Grantham v. Board of County Commissioners

246 A.2d 548, 251 Md. 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 6, 1968
Docket[No. 305, September Term, 1967.]
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 246 A.2d 548 (Grantham v. Board of County Commissioners) 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
Grantham v. Board of County Commissioners, 246 A.2d 548, 251 Md. 28 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

Singley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This controversy stems from a malpractice action instituted on 12 May 1966 in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County. The plaintiffs were Vincent DePaul Grantham, Jr., in his capacity as administrator of the estates of his deceased wife and a deceased infant daughter, and David I. Redmon, as next friend of Vincent DePaul Grantham, Jr., and of Grantham’s son, Vincent DePaul Grantham, III, both of whom were minors. For the purposes of this opinion, the plaintiffs will be referred to collectively as “Grantham.”

The defendants were two physicians, Dr. Max M. Herzberg and Dr. R. Kennedy Skipton, together with the Board of County Commissioners for Prince George’s County (the Board) which operates the Prince George’s General Hospital. The defendants were jointly and severally charged with having negligently caused the deaths of Grantham’s wife and infant daughter. Other counts of the declaration sounded in breach of contract and of warranty.

The case was tried before a jury which on 14 February 1967 returned verdicts totalling $60,000 against Dr. Skipton and the Board, no negligence having been found as to Dr. Herzberg. On 6 April 1967, the defendants’ motion for a new trial was granted. Thereafter, settlement negotiations were entered into between Karl G. Feissner, Esq., who represented Grantham, and Cary M. Euwer, Esq., who represented Dr. Skipton. A figure of $31,802.98 was finally agreed upon, and either Mr. Feissner, or William E. Kaplan, an associate of Mr. Feissner’s, prepared a release, in a form intended to come within the provisions of the Uniform Contribution Among Tort-feasors Act, *31 Maryland Code (1957) Art. 50, §§ 16-24 (the Act) and a “line”, or order to dismiss:

“As to Defendant R. Kennedy Skipton only, please enter this matter as dismissed, with prejudice.”

The “line” was signed by Mr. Feissner, and both the “line” and the release were delivered to Mr. Euwer on 19 June 1967.

Because of the fact that minors were involved, Mr. Euwer was insistent that the entry of judgments be a condition of the settlement. He testified :

“Mr. Feissner and I agreed on a settlement figure, I believe it was possibly in May, and he prepared a release and an order of dismissal, and then he was very anxious to get the draft. And one day Mr. Kaplan came to my office, and in the meantime I had talked to Mr. Pledger, who was Washington counsel for this insurance company, and also to Mr. Bober, who was the claims agent in Chicago, and because there were infants involved they insisted on a judgment being entered. And Mr. Kaplan came in my office and I showed him the check and I said, T can’t give it to you until we have an entry of judgment. You give me the figures as to how you want this judgment set up and then I will be able to deliver the check after it is signed by the Court.’ And he gave me the figures, and then he told me that Mr. Feissner was going to be down here.”

Thereafter, according to Mr. Kaplan’s testimony, a stipulation was prepared by Mr. Kaplan, apportioning the settlement figure among the several plaintiffs:

“I think perhaps we have got a conflict here as to the request for a judgment between Mr. Euwer and myself. I recall Mr. Euwer speaking to me about his company requiring a judgment to be entered because of minors. At this point I believe in my haste to get the check I even offered to prepare a judgment. When I got back to the office and discussed it with Mr. Feissner, our discussion reached the point where we *32 decided we had better not file a judgment, let’s do it by stipulation that has the approval of the Court in order to protect the minors under the code. This is the document that was brought to Mr. Euwer’s office, this was the document that had the figures and the breakdown of the amounts.”

The stipulation, signed by Mr. Feissner, was delivered to Mr. Euwer.

By 11 July 1967, Mr. Euwer had in his possession the release, the “line”, and the stipulation. Mr. Feissner was to be engaged in the trial of a criminal case on that day, and when Feissner and Euwer were unsuccessful in their efforts to see the court in the morning, Feissner sent Thomas P. Smith, a law clerk in his office, to see Euwer. Smith and Euwer saw the court in chambers later in the day. The court endorsed a form of approval on the stipulation and then signed an order for the entry of judgments in the amounts set out in the stipulation:

"ORDER FOR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT
Upon the aforegoing declaration, plea, and settlement stipulation, it is, by the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, Maryland, this 11th day of July, 1967,
ORDERED that judgments be entered herein in favor of plaintiffs in the total amount of $31,802.98, to be apportioned as follows:
In favor of the infant, Vincent DePaul Grantham,
III, in the amount of $18,551.74.
In favor of the infant, Vincent DePaul Grantham,
Jr., in the amount of $10,600.99.
And in favor of the Estate of Doris Grantham, in the amount of $2,650.25.
/s/ Roscoe H. Parker Judge”

This order, prepared by Mr. Euwer, had not been seen by Mr. Smith. In an affidavit which he later filed in the case, Mr. Eeissner said:

“* * * While your affiant has no independent recol *33 lection of ever having seen or approved the ‘ORDER FOR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT’, signed by the Court and filed on July 11, 1967, and therefore can neither admit nor deny whether such event actually occurred, he feels that in view of the extensive research he had conducted during the preparation of the release referred to above, and his knowledge that a judgment satisfied and paid by one joint tort feasor would release others from liability, if he had seen such an order prior to its submission to the Court, he would not have consented to its form or substance.”

The stipulation and the judgments were filed on 11 July, and the settlement check was delivered by Mr. Euwer to Mr. Feissner, who was still engaged in the trial of the criminal case.

On the following day, 12 July, Mr. Euwer filed the “line” or order of dismissal, which had been sent him by Mr. Feissner. As filed, the “line” read:

“As to Defendant R. Kennedy Skipton only, please enter this matter as dismissed, with prejudice, and the judgment paid and satisfied(Italics added.)

Mr. Feissner denies that he consented to, or had knowledge of, the addition of the italicized phrase.

On 14 August 1967, the Board filed a plea puis darrein continuance and a motion for summary judgment on the ground that the satisfaction of the judgments against Skipton resulted in a release of the Board. When this motion was granted, Grantham moved to vacate the judgments, and his motion was denied.

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Bluebook (online)
246 A.2d 548, 251 Md. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grantham-v-board-of-county-commissioners-md-1968.