This is an appeal from the order of a single justice dismissing a petition seeking extraordinary relief pursuant to this court’s general superintendence powers. G. L. c. 211, § 3. There was no error.
The facts are as follows. As executrix of the estate of her husband, the plaintiff brought an action in contract in March, 1974, in the Superior Court, Hampden County. On June 11, 1974, a judge sustained the defendant’s demurrer and granted the plaintiff leave to file an amended declaration within thirty days. The plaintiff neither appealed the order sustaining the demurrer nor filed an amended declaration. After thirty days, a docket entry was made purportedly entering judgment for the defend
*631
ant. This was in accordance with former civil practice, but not in accordance with Mass. R. Civ. P. 58 (a),
The plaintiff has shown no reason for extraordinary intervention on her behalf. If she had pursued her procedural rights in the Superior Court with normal vigilance, she would have had no occasion to file this petition for extraordinary relief. See
Molesworth
v.
Municipal Court of the City of Boston,
The supervisory power of this court is used sparingly.
Cappadona
v.
Riverside 400 Function Room, Inc., supra. Rollins Environmental Servs., Inc.
v.
Superior Court,
This case does not present such a situation. See generally
Osserman
v.
Jacobs,
The plaintiff’s appeal is frivolous. The order of the single justice dismissing the petition is affirmed with double costs. G. L. c. 211, § 10.
So ordered.
Notes
Rule 58 (a) requires that every judgment “be set forth on a separate document” and makes a judgment “effective only when so set forth.”
We note with approval the procedure followed by the Attorney General in the instant case, in which the real party opposing the exercise of this court’s superintendence powers is the adverse party in the underlying civil action, not the court which adjudicated that controversy. In similar cases in the future, the judicial defendant should (as was done in this case) seek both the joinder of the party whose substantive interests are actually at stake and the designation of the judicial defendant as a nominal party. This procedure will place the primary burden of defending the c. 211, § 3, action on the party whose interests are truly at stake, and will protect against unnecessary and duplicative participation by the Attorney General.
