Bright v. Kelley

176 A. 874, 168 Md. 107, 1935 Md. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1935
Docket[No. 81, October Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 A. 874 (Bright v. Kelley) 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
Bright v. Kelley, 176 A. 874, 168 Md. 107, 1935 Md. LEXIS 134 (Md. 1935).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action of assumpsit brought in the Circuit Court for Dorchester County by Walter J. Kelley, ancillary administrator of the estate of Edward A. Kelley, late of the City of New York, deceased, against James G. Darden, of Cambridge, Maryland, to recover $25,000 alleged to have been loaned to the defendant by the plaintiff’s intestate.

The two men, Darden and Edward A. Kelley, were friends of long standing, a friendship which continued until Kelley’s death on May 31st, 1930. On August 19th, 1929, Arthur L. Cams, a New York stockbroker, drew a check for $15,000 to the order of Arthur A. Moench, an employee of Cams, who indorsed it to Darden, who deposited to his credit with the Fidelity Trust Company of Baltimore. On September 14th, 1929, Cams drew a check for $2,500 to the order of Darden, which was also deposited to the credit of Darden. Both checks were paid and charged to Kelley, who carried an account with Cams. On February 7th, 1930, Kelley drew his own check to Darden for $2,000, and that, too, was deposited to the credit of Darden and paid.

After the death of Edward A. Kelley, Walter J. Kelley, his brother and the administrator of his estate, asserted that Darden was indebted to the intestate for the money which he had received on those three checks, on the theory that it had been loaned to him. Darden ignored the claim, and on July 16th, 1932, Walter J. Kelley, as administrator of Edward A. Kelley’s estate, brought this action *110 to enforce it. Pending the suit, on November 19th, 1933, Darden died, and Robert S. Bright, the executor of his will, was made a party defendant in his place and stead.

On October 10th, 1933, Henry Lloyd, Jr., attorney for the plaintiff, served upon William N. Andrews, attorney for the defendant, a notice addressed to Darden, informing him that the plaintiff would “take the depositions of ‘Arthur Moench,’ before George T. Baker, a Notary Public of the State of New York, at Suite 1940, No. 30 Church Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York City, in New York State, at 3:45 o’clock P. M. on the 25th day of October, 1933.” On November 7th, 1933, “papers under seal from George T. Barker, Notary Public,” were received and filed by the clerk. On May 3rd, 1934, a motion “Ne Reeipiatur as to filing of depositions and affidavit of Notary by Plaintiff” was filed. On May 3rd, 1934, an affidavit of the notary public was received and filed. The motion was overruled, the defendant pleaded the general issue, issue was joined short, and the case tried before a court and jury. The verdict of the jury was for the plaintiff, and from the judgment on that verdict the defendant appealed.

The record presents eleven exceptions, of which the first relates to the act of the court in overruling defendant’s motion of ne reeipiatur, the next five to rulings on questions of evidence, the seventh to the refusal of the defendant’s demurrer prayer, the eighth in part to the granting of the plaintiff’s second, fourth, and sixth prayers, the eighth, ninth and tenth to the overruling of defendant’s special exceptions to those prayers, and the eleventh was a mere repetition of the seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth exceptions.

The deposition which is the subject of the first exception was taken in a wholly irregular manner and would no doubt have been excluded had a proper motion been made. The notice given in intended compliance with Code, art. 35, sec. 17, stated that the deposition would be taken before “George T. Baker,” a notary public of the State of New York, whereas it was returned by “George *111 T. Barker”; the act requires that the deposition shall be duly certified under the hand and seal of the officer taking the same, but there is nothing in the record to indicate that Baker, or Barker, or any other notary or officer certified the depositions, although Barker did, after the deposition was returned, make an affidavit, which some six months later was filed in the clerk’s office, that Moench signed and swore to it in his presence, although he does not state whether the oath was taken before him or another. If there was a written motion, the record fails to disclose it, and the only grounds alleged as a basis for any motion, whether oral or written, are found in a rambling colloquy between court and counsel, in which the only reasons suggested in support of the motion were that the stenographer who transcribed the deposition was not sworn, and that at the time it was taken the defendant was ill, in a state of coma, and mentally incompetent. Whether the stenographer was sworn or not was without any legal consequence. If the witness was sworn and signed the deposition, and the officer who took it certified it, nothing else was required to make it admissible in evidence to the same extent as the evidence contained in it would have been had the deponent testified to it in the case in the court in which it was tried. If it was not so authenticated, the mere fact that the stenographer who transcribed it was sworn would not have made it admissible.

As to the second objection, that the defendant was mentally and physically incompetent when it was taken, it is sufficient to say that there was no effort to support that suggestion by proof. And since those were the only objections made in the trial court to its admissibility, it will be assumed that all others were waived, and that the deposition was properly admitted.

, The single issue in the case was whether Darden, during his lifetime, was indebted to Edward A. Kelley. One of the questions asked Moench was whether he was ever indebted to Darden, and over objection his answer to that question was allowed. The ruling was improper, because *112 it was immaterial whether Moench was or was not indebted to Darden, but it is not apparent how the appellant was injured by the ruling.

Walter J. Kelley, the administrator, the plaintiff in the case, was sworn on his own behalf, and in the course of his examination in chief was asked, “Did your brother ever owe any money to James G. Darden?” An objection to the question was overruled, and the witness answered, “No.” That ruling was flatly in the teeth of the statute, and the error was highly injurious. Indeed, that testimony was relied upon to bring the case within the case of Nay v. Curley, 113 N. Y. 575, 21 N. E. 698, upon which the plaintiff largely relied to take it to the jury. This is an action by an administrator against an executor and is based upon transactions between their respective decedents. The witness was also the plaintiff and his testimony was as to those transactions and could have related to nothing else if it was in any sense material or relevant. It should therefore have been excluded and the ruling in respect to it was both erroneous and reversible.

The rulings involved in the fourth, fifth, and sixth exceptions are free from error and require no special comment.

The seventh exception relates to the refusal of the defendant’s only prayer, which was a demurrer to the evidence. Its eighth is to the granting of defendant’s second, fourth, and sixth prayers, which in effect instructed the jury that if they found that Edward A.

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Bluebook (online)
176 A. 874, 168 Md. 107, 1935 Md. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bright-v-kelley-md-1935.