Colonial Carpets, Inc. v. Carpet Fair, Inc.

374 A.2d 419, 36 Md. App. 583, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 435
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1977
Docket1196, September Term, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 374 A.2d 419 (Colonial Carpets, Inc. v. Carpet Fair, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colonial Carpets, Inc. v. Carpet Fair, Inc., 374 A.2d 419, 36 Md. App. 583, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 435 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Gilbert, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The practice of law may be poetically likened to sailing a ship. Constitutions, case law, and legislative enactments are to the lawyer what charts, buoys, and beacons are to the sailor. The compass, however, is generally agreed to be the most important navigational aid on ship. The Maryland Rules of Procedure are the lawyer’s compass and serve to help him steer through the narrows of pleading, pass the rocks of default, around the shoals of limitation, and safely into the harbor of judgment. It is a reckless sailor, indeed, who puts to sea without a compass, and it is a reckless lawyer who fails to familiarize himself with the Rules of Procedure before he files and tries a case.

Notwithstanding the importuning of the Court of Appeals and this Court that the rules of procedure are not to be considered as mere guides or Heloise’s helpful hints to the practice of law but rather precise rubrics that are to be read and followed, 1 admonitions go unheeded by some .practitioners. When that occurs, we are left to wonder whether we are engaged in an endless struggle, just as *585 waves beat upon the shore, fall back and then repeat over and over ad infinitum, 2

This appeal arises because trial counsel for the appellant, demonstrating a paucity of knowledge of Maryland procedure, frustrated the appellee, and so jumbled the orderly process that even the trial judge’s compass went awry.

The basis of the appeal is an order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County awarding appellee’s counsel a fee of $4500 for services rendered subsequent to the voluntary dismissal of appellant’s suit against the appellee for an injunction. Appellee has cross-appealed on the ground that the amount of the fee awarded its counsel is parsimonious. Additionally, the appellee has moved to dismiss the appellant’s appeal on the ground that there was no compliance with Md. Rule 1028. For reasons that we shall hereafter discuss, we reverse the order of the circuit court and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion. It follows that we deny the motion to dismiss.

The record discloses that this litigation, permeated with the ostensible acrimony of opposing counsel, commenced on December 4, 1974, with the filing of a Petition for Injunction by Colonial Carpets, Inc., t/a The Carpet Barn (Colonial) against Carpet Fair, Inc., t/a Bill’s Discount Carpet Barn (Fair). The petition alleged that Fair had infringed upon Colonial’s Maryland registered trade mark and name. 3 It prayed that Fair be enjoined from so doing and that Colonial be “assessed” money damage for the “loss of profits” it had sustained.

The petition was promptly met with a demurrer which, reduced to its common denominator, averred that the petition failed to state a cause of action. The circuit court *586 agreed with Pair’s position and sustained the demurrer with leave to amend.

On March 7, 1975, the amended petition was filed. It took form in two counts. One reasserted the infringement by Pair upon Colonial's registered trade mark 4 and name. The second charged Pair with “deceptive and misleading” advertising through the use of the name “Carpet Barn” and unfair competition. Colonial requested that an injunction issue against the use of the trade name “Carpet Barn” by Pair and that there be an accounting by Pair of its “profits realized while operating under the name ‘Bill’s Discount Carpet Barn.’ ” Pair answered within the prescribed time and denied any infringement upon Colonial’s trade name or mark.

For the ensuing time, March 26, 1975 to February 2, 1976, the parties engaged in legalistic sparring relative to discovery. During the discovery period, Colonial’s counsel died and new counsel was substituted. The unmistakable bitterness of counsel toward each other, rather than diminishing, seemingly intensified.

Colonial sought a pretrial conference, Fair amended its answer to the petition by substantially embellishing it, and the case was set for trial on February 2, 1976.

At the outset of the trial, Colonial’s counsel informed the judge that Colonial desired Pair to produce voluntarily alleged managers of three of Fair’s stores, and a fourth person who was the president of the agency that handled Pair’s advertising. Pair refused to comply with the request. Colonial then requested permission to put into evidence the depositions of the witnesses that were not present. Fair objected to that procedure because the witnesses were not parties to the suit, and no summons had been issued for their attendance. Md. Rule 413 a 3.

The trial judge suggested that Colonial’s lawyer issue an order to the clerk for the summoning of three of the *587 witnesses with the idea that the sheriff could telephone the persons to be subpoenaed and so inform them, requesting their appearance.

The trial of the case started with the calling by Colonial of its president as the first witness. The witness was still undergoing direct examination when the court recessed for lunch. After the luncheon recess, Colonial’s lawyer advised the court that he had been told by the sheriff’s office that all the requested witnesses 5 were located outside of Prince George’s County and that the sheriff was without jurisdiction to serve summons on them. Colonial, through its counsel, told the judge that, “it now appears highly unlikely that any of these four witnesses [ 6 ] will be subject to the service and will appear as witnesses today. I feel, therefore, that .. . [Colonial’s] case will be seriously jeopardized, and that is a prime basis for our motion for a non-suit without prejudice.”

Over the strenuous objection of the attorney for Fair, the judge granted the motion. In so doing, however, he read from Md. Rule 541 Pertaining to voluntary dismissal of an action at law and Md. Rule 582 which is concerned with similar dismissals in equity proceedings. The judge then said:

“So, I’m going to grant your motion without prejudice. However, I’m going — and it can’t be determined until the matter is finally resolved in your next jurisdiction where you file it, but I’m going to leave open the question of attorney’s fees to the defendant in this case which may be allowed to be recoverable because we don’t know how much of this that has transpired to date can be used in a new proceeding. If it is used in a new proceeding, well and good. If not, then I think the plaintiff should be held accountable therefor.”

*588 A written order followed twenty-three days later. It provided in pertinent part:

“ORDERED, that this Court is reserving the possibility of the award of attorney’s fees to counsel for the defendant [Fair] until such time as the subject matter of the litigation is finally determined.”

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Bluebook (online)
374 A.2d 419, 36 Md. App. 583, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-carpets-inc-v-carpet-fair-inc-mdctspecapp-1977.