Fowler v. State Ex Rel. Gray

58 A. 444, 99 Md. 594, 1904 Md. LEXIS 98
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 58 A. 444 (Fowler v. State Ex Rel. Gray) 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
Fowler v. State Ex Rel. Gray, 58 A. 444, 99 Md. 594, 1904 Md. LEXIS 98 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit upon a sheriff’s bond to recover the amount of the exemption allowed a defendant under the provisions of the statute, now embraced in secs. 8, etc., of Art. 83 of the Code. A demurrer to the declaration was interposed, but as that was expressly abandoned by the, appellants it need not be *596 considered by us. The only exception now urged before us is to the ruling of the Court below in refusing to grant a prayer “That there is no evidence in this case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover.”

The appellants contend that it should have been granted for several reasons, which we will consider in the order they a're. named in their brief.

i. It is said there is no legally sufficient evidence that the defendant, Fowler, was sheriff when the sale was made, or 'that it was under his direction or authority. But the record shows than an auctioneer sold the property under an advertisement set out in full, which, after stating that the property ,was seized and taken in execution by the sheriff, by virtue of two writs of ‘fieri facias, issued out of the Circuit Court for Calvert County, names the time, place and terms of sale, and is signed “William A. Fowler, Sheriff of Calvert County,” and Mr. Long, who testified that he was a deputy sheriff of Calvert County, was present representing the sheriff. While ¿he record is not as full as it might have been, it is ample to show that Mr. Fowler was then sheriff and Mr. Long his deputy. Although a prayer of this general character has beén sustained in this Court in several cases, it would lead to a miscarriage of justice to reverse a judgment on this first ground, when the record .discloses as much as this does tending to show that what is now claimed not to have been proven was not questioned in the lower Court. If there could be any doubt upon the subject, the only plea filed by the' defendants would remove it.' That is, “that the said William A. Fowler, sheriff, did perform all the conditions in his bond aforesaid required by him to be performed.” Issue was joined on that ■plea and the case tried before the Court. No question was raised as to its sufficiency as there might have been by the-plaintiff as the declaration assigns breaches, but inasmuch as it in. terms describes William A. Fowler as sheriff and refers to “his bond aforesaid,” which bond is the one alleged in the declaration to have- been given by Fowler, as sheriff, with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as surety, it *597 would be giving this prayer more potency than would be safe or just, to sustain this contention of the appellants, when they had in effect admitted by their plea what they now say there is no sufficient evidence of. It is true the prayer does not refer to the pleadings, but when defendants admit a fact by their plea which relieves the plaintiff from the necessity of proving it, it would scarcely be claimed that this Court should reverse a judgment under a prayer of this kind, because the record does not set out in detail evidence to establish such fact.

What we have already said will relieve us of further reference to the point that there is no evidence legally sufficient to' prove the existence of the suit, the execution issued and the levy and sale made of the property thereunder, as set forth in the declaration, especially as the record admits a levy and sale under an execution issued on one of the judgments referred to in the proceedings, and (he bill of exceptions calls for them to be inserted, but they are omitted.

' 2. The sale w'as of the equity of redemption of John G. Roberts in two tracts of land — one of which sold for $ ioo and the other for $10. Before the sale, Mr. Gray notified the deputy sheriff making the sale that he claimed the exemption of one hundred dollars. The appellants contend that the record does not show that he had any authority to represent Mr. Roberts in that demand, but here again we have an extremely technical objection, and we cannot sanction the practice that would permit a judgment to be reversed for such reason, under a prayer as general as this. The Court below knew as this Court does, that Mr. Gray w'as and is an attorney at law, a member of the bar of this Court, and as such having the right to practice throughout the State. If any question was to be raised about his authority to act, which the appellants desired us to review, the record should at least show' that it was in someway brought to the attention of the lower Court. It is not our province to either make or search for pitfalls into which a party to a cause may fall, and when it is shown that an attorney at law appears at a sale being made by a sheriff and gives him notice of the claim of the exemption allowed a de *598 fendant by law, if his authority to act for that defendant is to be questioned so as to be passed on by this Court, it .must be by some more direct way than by a prayer of this character. The deputy sheriff who made the sale testified but did not intimate that he had any question about Mr. Gray’s authority or whom he was acting for.

3. This brings us to the consideration' of the'principal question in the case. It must be admitted that there are some expressions in the decisions of this' Court, construing our statute which allows an exemption from execution, which are apparently'conflicting, although when the facts of each case are carefully considered, those expressions can, for the most part, be easily reconciled. In Bramble v. State, use of Twilley, 41 Md. 435, the property sold was a farm which was' treated as a single parcel of land, and by the express terms of sec. 3, of ch. 7, of the Acts of 1861 (now sec. 10 of Art. 83 of the Code), the judgment debtor was entitled to one hundred dollars in money, out of the proceeds- of sale. It was therefore held that it was no defense for the. sheriff to say when sued for it “that the party failed to make ahy claim or demand for it until a long time after it had been distributed and applied by him to some other, purpose or claimant. When money comes into his hands as sheriff, it is his duty to'distribute and apply it to the parties entitled, and length of time in making a demand for it will not'excuse him,” unless such time elapses as makes the Statute of Limitations applicable. The question of waiver was not directly passed upon (further than to say that the facts stated in a plea which was demurred to might be some evidence of it), but the facts were relied on as an estoppel in pais, which this Court said was not sustained. The case of -State,use of Young, v. Boulden, 57 Md. 314, then arose. There goods and chattels were sold under a writ of fierifacias, and the provisions of-the statute were construed to mean 1st, “That property only shall be exempted, and the debtor has no right to demand an equivalent in money therefor * * * The exemption is- of property and the right to select the property to be exempted is given to each defendant'in the execu *599

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Bluebook (online)
58 A. 444, 99 Md. 594, 1904 Md. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-state-ex-rel-gray-md-1904.