Harris v. Womack

542 A.2d 409, 75 Md. App. 580, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 1988
DocketNo. 1617
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 542 A.2d 409 (Harris v. Womack) 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
Harris v. Womack, 542 A.2d 409, 75 Md. App. 580, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 133 (Md. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

WILNER, Judge.

On April 15, 1983, a tractor-trailer collided with an automobile at the intersection of Easton Parkway and Bay Street, in Talbot County. The tractor-trailer was owned by Kenneth Harris (Kenneth) and was being driven by his son Keith Harris (Keith);1 the automobile was owned by Win-[582]*582slow Womack and was being driven by his son Charles Womack.

In July, 1984, Kenneth sued Winslow and Charles Womack in the Circuit Court for Talbot County, seeking recovery for the damage caused to his tractor-trailer and for the loss of income from it. He contended that Charles Womack had negligently made a left turn in front of the tractor-trailer and thus charged him with failure to grant the right-of-way and failure to exercise due care. Winslow Womack was never served with process and so never became a party to the action. Kenneth’s case proceeded against Charles alone.

In October, 1984, Charles answered Kenneth’s complaint and in November filed a third-party claim against Keith. He alleged in that pleading that the accident was caused solely by Keith’s negligence—essentially, speeding, failure to keep a proper lookout, failure to yield the right-of-way to vehicles lawfully in the intersection, and failure to keep his vehicle under control. A copy of the third-party complaint was mailed to Kenneth; the sheriff’s return shows that a copy was served on Keith on December 11, 1984.

Keith never answered the third-party complaint, and, on November 20, 1986, on Womack's motion, the court entered an order of default against Keith. See Md. Rule 2-613(a). Notice of that order was apparently mailed to Keith and to counsel for Kenneth as required by Rule 2-613(b).2 When no response was made to the order of default, Womack moved for a default judgment. A copy of that motion also was mailed to counsel for Kenneth (who also later acted as counsel for Keith) although not to Keith himself, and, once again, no response was forthcoming. On January 20, 1987, the court entered the following order:

[583]*583“Upon legal and satisfactory proof that personal jurisdiction was obtained over the Third Party Defendant, Keith D. Johnson, that Notice of Entry of an Order of Default was promptly mailed to the Third Party Defendant pursuant to Rule 2-613(b), it is ...
ORDERED by this Court that the Judgment by default as to liability to the Third Party Plaintiff is entered against Keith D. Johnson, Third Party Defendant, for any and all sums which may be awarded against Defendant Charles Winslow Womack in favor of the Plaintiff, Kenneth Wilbur Harriss [sic], Sr.”

In March, 1987, Womack moved for summary judgment in the original action filed by Kenneth. The basis for the motion was the default judgment entered against Keith, which, according to Womack, established Keith’s negligence (or, at least, contributory negligence). That negligence, Womack argued, was imputed to Kenneth, for whom Keith was acting as agent, and thus Kenneth’s action was fatally flawed by contributory negligence.

Suddenly, upon the filing of that motion, Kenneth and Keith woke up to the consequence of the default judgment. On March 24, 1987, Kenneth and Keith jointly moved to set aside the enrolled judgment, asserting that Keith “was never served with process herein and only received papers from his father.” Kenneth also answered the motion for summary judgment.

At a hearing held on both motions on May 7, 1987, Keith testified that he had never been served with the third-party complaint by the sheriff, that he was not in Caroline County on December 11, 1984, when the sheriff reportedly served the papers on him,3 and that he had received the papers from his mother (not his father, as he alleged in his motion) “two months, no more than two months, a month, two months; could have been a little way either way” earlier. He produced testimony and some documents from the [584]*584Wheatley Trucking Company, for whom he hauled freight in December, 1984, indicating that (1) on December 10, he made a delivery in East Providence, Rhode Island, (2) either on the 11th or the 12th, he made a pick-up in Seabrook, New Jersey, and delivered that load to Cambridge, Maryland, and (3) he was scheduled to drive from Cambridge to Pittsburgh on the 12th. According to Keith, he not only did not receive any papers from the sheriff, but he never received any of the motions or the order of default.

It was stipulated that the sheriff had no independent recollection of whether he had served the papers on Keith and would be unable to identify Keith.

The court found that copies of the motions and order were, in fact, mailed to Keith. It also observed that he could have been at home in Caroline County for a short period, and thus available for service, on the evening of December 11. But the court never made a specific finding as to whether Keith had or had not been served by the sheriff. As “admittedly a conjecture or a suspicion on my part,” the court mused that the sheriff left the papers at Keith’s home “because somebody at that residence told him that Keith would be back shortly and they would give them to [him].”

Everyone “implicitly agrees,” said the court, “that the papers were in fact left there. What they disagree about is whether there was hand-to-hand service of process.” In that regard, the court noted, “[t]he evidence certainly raises a question about whether or not there was, in fact, personal service in the sense that Deputy Magrogan laid the suit papers in [Keith’s] hands____” Instead of resolving that evidentiary dispute, however, the court relied on other, equitable considerations in denying the motion to upset the judgment.

Accepting “as the beginning proposition” that Kenneth received the papers from the sheriff and then gave them to his wife, the court concluded that Kenneth had a motive not to give the papers to Keith which “makes me very suspi[585]*585cious about the testimony and about the chain of facts and circumstances as they’re outlined.” Although that suggests a finding that Keith’s story was less than credible, the court went on to hold that:

“In short, I will deny the motion to set aside the judgment, for the equitable reasons that I’ve indicated. If the law says that in the absence of clear and convincing evidence that the sheriff’s service was in fact hand-to-hand made, my decision is wrong, and if the Court of Special Appeals wants to tell me that, fine. Then the case would revert to a status of no judgment.”

Following that announcement, the court granted Womack’s motion for summary judgment and eventually entered judgment for Womack. This appeal, by Kenneth alone, ensued, the single argument being that the court “abused its discretion in failing to set aside a default judgment for lack of jurisdiction because Writ of Summons was never served on Keith____”

It is, of course, axiomatic that a court cannot render a valid in personam judgment against a person unless it first acquires jurisdiction over that person, and that jurisdiction is initially acquired by service of process. Whether a person has been served with process is essentially a question of fact, one that occasionally, as here, is in dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
542 A.2d 409, 75 Md. App. 580, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-womack-mdctspecapp-1988.