Carter v. Maryland & Pennsylvania Railroad

77 A. 301, 112 Md. 599, 1910 Md. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 77 A. 301 (Carter v. Maryland & Pennsylvania Railroad) 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
Carter v. Maryland & Pennsylvania Railroad, 77 A. 301, 112 Md. 599, 1910 Md. LEXIS 144 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, John T. Carter, recovered a judgment against the appellee company in an action of trespass in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. The suit was brought in the Circuit Court for Harford County and was,, in the first instance, tried there. A new trial having been granted the case was removed to Baltimore County where, upon a *607 second trial had in November, 1908, the plaintiff secured a verdict, upon which the judgment was entered, on May 8th, 1909, from which he took the present appeal.

The appellee moved, in this Court, to dismiss the appeal for error in passing orders extending the time for signing and filing the bills of exception in the lower Court.

It appears from the record that after the rendition of the verdict a motion for a new trial was made by the defendant which was not acted on until May 8th, 1909. While that motion was pending and before the expiration of the term at which the case was tried, the Court passed an order extending the time for signing and filing the bills of exception for thirty days, and before the expiration of that period passed another order for the further extension of the time until the expiration of thirty days after the decision of the motion for a new trial. After that motion had been overruled and the judgment entered, the time for signing and filing the bills was extended by successive orders until September 15, 1909, previous to which date they were duly signed and filed. Each one of these orders was signed before the expiration of the last previous one so that there was no break or gap in the total period of the extension of the time.

We do not think that the Court below exceeded its power in granting these extensions of time. As no rule of that Court regulating this subject appears in the record we assume that none exists. Under the ordinary practice although the exception to a ruling of the Court must be taken at the time the ruling is made it is neither usual nor necessary to prepare the bills of excejitions or have them signed until after the trial at some convenient time during the term at which the case is tried; unless otherwise specially ordered by the Court, which may by an order passed during "the term extend the time beyond its expiration. The bills may also be prepared and signed after the expiration of the term by consent of the parties to the case. Poe’s Practice, sec. 319; Wheeler v. Briscoe, 44 Md. 308; State v. Kent Co., 83 Md. 383.

*608 Although this Court has repeatedly emphasized the importance of having, bills of exception prepared and signed promptly while the recollection of the facts involved in them is fresh in the minds of the Court and counsel, it has in several cases recognized the power of the Court below to grant successive extensions of time for that purpose where the first extension is made before the expiration of the term and each subsequent one is granted before the expiration of the next preceding one. Gottlieb v. Wolf, 75 Md. 126; Edelhoff v. Horner-Miller Mfg. Co., 86 Md. 606; Horner v. Buck, 48 Md. 369. It has also been held by our predecessors that the subject of the time and circumstances of signing the bills of exception “is a matter under the control of the inferior Court whose ruling cannot be revised on appeal.” Andre v. Bodman, 13 Md. 256-7; Wheeler v. Briscoe, 44 Md. 311; Roloson v. Carson, 8 Md. 226.

Turning now to the consideration of the issues presented by the appeal,.it appears from the record that the cause of action was -the burning of timber and fencing on Mr. Carter’s farm by a fire alleged to have been .started by sparks or cinders emitted from the locomotive of a passing train of the appellee. According to a survey, made after the fire for Mr. Carter, it had burned over slightly more than 42’ acres of timber, while according to a survey ‘similarly made for the railroad company by Mr. Sommerville only about 29. acres had been burned over. The difference between the results of the two, surveys was owing to a dispute as to the eastern boundary of Carter’s land.

Mr. Carter claims title to his farm under a deed to him, from J. Edwin Webster et al., trustees and executors of Phoebe S. Rutledge, and others, dated December 13th, 1902, in which the land conveyed is described as follows: “All that certain farm of which Joshua Rutledge, late of said (Harford) county died seized, situated partly in the fifth and partly in the third election district of said county near the -rooks of Deer Creek, composed of parts of several tracts of land called “Roberts Garden,” “Garden Fence,” (“Roberts- *609 Venture enlarged”), “Best Endeavor,” “Graf tons Addition,” “Timber Ridge” or by whatsoever name or names the same may be known or'called, containing about three hundred' and seventy-five acres of land, being the same and all the lands conveyed by and described in the following deeds.” (Then follow the titles and places of record of four deeds from separate grantors) “and being the same and all the lands devised by the last will of Joshua Rutledge to the said Phoebe S. Rutledge,” etc.

According to the recitals in the deed the land had descended from Monica Rutledge, who purchased it in 1805, to her two sons Ignatius and John W. Rutledge. Ignatius having purchased his brother’s interest in the farm entered upon and occupied the same until his death, and by his last will devised it to his son Joshua Rutledge describing it in his will as “the farm whereon I now reside containing about four hundred acres which lies on both sides of Deer Creek.” Joshua Rutledge devised his entire estate to his wife Phoebe S. for life with remainder to other persons, but the farm was sold under a bill filed by his creditors and purchased by his widow Phoebe S. and was sold after her death by her executors and others to the plaintiff, Carter, and conveyed to him "by the deed of December 13th, 1902, already mentioned.

Mr. Carter took possession of and occupied the farm- after its purchase by him and it was in his occupancy at the time the timber was burned. The timber land was unenclosed on its eastern side where it abutted on what is described in the evidence as the “Witz Land.” Carter, himself, testified that he had used this timber land to cut firewood out of it, that there was no doubt in his mind that it belonged -to the farm and that no one ever questioned his use of it.

Harrison Ayers, eighty-four years old, who lived “close by” the property and had known it for more than fifty years, testified that thirty-five or forty years ago the line which Mr. Carter now claims to be the true eastern boundary of his farm had been pointed out to the witness by Ignatius Rutledge who then owned the farm and Mr. Rigdon who then *610 owned the Witz land as the division line between their lands.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 301, 112 Md. 599, 1910 Md. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-maryland-pennsylvania-railroad-md-1910.