This purports to be an appeal by the plaintiff Rollins Environmental Services, Inc. (Rollins), from an order of a single justice of this court denying its petition 1 “to correct and prevent an [alleged] error and abuse consisting of the wrongful denial” by a judge of the Superior Court of the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment in an action pending in that court. The petition denied asked for relief under this court’s supervisory powers under G. L. c. 211, § 3, or, in lieu thereof, for relief under G. L. c. 231, § 118, as appearing in St. 1973, c. 1114, § 202.
Whether the petition be treated as seeking relief under G. L. c. 211, § 3, or under G. L. c. 231, § 118, it was properly denied; and if it is treated as seeking relief under the latter statute, the order of denial was interlocutory and the appeal therefrom is not properly before us at this time.
The petition which was denied by the single justice stemmed from the following proceedings. Rollins brought an action in the Superior Court against Montvale Laboratories, Inc. (Montvale), and certain of Montvale’s officers, asserting in “Claim One” of its complaint that Montvale owed it $12,784.54 according to an account annexed to the complaint, and in “Claim Two” of the complaint that Montvale’s officers and directors owed it the same $12,784.54. Montvale filed an answer admitting the allegations of “Claim One,” denying liability by it 2 on “Claim Two,” and asserting four counterclaims, all allegedly accruing after the date of the two Rollins claims. In its first counterclaim Montvale alleged that Rollins, “in violation of its obligation not to compete with the defendant [Montvale], solicited and obtained *176 orders from one or more of the defendant Montvale’s customers to its damage.” This counterclaim, fairly read, appears to allege a breach of a covenant in the same contract as that on which the two claims by Rollins are based. Montvale’s second counterclaim seeks recovery of $1,500,000 for Rollins’s alleged violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act, its third seeks recovery in the same amount for Rollins’s alleged conduct in restraint of trade, and its fourth seeks recovery in the same amount for Rollins’s alleged use of its monopolistic domination of the New England market in Montvale’s line of business for purposes of price discrimination against Montvale.
Rollins filed a motion in the Superior Court “under Rules 12(c) and 56 that Judgment be entered against Defendant Montvale ... on Claim One of the Complaint in the amount of $12,784.54, with interest and costs, said Defendant in its Answer thereto having admitted the allegations contained in said Claim One.” After a hearing on the motion, a judge of the Superior Court entered the following order thereon on November 19, 1974: “Motion for judgment on the pleadings and/or summary judgment against Deft/Montvale Laboratories, Inc. Denied.” 3
*177 After the denial of its motion for summary judgment on Claim One, Rollins, on December 16, 1974, filed its petition with the single justice as described in the first paragraph of this opinion. The matter was heard on January 8, 1975, on the return of the order of notice issued thereon, and on January 9, 1975, the petition was denied by an order of the single justice. Rollins claimed an appeal from that order to the full court. For the several reasons discussed below, we hold that the appeal is not properly before us, and that therefore it must be dismissed.
1. Refore implementation of the new Massachusetts rules regulating civil and appellate procedure, it was the settled law, established by a long line of decisions of this court, that an order denying a motion for summary judgment under G. L. c. 231, § 59, was an interlocutory order, that it was not an “order decisive of the case”
*178
within the meaning of G. L. c. 231, § 96, and that no appeal from such an order could be entered for review by an appellate court until the case was in all other respects ripe for final disposition in the trial court.
Lawrence
v.
Old Silver Beach, Inc.
Neither the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure nor the Massachusetts Rules of Appellate Procedure changed the previous settled law that unless a judge making an interlocutory order reports it to an appellate court for review, the order is not subject to appellate review until the case is in all other respects ripe for final disposition in the trial court.
Foreign Auto Import, Inc.
v.
Renault Northeast, Inc. supra,
at 468-471. In
Albano
v.
*179
Jordan Marsh Co.
2. It is equally the settled Federal law that an order denying a motion for summary judgment under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is interlocutory and generally nonappealable. Moore’s Federal Practice, par. 56.21 (2) (2d ed. 1974).
Switzerland Cheese Assn. Inc.
v.
E. Horne’s Mkt. Inc.
“It is a well-recognized rule, that the adjudged construction of a statute, by a foreign state or country where it was enacted, is to be given to it when it is afterwards passed by the Legislature of another state or country.”
Pratt
v.
American Bell Tel. Co.
This court having adopted comprehensive rules of civil procedure in substantially the same form as the earlier Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the adjudged construe
*180
tian theretofore given to the Federal rules is to be given to our rules, absent compelling reasons to the contrary or significant differences in content. See
Giacobbe
v.
First Coolidge Corp.
3. Rollins, apparently recognizing that, as we have concluded, it is not,entitled as matter of right to appellate review of the order denying its motion for summary judgment, resorted to the two pronged petition heard by the single justice. One prayer of the petition is that the court invoke its powers under G. L. c. 211, § 3, as amended by St. 1973, c. 1114, § 44, to superintend “all courts of inferior jurisdiction to correct and prevent errors and abuses therein if no other remedy is expressly provided.” This extraordinary power has been sparingly exercised, and it “should be exercised only in exceptional circumstances when necessary to protect substantive rights.” Healy v. First Dist.
Court of Bristol,
The petition, as posited on G. L. c. 211, § 3, was properly denied.
4. The other prayer of the petition was that the court exercise its discretion under G. L. c. 231, § 118, as appearing in St. 1973, c. 1114, § 202. The discretionary powers of a single justice under this statute with reference to a petition for relief from an interlocutory order of the Superior Court were discussed at length in our recent decision in
Foreign Auto Import, Inc.
v.
Renault Northeast, Inc.
5. The plaintiff’s appeal is dismissed, and the defendant is to have costs of appeal.
So ordered.
Notes
We use the word “petition” because the plaintiff so labeled its pleading, but the pleading is more appropriately termed a “complaint.” Mass. R. Civ. P. 3,
This answer is that of Montvale only, and it does not appear in the record before us whether Montvale’s officers and directors filed an answer.
With its motion Rollins also filed a proposed order to be used for the entry of judgment in its favor. The proposed order recited Montvale’s admission of the allegations in Claim One of Rollins’s complaint, that “there is no just reason for delay in the entry of judgment on said Claim One and that such judgment should enter forthwith,” and that the Montvale counterclaims are “of a permissive nature, separate and distinct from the subject matter of Claim One.” The language of the proposed order was apparently carefully chosen to comply with the specific language of Mass. R. Civ. P. 54 (b),
Had the judge allowed Rollins’s motion for judgment on Claim One, then tihe fact that the order allowing the motion included or excluded the express determination and direction which the rule makes a prerequisite to “the entry of a final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims” would be significant in determining the effect and appealability of the order. See Moore’s Federal Practice, par. 56.20 (2d ed. 1974). However, since the motion was denied, we need not pursue this point.
Neither need we pursue or discuss the question whether the judge might have allowed Rollins’s motion without making such an express determination and direction, thus not constituting a final judgment on Rollins’s Claim One, or affecting, concluding or adjudicating any rights of Montvale on its four counterclaims.
Government of Virgin Islands
v.
2.6912 Acres of Land,
