Crawford v. Richards

66 A.2d 483, 193 Md. 236, 1949 Md. LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 19, 1949
Docket[No. 164, October Term, 1948.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 66 A.2d 483 (Crawford v. Richards) 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
Crawford v. Richards, 66 A.2d 483, 193 Md. 236, 1949 Md. LEXIS 315 (Md. 1949).

Opinion

Henderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court for Allegany County, dated December 22, 1948, dismissing a petition of the appellant (plaintiff below) praying that her case be removed from the stet docket to the trial docket. To understand the contentions of the parties it is necessary to state the history of the proceedings in detail.

*239 Elizabeth. L. Crawford, administrator d. b. n. of the estate of Millard F. Crawford, duly appointed by the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, brought an action at law by titling against W. Carl Richards on September 21, 1945. On the same day the action was docketed and the defendant was returned “summoned”. On October 18, 1945, the plaintiff forwarded by registered mail to the clerk of the court, a paper designated “declaration in titling”, which was a printed form of “narr, under act of 1902, chapter 409”, containing the common counts and a special count upon four promissory notes, one dated May 1, 1939, and three dated May 1, 1940, all payable one year after date, in the total sum of $2,138. The paper contained a notice to plead, affidavit that the sum, with interest, was justly due and owing, and a printed direction to the clerk to issue summons returnable to the second Monday in November. The notes were attached to the declaration as exhibits.

These papers were accompanied by a letter from the attorney for the plaintiff in Baltimore to the clerk of court in Cumberland, reading as follows: “Thank you for your kindness in acceding to my request for copies of the form for filing declarations under the Practice Act of Allegany County, Laws 1902, c. 409. Under separate cover, by registered mail and special delivery, I am mailing you a ‘declaration in titling’, and copy, to be filed in the case of ‘Elizabeth L. Crawford of Baltimore, Maryland, administratrix de bonis non of Millard F. Crawford, deceased, late of Baltimore, Maryland vs. W. Carl Richards of Cumberland.’ I understand that it should be in your hands by the twenty-second of October”.

On October 19, 1945, the clerk docketed these papers as an original action at law, issued summons which was duly served by the sheriff on October 31, 1945, and copy of narr. left with the defendant. On November 20, 1945, the defendant filed general issue pleas and two pleas of limitations, with affidavit of defense under the act. On December 6, 1945, the plaintiff filed a replication. Depositions were taken by the plaintiff before an examiner in *240 Baltimore, and filed on January 23, 1947. On October 8, 1948, the plaintiff filed a motion “for trial by jury”, to which the defendant filed a motion ne recipiatur. The docket entries do not show that these motions were ruled upon.

On November 15, 1948, the plaintiff, in open court verbally petitioned the court to “consolidate” the case by titling, docketed September 21, 1945, with the declaration docketed October 19, 1945. On the same day the docket entries contain the notation: “Leave for consolidation granted to bring case heretofore docketed forward; which leave is to be taken without advantage or prejudice to the parties to this cause”. The case was then marked “continued”. On November 16, 1948, the plaintiff filed a petition praying the court “to pass an order removing the titling of the case from the stet docket, so that the way may be cleared for the trial of the case on its merits at the January Term of court”. The defendant moved for a dismissal of the petition, alleging that the case first docketed as no. 14 Originals, October Term, 1945, later designated as no. 11 Trials, July Term, 1947, had been placed upon the stet docket as stet case no. 3558; that it was now consolidated with the case subsequently docketed; that more than four terms had expired since the case was placed on the stet docket; that the case “is now non pros”, and cannot be revived.

Rule 1, section 10, of the Circuit Court for Allegany County reads as follows:

“Either party by giving notice in writing to the adverse party, or his attorney, fifteen days previous to the term of court commencing next after said notice, may have a case on the Stet Docket set for trial by the Court at said term next ensuing, and it shall then be tried (unless continued for cause shown) at such time as the Court shall fix, without prejudice to other cases. If no such notice is given before the fourth term after entering the stet, said cause shall be considered as non prossed, unless enjoined or under rule reference, or *241 awaiting the decision of other cases involving similar questions, * * The court, in a written opinion, stated that the “rule is absolutely binding”. Thereupon, he signed the order appealed from, dismissing the plaintiff’s petition to have the case by titling transferred to the trial docket.

Despite the fact that the docket entry, granting leave to “consolidate” the two docketed cases, spoke of bringing “forward” the case originally docketed “without prejudice”, the court seems to have treated the cases as consolidated in the original suit. The plaintiff seems to have acquiesced in this construction, since she moved to transfer the case from the stet docket to the trial docket. Moreover, the plaintiff has never suggested that there were two cases. On the contrary, she asserts a right to try the case originally docketed, and contends that the clerk erred in docketing the declaration as a second suit. We have no doubt that the clerk did err in so doing. While he was doubtless confused by her direction to issue a second summons and by the declaration purporting to be brought under and complying with the requirements of the act of 1902, nevertheless the inscription “declaration in titling”, and the letter referring to a case between the same parties and stating that the attorney understood “it should be in your hands by the twenty-second of October”, were sufficient, we think, to put him on notice of the suit by titling which he had docketed on September 21, 1945.

The court has power to correct clerical errors. Weighorst v. State, 7 Md. 442. What was said in May v. Wolvington, 69 Md. 117, 121, 14 A. 706, 708, is apposite here: “When an attorney delivers to the clerk his pleas, properly entitled, with a direction in writing to file them, he can do nothing more. If by mistake or inadvertence, the clerk files them in a case to which they are not directed, he is not by any means to lose the benefit of them. When a party has complied with all the requirements of the law, there is no rule of right reason which would punish him for the errors of a ministerial officer *242 of the court. These defendants have done nothing to forfeit the invaluable privilege of being heard in their own defense. It is but simple justice that they should have the benefit of their pleas. They must be considered as filed in the proper case. They were, in legal effect, filed therein. The fact that the clerk placed them in the wrong bundle of papers, and made the docket entries in the wrong suit, has no more effect in defeating the rights of the defendants, than if he had mislaid them in any other way, or had lost them.”

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Bluebook (online)
66 A.2d 483, 193 Md. 236, 1949 Md. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-richards-md-1949.