260 Mass. 102 | Mass. | 1927
This is an action of contract to recover on a promissory note made by one George E. Whittier, and payable to the order of Wales B. Farmer under whose indorsement the plaintiff derives title. We assume in the absence of any question to the contrary raised by counsel, that “Wales B. Farmer” is the same person as Walter B. Farmer, the defendant. The note is dated March 25, 1923, and matured July 27,1923, and the defendant, having pleaded his discharge in bankruptcy in bar of the action, testified without objection, “that he was discharged in bankruptcy on August 21, 1925, in the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts from all claims that were provable against his estate and which existed on the eleventh day of August, 1924,” and a certified copy of the discharge was admitted in evidence. But no testimony was introduced “of the nature of the schedules . . . nor of any notice of the bankruptcy proceedings received by the plaintiff during the pendency of said proceedings.” The evidence was closed, and the defendant seasonably filed ten requests for rulings, all of which except the third, fourth and fifth are waived. The trial judge, however, gave the third and fourth requests, that, if the plaintiff claimed that the discharge was not a bar, the burden was on the plaintiff to prove that
The case having been taken under advisement, the judge several days thereafter called a conference of counsel, and upon discussion announced, that he would allow the plaintiff to introduce certified copies of the bankruptcy schedules. The defendant objected to the admission of additional evidence and his objection was noted. If the judge seems to have acted on his own initiative, yet it was within his discretionary power after hearing the parties to reopen the case for the admission of further evidence. Morena v. Winston, 194 Mass. 378. It is contended by the defendant that the subsequent reception in the absence of his counsel of the bankruptcy proceedings which did not show the name of the plaintiff as a creditor was error, because the defendant had no opportunity to inspect the copies, or to be heard upon their admission. But the defendant had been informed of the nature of the proposed evidence, and the manner in which it was to be introduced, and while objecting generally, made no request for further hearing on its admission. The reopening of the case was a continuation of the trial, and, the defendant’s objections having been saved, the fact that attested copies of the schedules, instead of being presented when the ruling was made, were received afterwards, did not deprive the defendant of any legal right. It was not a proceeding where the plaintiff was heard on a material issue in the absence of the defendant.
The record shows that the defendant also filed four “supplementary requests.” The date of filing however does not appear. The first two requests have been waived. The
The fourth request that on all the evidence the plaintiff is not entitled to recover was denied rightly. The judge found, on evidence which warranted the finding, that, the note not having been listed, the action could be maintained. Caldwell v. Eastman, 248 Mass. 332.
We have considered all the questions argued by counsel for the defendant, and, finding no error of law, the order of the Appellate Division dismissing the report is,
Affirmed.