This is an action begun in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, where judgment was entered in favor of the defendant. A doubt is raised as to the jurisdiction of the Superior Court founded on the ground that the appeal from the judgment of the Municipal Court was not seasonably prosecuted. That judgment was entered at ten o’clock in the forenoon of Friday, the third day of February, 1911, the hour and day of the week required by R. L. c. 177, § 2. The appeal was perfected at 11.15 o’clock in the forenoon of February 10, which was the seventh day counting Sunday, and the sixth day excluding Sunday, after the entry of the judgment. It is provided by R. L. c. 173, § 97, as amended by St. 1910, c. 534, § 1, that “a party who is aggrieved by the judgment of a . . . municipal court ... in a civil action . . . [with exceptions not here material] . . . may . . . within
Although in this instance the effect of the statute in prescrib
As the appeal was not perfected until after eleven o’clock on the sixth day after the entry of judgment, the further question arises whether the period limited includes entire days or only a period of six times twenty-four hours measured on secular days from ten o’clock in the forenoon, the hour when the judgment is entered. It has been said, “The law knows no division of a day.” Portland Bank v. Maine Bank,
It is not necessary to consider whether the nature of the use made by the defendant of the fence for advertising purposes would have constituted him a tenant or a licensee, if his occupation had been by virtue of an arrangement with the plaintiff or some one representing him. See Roberts v. Lynn Ice Co.
Order denying motion to dismiss affirmed.
Exceptions sustained.
