Hodges v. Mullikin

1 Md. Ch. 503
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedAugust 27, 1828
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Md. Ch. 503 (Hodges v. Mullikin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodges v. Mullikin, 1 Md. Ch. 503 (Md. Ct. App. 1828).

Opinion

Bland, Chancellor.

Ordered, that the matter of the aforegoing petition stand for hearing on the thirteenth day of September next; and each party is authorized to take testimony, before any justice of the peace, to be read at the hearing, on giving to the opposite party three days notice as usual. Provided that a copy of this order, together with a copy of the said petition, be served on the complainant on or before the fifth day of September next.

Under this order testimony was taken and returned; sundry documents were filed in relation to the matter of the petition; and the case was thus brought before the court.

10th October, 1828. — Bland, Chancellor. — The matter of the petition of the defendant Mullikin standing ready for hearing, and the solicitors of the parties having been fully heard, the proceedings were read and considered.

It appears, that the defendant Thomas Harwood was indebted to the State, and also to several individuals; for the payment of which debts, the late Benjamin Harwood and the defendant Mulli-Idn, had become bound, by bond or by promissory notes, as his sureties; and that, for the purpose of saving harmless these his sureties, he executed a deed, on the 7th of April 1810, by which he conveyed certain real and personal property to them, and the survivor of them, in trust for the payment of those specified debts for which they or either, of them were bound as his surety : and, in case either of those debts were not paid, within five years from that day, with power to sell the whole, or so much thereof as might be necessary to satisfy them. After the execution of this deed of trust, this Thomas Harwood being indebed to the plaintiff Hodges, [505]*505lie, Harwood, on the 11th of September 1810, by a deed legally executed, mortgaged the same property to Hodges for the debt due to him. But as this mortgage recites the deed of trust, Hodges could only take subject to the prior lien created by that deed.

On this state of things, Hodges filed his bill, on the 15th of June 1822, against Thomas Harwood, and Benjamin Mullihin, as the surviving trustee, to have the property sold for the satisfaction of the' debt for which it had been mortgaged; by his bill, he makes an exhibit of the deed of trust as well as the mortgage, and states, that Benjamin Harwood was dead; in consequence of which the trust had survived to the defendant Mullikin. This suit, thus instituted, was marked on the docket for the use of Wilson £f Sons. Harwood, in his answer, filed on the 12lh of December 1822, states, that the debts specified in the deed of trust were still- unpaid, and insists that a decree in favour of Hodges cannot be passed; on the ground, that those creditors have a prior lien, and should be made parties. But Mulli/cin, in his answer, filed on the 14th of July 1823, merely says, that he has sustained no injury; has no claim to the property mentioned in the deed of trust; and submits to such decree as may be deemed just. To these answers a general replication having been filed, a commission was issued, which having been returned without collecting any proofs, the case was submitted on the notes of the solicitor for the plaintiff, and on the notes of the solicitor for the defendant Harwood. Upon which, on the 2d of May 1825, a decree was passed, that unless the defendant Harwood paid the mortgage debt and costs on or before the 2d of June, then next, the property should be sold. It does not appear, that the mortgage debt has been paid, or that any sale has been made under the decree.

On the 25th of August last the defendant Mullikin filed his petition, on oath, in which he sets forth particularly the course he had pursued, and how far he was uninformed; and concludes by averring, in general terms, that he acted throughout in ignorance of his legal rights and duties; in ignorance of the facts; and was misled and deceived by. his co-defendant Harwood; by the gross neglect of the specified creditors to notify him of their claims ; and by the omission of the plaintiff’s solicitor, Midiólas Brewer, to inform him of the answer of the defendant Harwood, and the matters therein stated. Upon which the petitioner asked [506]*506leave to file a bill of review, or to have granted to him such other relief as the nature of the case might require.

It has been urged, that the petition, having been sworn to, is of itself sufficient ground for granting leave to file a bill of review; that it was entirely unnecessary to have taken any testimony in support of the allegations of the petition; and therefore, that it would be needless to decide upon the objections made to the competency of the witnesses who have been examined.

I have met with no instance in the English books, in which it appears, that any testimony had been taken and read at the hearing of an application for leave'" to file a bill of review grounded on an alleged discovery of new matter unknown before the decree. It is clear, that the party himself, as well as his solicitor, if the solicitor be alive, and there is any reason, from the circumstances of the case, to believe that he might have known of the alleged new matter, must each of them make a particular, full, and distinct affidavit, that he did not, before the decree, know of that which is stated as the newly discovered matter.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Finley v. Bank of United States
24 U.S. 304 (Supreme Court, 1826)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Md. Ch. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodges-v-mullikin-mdch-1828.