Poll-Parrot Beauty Salons v. Gilchrist Co.
Decision Date | 25 January 1937 |
Citation | 296 Mass. 451,6 N.E.2d 612 |
Court | United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court |
Parties | POLL-PARROT BEAUTY SALONS, INC. v. GILCHRIST COMPANY& another. |
January 5, 1937.
Present: RUGG, C.
Equity Pleading and Practice, Appeal, Decree, Stipulation.
An appeal, in a suit in equity brought by a corporation, from a final decree which recited that the plaintiff had failed to comply with a stipulation, made by the parties with approval of the courts pendente lite, and dismissed the bill, where the record included no report of evidence or statement of material facts found by the trial judge, presented only the question whether the decree properly could have been entered on the pleadings; the plaintiff on the record could not question the authority of its officers who signed the stipulation.
BILL IN EQUITY filed in the Superior Court on September 5, 1936. By order of Swift, J., a final decree was entered dismissing the bill. The plaintiff appealed.
D. Ginsburg, (L.
Tobin & B. B Ginsburg with him,) for the plaintiff.
F. J. Murray, (H.
W. Packer with him,) for the defendant Gilchrist Company.
This is a suit in equity by the lessee under a written lease made to it by Gilchrist Company, hereafter called the defendant seeking to restrain the prosecution of summary process for the recovery of the premises brought by the defendant in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, and to prevent the defendant from taking possession of the leased premises and from interfering with the quiet enjoyment of them by the plaintiff. The defendant answered at length, and later was allowed to amend by setting up that in the action for summary process referred to in the bill judgment had been entered for possession in favor of Gilchrist Company, from which judgment no appeal had been taken. There was thereafter filed and allowed by the judge a stipulation between the parties of the following tenor: This stipulation was signed by the president and treasurer of the plaintiff and by the assistant treasurer of the defendant. Motion by the plaintiff to set aside the stipulation was denied after hearing. No appeal was taken from that denial. Petitions for leave to intervene...
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