229 Mass. 68 | Mass. | 1918
This is an action of contract commenced by trustee process in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston. Neither the plaintiff nor the principal defendant are alleged in the writ to reside within the jurisdiction of that court, but the Charlestown Trust Company, one of the corporations named as trustee, is alleged to have its usual place of business within the jurisdiction of that court. The principal defendant filed an answer in abatement, averring in substance that she has no money on deposit with the Charlestown Trust Company and has never had any business transactions with it, and calling attention to the fact that on the allegations of the writ the plaintiff was a resident of Westminster in the State of Vermont, and the defendant, of Cambridge in this Commonwealth, and praying that the writ abate. This was described rightly as an answer in abatement. Young v. Providence & Stonington Steamship Co. 150 Mass. 550, 554.
The plaintiff filed a motion to overrule “the defendant’s answer in abatement.” This was irregular. All that was necessary was to set the case down for hearing on the answer in abatement. Comstock v. Livingston, 210 Mass. 581.
On the hearing upon the matter in abatement “no witnesses were sworn, and no evidence was offered in behalf of the defendant. The defendant appeared by her husband, who offered to prove to the court that the defendant did not then have, and never had, any money deposited in the Charlestown Trust Company, nor had she ever had any business transactions with the Charlestown Trust Company. The defendant made no further offer of proof.” Thereupon the court sustained the answer in abatement. This was error. The plaintiff does not appear to have consented to this course of procedure, nor to have agreed that the facts stated in the offer of proof were true or might be regarded by the court as the equivalent of evidence. The plaintiff had a right to have the witnesses called and to cross-examine them if he desired. There is nothing to show that he waived that right. This is quite different from an offer of what a party expects to prove when on objection his questions to a witness are excluded. Cook v. Enterprise Transportation Co. 197 Mass. 7, 10. Hallwood Cash Register Co. v. Prouty, 196 Mass. 313, 315.
The mere fact that one named as trustee is discharged, when the only ground for jurisdiction of the court is the residence of one named as trustee, does not deprive the court of jurisdiction provided service has been made upon the principal defendant such as would be sufficient in a common writ. The bald circumstance, that the court would not have had jurisdiction if no trustee had been named, does not deprive a court of a jurisdiction acquired solely by reason of the insertion in the writ of one as trustee who subsequently is discharged as trustee. That precise point was decided in Belknap v. Gibbens, 13 Met. 471, 475, when the statute was substantially the same as now. Lucas v. Nichols, 5 Gray, 309. Raymond v. Butterworth, 139 Mass. 471. It was said by Chief Justice Shaw in Brown v. Webber, 6 Cush. 560, 569, 570: “the county in which a writ is to be returned is fixed by the place of a trustee or trustees named in the writ, and will not be changed by the fact that the trustees are afterwards discharged. It also follows, that if neither plaintiff nor defendant lives in the county where the writ is returned, or in a county where a trustee named in the writ lives, and though such trustee is discharged, the suit is rightly brought in such county, and may, after the discharge of the trustee, be prosecuted against the principal defendant, if such service has been made on him as would be legal, if the suit have been commenced by a common writ.”
Although questions of law arising on answers in abatement
The result is that the answer in abatement set forth no ground in law for the abatement of the proceeding. The order of the Appellate Division was right and is
Affirmed.