Evans v. Howard

259 A.2d 528, 256 Md. 155, 1969 Md. LEXIS 633
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 11, 1969
Docket[No. 57, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 259 A.2d 528 (Evans v. Howard) 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
Evans v. Howard, 259 A.2d 528, 256 Md. 155, 1969 Md. LEXIS 633 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

Orth, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The only question presented on this appeal from a judgment on the verdict of a jury in the Circuit Court for Howard County 1 for James Howard, Jr. (plaintiff *157 appellee) against Gary M. Evans, et ux. (defendants-appellants) In the amount of $3450 upon an action arising ex contractu is whether the trial court committed reversible error by denying appellants’ motion for judgment by default. We find that it did not.

The appellee claimed money due for work done and materials provided under an agreement with the appellants whereby the appellee was to construct a house on a lot owned by the appellants. He alleged that after the agreement was executed it was changed and modified, in part by the appellants’ undertaking “to handle the purchasing of materials and the disbursing of funds” and the appellee’s undertaking “to supply the labor and such helpers as the [appellants] might require on an hourly basis.” The appellee declared that under this modification he supplied labor at a reasonable hourly rate in a total amount of $5800, that he presented his bill therefor, that the appellants paid $2550 on account and still owed $3250. He cl aimed damages of $3500. The appellants filed a general issue plea. Maryland Rule 342 b.

The case was set for trial on 30 September 1968. On 23 September the appellants requested the clerk of the court to issue a summons duces tecum for the appellee to appear as a witness for them 2 “at the trial of this case in the Circuit Court for Howard County on Monday, September 30,1968 at 10:00 A.M. and order him to bring with him all of his records of employment kept on the work performed on the Gary M. Evans, et al building contract.” It specifically designated that the records we:ee to include “Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return” and “Employment Report, State of Maryland, Department of Employment Security” for the period July 1, 1965 through December 31, 1965. The summons was *158 served on the appellee. Under date of 30 September the docket entries read that the case was called in open court and continued. The appellants assert in their brief that the appellee moved for the continuance “due to his inability to produce the summoned information” and that “the trial court granted the continuance and directed the appellee to produce the summoned information at the subsequent trial,” but a transcript of those proceedings does not appear in the record before us. On 16 October the appellee filed four documents, each subscribed and sworn to by a different person and each stating that the subscriber was employed by the appellee “during the time he was building a house for Gary M. Evans” and “confirming” that the appellee “paid me for the work performed on Gary M. Evans house. And the necessary deduction from my salary was made according to wages receive (sic).”

On 17 February 1969 the case came on for trial, the appellee appearing in proper person. A jury was drawn and sworn. Out of the presence of the jury counsel for the appellants brought to the court’s attention that a summons duces tecum had been filed, that at the last hearing (30' September 1968) the appellee stated that someone else had the records demanded, and that the court gave him a period of time to obtain them and produce them “here today.” Counsel for the appellants said that the documents demanded did not appear in the court file and moved for a judgment by default. The appellee said that he had turned his records over to the attorney who had formerly represented him in the case and who had “disbarred himself” when the appellee found out that he was not working in his behalf. “And then he wouldn’t send me none of my legal papers * * * Now, how am I gonna produce them if he don’t send me my legal papers?” He claimed he had gone down to the “social security place” but was unable to obtain any of his reports. The court denied the motion for judgment by default, saying, “If we don’t go ahead we’ll never get the case disposed of, and certainly you’re entitled to have *159 your subpoenas answered and returned, but I think I’ll leave it up to you on cross-examination.”

The issue whether the lower court erred in denying the motion for judgment by default encompasses two interrelated questions: (1) was a judgment by default an authorized sanction for the failure of the appellee to produce the documents as commanded by the summons duces tecum; and (2) if it was, was its grant or denial a matter of the exercise of the court’s discretion which, in the facts and circumstances here, the court abused in denying it.

A summons may be directed to a witness, including an adverse party (see Code, Art. 35, § 9), to testify in court. Rule 114 a. The summons may command the witness to produce documents designated therein. Rule 115 a. A witness may also be summoned for any other purpose. Rule 115 b. One of these other purposes is to take his deposition, Rule 407 a, and a summons Issued for such purpose may command the person to whom it is directed to produce designated documents relating to matters within the scope of permissible examination, Rule 407 b. But by the express provisions of Rule 407 a this summons or summons duces tecum may be issued only “upon proof of service of a notice to take a deposition.” Without question the summons duces tecum here, by the express terms of the request under which it was issued, was pursuant to the authority provided by Rules 114 a and 115 a and was for the purpose of having the appellee testify for the appellants in court at the trial; it was not pursuant to Rule 407. The appellants did not seek to depose the appellee and, of course, there was no proof of service of a notice to take his deposition. The sanction for the failure, without sufficient excuse, to obey a summons served under Rule 114 is that the witness shall be liable to attachment and fine. Rule 114 d. And as the summons duces tecum under Rule 115 a is issued pursuant to Rule 114, the same sanction is applicable for failure to obey it. 3 We do not believe that it is within the contem *160 plation of Rules 114 and 115 that a judgment by default shall be rendered upon failure to obey a summons issued under their provisions.

The appellant urges that Rule 422 is applicable to the summons here. We do not agree. Rule 422 provides, in relevant part, that if a party refuses to obey an order requiring him to produce any document, the court may make such orders in regard to the refusal as are just. One of such orders which the court may make is expressly provided by § c of the Rule—the rendering of a judgment by default. But we think it clear that this sanction applies only to orders to produce documents passed under discovery procedures authorized by Chapter 400 of the Maryland Rules of Practice and Procedure. Rule 422 is entitled “Failure to Comply with Orders for Discovery .... Gen’l.” It is encompassed within Chapter 400 (Rules 400-425) bearing the general title “Depositions and Discovery.” While Rule 422 would apply to a summons duces tecum

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 A.2d 528, 256 Md. 155, 1969 Md. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-howard-md-1969.