Bailey v. Jones

68 A. 881, 107 Md. 405, 1908 Md. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 26, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 A. 881 (Bailey v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Jones, 68 A. 881, 107 Md. 405, 1908 Md. LEXIS 29 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellees against the appellants in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, in equity, to annul and vacate a deed conveying certain real estate, situate in Wicomico County, by one Goldsborough R. Bailey to the appellant, Lida E. Bailey, alleging it to be a cloud upon the appellees’ title to the property in question.

*407 The original bill was filed on the 2nd of April, 1906, and the defendants were duly summoned to appear and answer the bill. On May 23rd, 1906, Mr. Joseph L. Bailey, a member of the Wicomico County bar appeared for the defendants. Subsequently, on January 2nd, 1907, by leave of Court, an amended bill of complaint was filed, and the defendants were duly summoned thereto.

According to the docket entries, the following proceedings appear to have been had in the Court below:

March 18th, 1907, Order of J. L. Bailey for appearance for defendant filed.

April 2nd, 1907, Petition and decree pro confesso filed and order referring to the examiner filed.

June 6th, 1907, Interrogatories and testimony filed.

June 22nd, 1907, Final decree of Court setting aside deed filed.

August 21st, 1907, Order and affidavit for appeal.

August 22nd, 1907, Appeal bond approved and Petition to stay decree filed.

November 14th, 1907, Order to transmit record to Court of Appeals filed by defendants.

It will be thus seen, that while the defendants were duly summoned to appear to both the original and amended bills, and did in fact appear by attorney to each of them, they failed to plead or answer the bill, or to make any defense whatever to the jurisdiction of the Court to grant the relief prayed for, or to contest the right of the plaintiffs to the relief sought by the bill upon the merits of the case. On the contrary, no steps appear to have been taken by the defendants, after their appearance on March 18th, 1907, until August 21st, 1907, when they ordered an appeal to this Court from the final decree dated the 22nd of June, 1907, adjudicating the rights of the parties to the suit.

The objection that the decree pro confesso was passed before the expiration of the twenty days from the time of appearance entered, allowed by the rules of Court within which to answer, cannot" avail the defendants in this case. *408 The decree pro confesso is dated April 2nd, 1907, and there were no proceedings under this decree until June 6th, 1907, when the testimony was taken upon notice to the defendants and filed in Court. The evidence remained in Court from June 6th to June 22nd, subject to exception, before the final decree was passed by the Court below. The granting of the decree pro confesso one week prior to the time allowed by these rules did not prevent the defendants from coming in and asserting their defense.

Under 143 sec. of Art. 16 of the Code, it is provided that any defendant against whom an order to take a bill as to any matter or thing pro confesso may be passed, may appear at any time before final decree and file his answer, or oath to the bill * * * and on such answer being filed, such proceedings shall be had as would or might have been had in case such answer had been filed before the passage of such decree. Belt v. Bowie, 65 Md. 350; Wagner v. Shank, 59 Md. 313.

In this case the defendants, having appeared by counsel, must be charged with knowledge that by the. law they were required to answer the plaintiff’s bill and that they would proceed to final decree, upon default of answer. These defendants, had actual notice of the decree pro confesso on June 3rd, from the examiner before taking the testimony, two months after passing of the decree, and they failed to appear or to make any defense whatever to the procedure thereunder.

In Rust v. Lynch and Jackson, 54 Md. 639, it is said: “Decrees are not lightly to be disturbed or vacated, after enrollment, though entered upon default of the defendants; and it is only when there are strong and special circumstances shown and the conduct of the party applying is entirely free from well grounded imputation of laches or mala fides, that his application will be entertained and the discretion of the Court exercised in his favor. If it were otherwise, the certainty and stability of decrees would be destroyed and parties would never know when they were at the end of litigation. Oliver v. Palmer, 11 G. & J. 426; Burch v. Scott, 1 G. & J. 393.”

In the case at bar, the final decree was passed on June *409 22nd, 1907, and an appeal to this Court directed on the 22nd of August, 1907. On August 22nd, the defendants filed a petition to stay the decree pending an appeal, but no action of the Court appears to have been taken thereon.

There was no petition for the discharge of the enrollment and for the vacation of the decree upon the ground of fraud, surprise, &c., so as the defendants could make a defense on the merits in the Court below, but the sole ground*of the contention is, that the defendants should be relieved on appeal from the decree passed on the 22nd of June, 1907, because of an alleged irregularity in the passing of the decree pro confesso. It is not claimed that the defendants sustained any substantial injury by reason of this irregularity, and it would therefore be an unjustifiable interference with a decree of Court to reverse and vacate it on such ground. In fact, it is not alleged that the defendants have even a defense at all, upon the merits, or that they have been injured by the proceedings in the Court below. In Rust v. Lynch, 54 Md. 638, it is said: If a decree could be vacated upon such ground as is here alleged by the defendants, there would be little or no stability in decrees obtained upon ex parte proceedings authorized by the statute; and instead of being a means of íelief against the delay and neglect of defendants, the statute would furnish the ready mode of protracting the litigation beyond the time required to reach final hearing and decree in the ordinary course of proceeding. •

The appeal in this case being from the final decree passed herein, and no objection appearing from the record to have been made in the Court below to the competency of the witnesses, or to the admissibility of the evidence or to the sufficiency of the averments of the bill or to the jurisdiction of the court to pass the decree, there is practically no question open for review on this appeal except the decree itself.

We have however examined the proceedings in the case and the testimony taken therein, and find the evidence sufficient to sustain the allegations of the bill and to support the final decree granted herein.

*410 The deed from Goldsborough R. Bailey to Lida E.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 881, 107 Md. 405, 1908 Md. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-jones-md-1908.