French v. Jordan Marsh Co.
French v. Jordan Marsh Co.
Opinion of the Court
The only question in these cases involves the construction of Rule 88 of the Superior Court (1932).
The rule relates to the reports of auditors whose findings of fact are not final. The part here material reads as follows: “A party shall be held to waive any right to jury trial previously claimed, unless within ten days after the filing of the report he shall file a statement that he insists thereon. He shall have the right to introduce evidence other than the report only as to issues upon which he or some other party, by a writing filed within such time, reserves the right to introduce such evidence; but the court may permit amendment of such reservation at any time.” In these actions (for personal injuries and consequential damages respectively), after an auditor’s report in favor of the
The plaintiffs contend that inasmuch as the defendant filed no reservation of its own right to introduce evidence outside of the report it had no right even to meet the outside evidence introduced on the part of the plaintiffs. The rule will not admit of this construction. No such one-sided trial was intended. The rule is plain that “A party . . . shall have the right to introduce evidence other than the report only as to issues upon which he or some other party” reserves the right. As to the defendant the plaintiffs were other parties. They reserved the right, and one of them at least exercised it at the trial. By the terms of the rule the defendant was entitled to meet the evidence introduced by “some other party” under a reservation by the latter. The case is entirely different from Knapp v. Amero, 298 Mass. 517, where the parties who had reserved their rights waived them before trial.
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Anna H. French v. Jordan Marsh Company Oscar W. French v. Same
- Status
- Published