendant’s appeal to this court is premature and not properly before us, her appeal to the Appellate Division was also premature. The plaintiff has now been delayed more than thrеe years in obtaining a trial on his claim. The two premature attempted appeals have produced nothing for the defendant, and the resulting delay to the plaintiff can serve no purpose but to contribute to the loss of confidence in the courts as the avenue for adjudication of privatе disputes with reasonable dispatch. The continued use of such delaying tactics in the face of settled law against the presentation of interlocutory appeals may result in sanctions 5 against offenders in appropriate cases in the future.
5. The defendant’s appeal is dismissed with double costs to the plaintiff. We make no intimation as to the correct *478 nеss of the order of the District Court in overruling the demurrer or of the order of the Appellate Division dismissing the defendant’s report.
So ordered.
Notes
“1. The declaration does not set forth a cause of action substantially in accordance with the laws of this Commonwealth, particularly with reference to ... [G. L. c. 231, § 7, cl. 2],
“2. The declarаtion is a count on an account annexed and there is no proper Bill of Particulars filed with the writ when entered as required by ... [G. L. c. 231, § 14].
“3. The account annexed in the plaintiff’s declaration which furnishes the functions of a Bill of Particulars is defective because it states nothing to enable the Judge and the defendant to understand the nature of the claim.”
The words “before the entry of judgment in the case on the merits” apply to a case governed by the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure,
The words “unreported” and “reports” as used here <jlo not refеr to reports made by judges of District Courts to the Appellate Division of the District Courts under G. L. c. 231, § 108, at the request of aggrieved parties. The right of an aggrieved party to appellate review of District Court rulings is preserved by the process of filing written requests for reports, submitting draft reports, and establishing or disallowing the reрort. G. L. c. 231, § 108. E.g.,
Barton
v.
Cambridge,
Amherst & Belchertown R.R.
v.
Watson,
See, e.g., G. L. c. 231, §§ 6E-6G, inserted by St. 1976, c. 233, § 1.
