325 Mass. 23

Ethel E. Lasell vs. Director of the Division of Employment Security.

Suffolk.

May 2, 1949.

November 10, 1949.

Present: Qua, C.J., Ronan, Spalding, & Williams, JJ.

F. E. Kelly, Attorney General, H. P. Fielding, Assistant Attorney General, & J. A. Brennan, for the respondent Director of the Division of Employment Security, submitted a brief.

No argument nor brief for the petitioner.

Qua, C.J.

The procedural background of this case *24appears largely by indirection and reference in the record, but we assume in favor of the director that the petitioner was denied unemployment compensation by the board of review; that upon her petition for review to the Municipal Court of the City of Boston under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 151A, § 42, as appearing in St. 1943, c. 534, § 6, and amended by St. 1947, c. 434, that court rendered a decision in her favor and contrary to that of the board of review; that the director duly appealed to this court as provided in the 1947 amendment and, as provided therein and in Rule I1 of the rules made pursuant thereto, filed on May 17, 1948, his draft report; and that the trial judge disallowed it. Thereupon the director, under Rule II,1 filed his petition to establish that report. The Appellate Division dismissed the petition, and the director appeals. The decision of the Appellate *25Division rests upon rulings of law as to the form of the petition and draft report and not upon findings of fact, and is therefore open to revision here. Patterson v. Ciborowski, 277 Mass. 260, 266. Santosuosso v. Della Russo, 300 Mass. 247, 250, and cases cited. See Calcagno v. P. H. Graham & Sons Co. Inc. 313 Mass. 364, 365-366.

The petition was rightly dismissed.

A petition to establish a report, like a petition to establish exceptions, is strictissimi juris. There is a close analogy between the kind of report with which we are here concerned and a bill of exceptions. Gallagher v. Atkins, 305 Mass. 261, 262-263. Calcagno v. P. H. Graham & Sons Co. Inc. 313 Mass. 364, 368. Wind Innersole & Counter Co. Inc. v. Geilich, 317 Mass. 327, 329. By Rule II of the rules established under c. 151A, § 42, as amended by St. 1947, c. 434, a party seeking allowance of a report is required to file "his petition verified by affidavit of the party or his attorney setting forth in full his claim for such report and all facts material thereto.” The rule further provides that “No party shall be allowed to establish the truth of such allegations if he has failed to comply with the requirements above set forth.” This wording closely follows that of Rule 6 of the Rules for the Regulation of Practice before the Full Court, relating to petitions to establish bills of exceptions. 252 Mass. 587. Under the latter rule this court has repeatedly held in rescript opinions handed down in recent years that a petition to establish exceptions must be dismissed if it contains no allegation verified by affidavit that the proposed bill of exceptions conforms to the truth. Levine, petitioner, 301 Mass. 612. Andersen, petitioner, 301 Mass. 612. R. E. Guerin Trucking Co. Inc., petitioner, *26318 Mass. 783. See Dubois v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 315 Mass. 758. There is no reason why a corresponding requirement should not apply to a petition to establish a report. The petition in this case contains no allegation that the draft report filed May 17, 1948, and sought to be established conforms to the truth, and there is no equivalent allegation. The facts that the petition itself is verified by oath and that it contains many allegations pertinent to the report are not enough. The draft report, filed May 17, 1948, contains many statements not contained in the petition to establish it and so not verified by the oath at the end of the petition that the allegations contained in the petition are true. And conversely there is nothing under oath in the petition to show that the draft report contains all that it ought to contain to make it a fair and just report, that is, conformable to the truth.

The draft report itself is open to objection on the ground that it contains certain paragraphs numbered 1 to 4, inclusive, in which the director attempts to define and limit the questions of law to be reported. Without intending to criticize the phrasing of these paragraphs, we are of opinion that neither the trial judge nor the Appellate Division was required to accept and to crystallize in a report the director’s ex parte statement of the legal issues, drafted by him after the hearing of the case had been fully completed and the decision made. Nor do we think that it was incumbent on the director to define these issues in drafting a report, as he appears to believe it was. A report under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 151A, § 42, as amended, and under the rules made in pursuance of that section is in its mechanical aspects closely analogous to the ordinary report in actions at law in District Courts under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 108, as amended, but it differs substantially from a report under that section in its purpose and effect. A report under c. 231, § 108, is in itself the vehicle by which rulings of law are brought to the Appellate Division for determination, and should therefore in itself disclose in some manner the rulings intended to be reported. But under c. 151A, § 42, as *27amended, the case comes directly to this court by appeal. The case is heard in the District Court on the documents and transcript of the testimony in the board of review. The court decides only questions of law arising on the documents and the transcript. The necessity of separating law from fact does not arise, — at least not in the manner and degree in which that question arises in ordinary actions at law. The petition for review itself must “state the grounds upon which such review is sought.” Until the amendment of 1947, the section contained no provision for a report. It would seem that a principal reason for the amendment must have been to provide an easy method for reducing that which would otherwise be a bulky record on appeal so that it should include only such material as should apply to the issues already stated in the petition and open on the record. Further definition of those issues could hardly have been an object.

There may be other difficulties with the draft report, but we do not think it useful to discuss further details. It is apparent both that the petition to establish lacks a necessary allegation and that the director has insisted and still insists before us upon a form of report which we think incorrect. Without doubting his good faith, there is nothing to show that the Appellate Division should have taken any other course than to dismiss his petition. Ray, petitioner, 314 Mass. 195, where the previous cases are reviewed.

The director insists that the trial judge dealt with the report without giving him the hearing thereon to which he was entitled under Rule I. It was, of course, the duty of the judge to comply with the rule. Whether he did so would seem to depend upon whether, as required by the rule, the director seasonably filed with the clerk a written request for a hearing. However this may be, and whatever remedy a party may have for a failure of the judge to comply, we are unable to see how the Appellate Division was in error in dismissing an insufficient petition for the establishment of an improper report.

Order dismissing petition affirmed.

Lasell v. Director of the Division of Employment Security
325 Mass. 23

Case Details

Name
Lasell v. Director of the Division of Employment Security
Decision Date
Nov 10, 1949
Citations

325 Mass. 23

Jurisdiction
Massachusetts

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