Bowie v. Neale

41 Md. 124, 1874 Md. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 Md. 124 (Bowie v. Neale) 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
Bowie v. Neale, 41 Md. 124, 1874 Md. LEXIS 102 (Md. 1874).

Opinion

Bowie, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The motion to dismiss the appeal in this case, must be overruled, as the Clerk of the Circuit Court, and his Chief deputy, have deposed that the record was made out and transmitted at the earliest practicable moment, and that the [131]*131delay in said transmittal, was not caused by the fault, or laches of the appellant, but from the inability of the clerk, to make out the record, from the press of business in the clerk's office, at the time. The appellant, is adefendant in a suit instituted on the 26 May, 1866, by a writ of scire facias, sued out of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, in the name of the appellees, reciting a judgment rendered in said Court on the first Monday of November, 1853, in favor of the appellees, Neale and Luckett, against a certain James S. Morsell and William N. Dor sett:

“Whereof (it was alleged) the said James S. Morsell is convict, as it appears of record,” and suggesting, that the said Morsell, at the time of the rendition of the judgment, was seized of divers lands, and execution of the judgment remained to be done. The sheriff was commanded to make known ‘ ‘ to the terre-tenants in his bailiwick, whereof the said James S. Morsell, on the 7th of November, 1853,” (on which day the judgment was rendered) “ or ever afterwards was seized, that they should appear and show cause why the debt aforesaid, ought not to be levied on those lands and tenements.”

The writ, being returned “ nihil” the appellant and James S. Morsell appeared at Nov. Term, 1866, and the appellant filed several pleas, which were afterwards by leave of the Court, withdrawn.

A demurrer was filed by the appellant to the scire facias on which judgment was entered on the 20th June, 1871, for the plaintiffs. On the 21st of June, 1871, the appellant moved to quash the sci. fa., for certain reasons assigned. This motion being overruled, an appeal was entered by the defendant from the order overruling the same.

Various additional pleas were filed, which were demurred to, and judgment entered thereon for the plaintiffs.

[132]*132On the 18th of October, 18*72, the defendant moved for leave to withdraw the pleas of payment, accord and satisfaction, and file an additional plea, which was granted.

This plea averred, that after the rendition of the original judgment, and before the issuing of the scire facias, on the 11th of February, 1855, the plaintiffs issued a fieri facias on said judgment against the defendants, Morsell and Dorsett, which was delivered to the sheriff, and on the 2nd of March, 1855, levied on the goods and chattels of James 8. Morsell to the amount of the debt, damages and costs, and returned on the first Monday of April, 1855, l<levied, etc., and not sold by order of the plaintiffs’ attorney.”-

And afterwards a venditioni exponas was issued thereon, to which the sheriff failed to make any return, and the said writ of venditioni exponas was outstanding when the said scire facias was issued against the said William N. Dorset!, and the terre-tenants of Morsell for the renewal of the said judgment therein recited, and said vendi. never was executed, nor quashed, or countermanded, nor further proceeded in, nor has the sheriff made any return thereto, and is of full force and effect; that while the vendi. was outstanding, the said Morsell sold for a valuable consideration the real estate of which he was seized at the time of the rendition of the judgment, to one John E. Bowie, viz : on the 15th of November, 1855, and placed him in possession thereof; and the said Bowie, without notice of .plaintiffs’ claim, paid the jsurchase money and took a conveyance thereof: and the said John E. Bowie, after-wards, on the 11th of August, 1862, sold and conveyed said real estate for a valuable consideration to the appellant, who, without notice, paid the purchase money ; and that the plaintiffs permitted and authorized the sheriff, after the vendi. was in his hands, to allow the property levied on as aforesaid, to remain in the possession of Morsell, and to be removed by Mm out of the jurisdiction of the [133]*133sheriff, so that the same was lost, subsequent to the alienation of the said real estate by the said Morsell.

Which plea being demurred to, judgment was rendered thereon for the plaintiffs, and fiat thereon, from which the appellant prayed an appeal.

The appellant’s objections to the rulings of the Court below, are presented under three heads,

1st. That the Court below erred in not sustaining the appellant’s demurrer to the writ of scire facias.

2nd. That it erred in overruling the appellant’s motion to quash.

3rd. That it erred in supporting the appellees’ demurrer to the fourth additional plea of the appellant.

The reasons relied on to .sustain the motion to quash are grounds which, if tenable, were for the most part available on demurrer or which have been made the subject of the fourth additional plea, since overruled on demurrer. In considering, therefore, the points raised on the demurrers to the scire facias, and the fourth additional plea, we shall virtually dispose of all the questions properly presented by the record.

The first specific objection to the writ of scire facias, relied on by the appellant, is that the writ recites a judgment recovered against Morsell and Dorsett, and then avers that James S. Morsell alone, was convict thereof; meaning, if we understand the appellant’s position correctly, that there is a variance between the recital of the judgment and the averment, or suggestion as to its legal effect. We do not, however, so construe the recitals referred to. The scire facias, having set out the original judgment by describing the Court, the term, and original parties, etc., proceeding to declare its effect as evidence against Morsell alone, concludes, whereof the said James S. Morsell is convict, as it appears of record, ‘reddendo singula singulis.’ ” Which is equivalent to saying that it is legally proved against him by the record, that such a judgment as before recited was rendered.

[134]*134Without regarding what might be considered clerical misprisions, it is further objected, that the scire facias demurred to recites a judgment against two defendants, and proceeds against the terre-tenants of one only.

This is the identical defect suggested by the Court of Appeals in the case of Prather vs. Manro, in which case, speaking of the writ of scire facias, the Court remarked : “ It states that a judgment had been recovered by the plaintiffs against two defendants, and that it remained unexecuted, and on the authority of this state of facts, proceeds against the terre-tenants of one of those defendants as the proper persons against whom alone, to enforce the execution of the judgment. No suggestion is made of the death of the original defendants, or either of them; and they must be presumed, therefore, to be in full life, and if alive, were necessary parties.” 11 G. &. J., 266.

There are no suggestions in the scire facias in the present case, accounting for the separation of the defendants, or their terre-tenants. »

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Md. 124, 1874 Md. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowie-v-neale-md-1874.