Buchanan v. Patterson

51 A. 169, 94 Md. 534, 1902 Md. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 30, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 51 A. 169 (Buchanan v. Patterson) 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
Buchanan v. Patterson, 51 A. 169, 94 Md. 534, 1902 Md. LEXIS 22 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case was heretofore before this Court with reference to questions raised as to who were entitled to participate in the fund then in the hands of Esther S. Buchanan, administratrix of William B. Buchanan, by reason of an appropriation to her as such administratrix by the Act of Congress of 1899, appropriating moneys to pay French Spoliation Claims, and as to the rule for distribution to be observed in ascertaining the shares of those entitled to participate therein’ (see case of Patterson and others v. Buchanan, Admr., &c., 92 Md. 334.) Upon the first appeal the decree of the Court below was reversed in part and affirmed in part and the case remanded for a decree in accordance with the opinion of this Court. This is an appeal from the decree passed by that Court upon the remand.

The case was instituted by Esther S. Buchanan individually and as administratrix of William B. Buchanan and administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a. of James A. Buchanan, to put the funds in her hands under the jurisdiction of a Court of equity and get the direction of the Court in making distribution thereof. Esther S. Buchanan and Wilson C. Buchanan, her co-appellant here, are children of William B. Buchanan .and grandchildren of James A. Buchanan. The money to be distributed was approprited for payment of a so-called French Spoliation Claim—the losses giving rise to the claim having been sustained by the firm of S. Smith & Buchanan. This firm was at first composed of Smith and James A. Buchanan, and later of these two and William B. Buchanan, who survived the other members of the firm. Because of his being the surviving member of this firm, the administratrix of William B. Buchanan presented and was paid the claim for the losses of the firm. *540 Upon the former appeal this Court decided that the evidence: in the cause showing that William B. Buchanan was not a member of the partnership when the losses occurred for which the appropriation in hand was made, his next of kin, as such, were not entitled to share in the fund to be distributed. Accordingly, by the decree passed upon the remand of the case, the next of kin of William B. Buchanan were not admitted, as such,, to shares of the fund distributed ; and the same was distributed wholly to the next of kin of the other two members of the partnership, who were living at the date of the decree, and to the administrators of two of these next of kin who had died since the institution of the proceedings in the cause and prior to the decree. The only next of kin of William B. Buchanan, who were living at the date of the Act making the appropriation in question, were the appellants here, Esther S. Buchanan and Wilson C. Buchanan, her brother. When the proceedings in this cause were instituted for the purposes indicated Wilson C. Buchanan was placed upon the docket as a defendant, and under the bill process went against him as such. When the proceedings culminated in the decree passed by the lower Court under the directions of this Court contained in its former opinion the appellants here united in an order of appeal from the decree as follows:

“Esther S. Buchanan et al. vs. Wilson C. Buchanan et al.

In the Circuit Court No. 2, of- Baltimore City.

“ Mr. Clerk:—Enter an appeal on behalf of Esther S. Buchanan, individually and as administratrix of William B. Buchanan, deceased, and of Wilson Cary Buchanan, from the decree passed in this cause on the twenty-sixth day of June, 1901, to the next Court of Appeals of Maryland”—which was signed by their respective solicitors.

It is insisted here on behalf of the appellees that the appeal thus brought up ought to be dismissed: 1st, Because it is a joint appeal of a plaintiff and a defendant. 2nd. Because Esther S. Buchanan is both appellant and appellee—appellant in her own right and as administratrix of William B. Buchanan, and appellee as administratrix of James A. Buchanan.

*541 It is provided by our Code, Art. 5, sec. 24, that “ an appeal shall be allowed from any final decree or order in the nature of a final decree, passed by a Court of equity, by any one or more of the persons parties to the suit, with or without the assent or joinder of plaintiffs or co-defendants in such appeal; provided that if the Court of Appeals shall affirm the decree of the Court below, they shall not award costs of the appeal against any one except the appellant.” This law was enacted in its present form in 1864 (see Act. 1864, chap. 156), and shortly after and probably in consequence of the decision of this Court in the case of Lovejoy v. Irelan, 17 Md. 525, in which it was held that in a suit in equity in which there had been a decree against two or more defendants jointly, one or more such defendants could not appeal from the decree without joining all of their co-defendants unless after summons and severance. The statute not only provided against the recurrence of the hardships that might at any time arise from the rule of practice which was enforced in the case just referred to, but also indicated a policy of the law to disembarrass the valuable right of appeal, and to prevent the obstruction of the right by the use of technical restrictions upon its exercise. The Courts should administer the statute in the spirit of this ■policy. In a case of the character of the one at bar all the •.parties thereto are in a sense actors. They are not before the Court, primarily at least, for the purpose of asserting and enforcing rights on one side which are denied and resisted on the other; but for the common object of procuring an orderly and authoritative distribution among them of a fund in which they have interests thus to be ascertained and set apart. The placing of the parties upon the docket and their classification into plaintiffs and defendants are to a great extent matters of arbitrary árrangement; and are determined more from considerations of convenience than from those which rules of practice ordinarily require to be observed in arranging parties ■to a suit. It would be difficult, indeed, and often impracticable to so arrange or classify parties, in a proceeding such as this, as to preserve, throughout the adjudication of questions per *542 taining to their rights, the adverse attitude indicated by the positions assigned them in the suit as plaintiffs or defendants. It frequently occurs that those who may be assigned adverse attitudes in the proceedings at the institution thereof are after-wards brought together by a common interest either in maintaining or questioning matters of adjudication in which'they have a joint or common concern. To insist upon a severe exactness in maintaining in such cases the technical relation of the parties to the record irrespective of their real relations to any. controverted matter would be to embarrass them in carrying on the litigation, and hinder them in their substantial rights.

Now there is no doubt that in the state of case that we have here both" of the appellants in their individual capacities were affected by the decree below in sueh a manner as to entitle them to an appeal therefrom. It would seem to be altogether immaterial whether in prosecuting such appeal they gave each a separate order or united .through-their respective counsel in one order of appeal.

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Related

United States v. Jordan
113 U.S. 418 (Supreme Court, 1885)
United States v. Louisville
169 U.S. 249 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Patterson v. Buchanan
48 A. 158 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1901)
Lovejoy v. Irelan
17 Md. 525 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1861)
Owens v. Crow
62 Md. 491 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1884)
Littig v. Hance
32 A. 343 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
51 A. 169, 94 Md. 534, 1902 Md. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-patterson-md-1902.