Beall v. Frank & Adler

48 A. 1051, 93 Md. 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 17, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 48 A. 1051 (Beall v. Frank & Adler) 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
Beall v. Frank & Adler, 48 A. 1051, 93 Md. 331 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the' opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County dissolving an injunction and dismissing the bill which had,been filed in-that Court by the appellants to restrain the appellees and the sheriff of the county from proceeding with the execution of a judgment against certain property claimed by the appellants ; and upon which bill a preliminary injunction had been granted. The bill alleged that the appellants were carrying on a mercantile business at Glenn-dale, in Prince George’s County, as a firm, trading as Beall & Mahan ; that in the spring of 1899, “the plaintiff, EllaV. Beall, engaged in a retail dry goods and grocery store on her own *332 account and enjoyed- good credit with a fair and increasing share of success up to about the 9th day of November, 1899, when she entered into articles of partnership with the other plaintiff, Florence G. Mahan, who became a one-half partner in said mercantile business;” that they were interrupted in the said business by a levy on their whole stock of merchandise by the Sheriff of Prince George’s County, “who seized and took possession thereof by virtue of a writ of fieri facias which had been issued from the Circuit Court for ” said county ■on a judgment recovered by the appellees, Frank & Adler, against Frank Beall at the January Term, 1896, for the sum of $843.78, interest and costs—the sheriff taking said stock as the property of Frank Beall, the defendant in the judgment; that said Frank Beall did not have any interest whatever, directly or indirectly in the property so seized and levied upon ■or any part thereof; that the said sheriff threatened to advertise and sell said stock of goods ; that the said Ella V. Beall ■carried on the said business from the spring of 1899 with capital which was her own individual money; that she took out license as required by law; that the other plaintiff also invested her own money as capital; that “their respective husbands had not one cent invested in the business;” and that “said .stock of goods so seized by the sheriff belongs exclusively to the plaintiffs and is not in any way liable for the debts of the said Frank Beall.” The bill then prays for an injunction against the defendants below, the appellees here.

The appellees, Frank & Adler, answered the bill. In their answer they aver they know nothing of the partnership alleged in the bill. They admit having the judgment against Frank Beall and that they ordered a fieri facias to be issued thereon which commanded the sheriff “to levy upon the lands and tenements, goods and chattels” of said Beall. They further aver that they know nothing of the plaintiff, Ella V. Beall being engaged in “mercantile business as alleged” in the bill; that Frank Beall has been in mercantile business for a number of years in Prince George’s County; that he was so engaged when he contracted the debt with the respondents for *333 which the execution referred to in the bill was issued and levied; that he “has had active charge and general management of the store at Glendale from the spring of 1899 to the date of said levy keeping himself in and about said store, selling goods therein, and receiving payment thereof, and if he was acting as agent of Ella V. Beall or Beall & Mahan” strict proof thereof is required; that said Frank Beall “professed to have failed in business when merchandising” in said county and made a deed of trust or assignment for the benefit of creditors; that the trustee named accepted the trust and docketed a case in the Circuit Court in which a large number of claims were filed against the said Beall but not including the claim of the respondents; that there was no inventory, nor lists of assets, accounts of sales nor reports made by the trustee because the assignment carried nothing of any consequence and nothing worth the effort of the trustee to possess himself of; “that the said Frank Beall kept to himself his position as merchant and has since” merchandised in said county “and has supplied the plaintiff Ella V. Beall with the money which started her in business at Glendale;” that “if the operations at said store have been carried on in her name to the time of the formation of her partnership with Florence G. Mahan” she purchased goods with money and property furnished her by the said Frank Beall and “the same has been carried in her name for the purpose of enabling the said Frank Beall to defraud his creditors and place said property or a. large part thereof in this and other ways beyond the reach of his creditors; that “a large part of the property, if not all, in said store at the time of the alleged levy by the sheriff, was in law the property of the said Frank Beall or if the property of the said Ella V. Beall that she acquired the same by gifts from .her husband or through money and property furnished her at sundry times by him;” and that if the plaintiff “Florence G. Mahan had any interest in said property at the time of said levy” strict proof thereof is required. The respondents then “pray that the Court may return jurisdiction in the premises to ascertain whether the said Ella V. Beall or the said Flor *334 ence G. Mahan or both owned the property so levied upon and whether or not the said Ella V. Beall’s interest therein, if any, was not acquired by gift from her husband or through money or property furnished her by him, between the date of the contracting of the debt of the said Beall to these defendants and the date of said levy.”

The sheriff answered admitting the levy, asking strict proof of the title of the .plaintiffs, describing what was done under the levy and praying that, as the defendants, Frank & Adler, assert in their answer that title to the goods levied upon is in Frank Beall, that the “parties may prosecute their interpleading to a final hearing.” It is thus seen that all parties invoke the jurisdiction of the Court to have determined the issues that are presented by the pleadings.

The decision of these issues depends upon the evidence which has been adduced by the parties in support of their respective contentions. From a careful consideration of this evidence we have been led to a different conclusion from the one which was reached in the case by the learned Court that decided the case below. The basis of the contention upon the part of the plaintiffs is that the property in controversy was acquired by them by their own labor, skill and industry in the prosecution of a business upon their own account and independently of their husbands. In examining this contention it will only be necessary in the view we take of the case to have reference to the evidence affecting the relation of Mrs. Ella V. Beall to the property in question.

In a contest of this character between a wife and the husband’s creditors there is a presumption against the claim of the wife “ which she must overcome by affirmative proof.” Seitz v. Mitchell, 94 U. S. 580—3; Manning v. Carruthers, 83 Md. 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 1051, 93 Md. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beall-v-frank-adler-md-1901.