Horn v. Bohn

53 A. 576, 96 Md. 8, 1902 Md. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 A. 576 (Horn v. Bohn) 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
Horn v. Bohn, 53 A. 576, 96 Md. 8, 1902 Md. LEXIS 133 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant filed a bill in equity to enjoin the appellee from trespassing and entering upon his farm for the purpose of harvesting and threshing the rye and wheat crops thereon, and also for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of, harvest and preserve those crops. The appellee was a tenant of the appellant until the first of April, 1901, and those crops *10 had been sown during his tenancy. The bill alleges that the appellee had threatened that he would destroy and waste the crops growing on the farm, when he went to harvest the rye and wheat, that .he had declared to a tenant of the appellant that “he would drive over and utterly ruin the oats crop,” that he had threatened that he would not thresh the crops at the barn as the custom of the country required, and declared that he'would thresh them in the fields and “will blow the straw all over the fields,” thereby killing the grass then'set and growing thereon. It was also alleged that the appellee was insolvent and that the appellant would sustain irreparable damage unless he was restrained by the Court. A preliminary injunction was granted and a receiver was appointed. The defendant by his answer denied most of the material allegations against him and made motions to dissolve the injunction and to discharge the receiver. The Court passed an order setting them down for hearing and authorizing testimony to be taken orally. A hearing of those motions resulted in the Court passing an order on the ioth day of July, 1901, dissolving the injunction, directing the receiver to file a report within ten days, and giving the defendant possession and control of the crops, reserving a lien for the payment of the costs and expenses incurred by the receiver, and proper compensation for his services to be thereafter allowed, upon the share of the plaintiff in the crops. The order further provided that if the costs and expenses- incurred by the receiver were not paid by the plaintiff to the receiver within five days after demand, then the defendant was authorized and directed to sell so much of the crops to which the plaintiff was entitled, as was necessary to pay them. The bill was retained until the receiver reported and was discharged and for the further order of the Court.

On the 23rd of July, 1901, the plaintiff filed a petition asking the Court to modify the order of the ioth of July in so far as it applied to the plaintiff’s paying the costs incurred by the receiver in cutting the crops, and also as to the creation of a lien on his half. The reasons stated for the modifications *11 were that under their contract the defendant was required to cut the crops at his own expense, and the plaintiff had filed a bond by which the defendant was indemnified for any moneys due him under the decision of the Court. On hearing that petition the Court passed an order allowing the receiver a commission of two and one-half per centum upon fourteen hundred dollars (the value of the crops) as compensation for his services as such receiver, “which amount, together with the expenses incurred by him as appears from his report, shall be paid as provided by the previous order of the Court passed in this case on the ioth day of July, A. D. 1901, except as to the sum of $16.17, amount expended for binder twine, and the one-half of the expenses paid for harvesting, to wit: $24, making the aggregate sum of $40.17, which amount shall be paid by the defendant.” That order also discharged the receiver, dismissed the bill and directed the plaintiff to pay the costs of the suit, to be taxed by the clerk. On the 21st of September, 1901, the plaintiff appealed from.both orders.

A motion to dismiss the appeal from the order of July 10th, 1901, has been made on the ground that it was not taken in time. That motion must prevail, but as the costs and expenses are referred to in the order of July 23rd, to “be paid as provided by the previous order,” etc., those questions are presented by the appeal from the last order.

An order discharging a receiver does not of itself afford a ground for appeal (Cain v. Warford, 7 Md. 282; Washington Railroad Co. v. Southern Md. Railroad Company, 55 Md. 153), but as the order of the 23rd of July embraces items of expense which the appellant contends are not properly chargeable to him in the manner that he is charged, we will inquire into the proof on that subject, which will incidentally involve the consideration of the propriety of appointing a receiver.

We do not see any occasion for such appointment. It is conceded that it was not only the right, but the duty of the appellee to harvest the crops. By the terms of the agreement he was compelled to house and properly care for all crops *12 grown on the farm, and to deliver to the appellant one-half thereof, and it is stated in the record that “it is admitted that the out-going tenant goes back to cut the crop.” The testimony shows that the appellee objected to his successor in the tenancy (Mr. Black) sowing oats on the strips of land that ran through the wheat fields and Mr. Black said the appellee threatened that if he did he would haul the wheat across the strips, which he claims would seriously damage the oats. Mr. Black said he told him that if he proposed to do that he could not have any stable accommodations for the threshing, to which he replied “if that is the way then, he says, I don’t know if I will thresh in the barn, maybe I will and maybe I won’t.” That conversation was about the first of April — before the oats were sown. There does not seem to have been any further conversation on the subject before the injunction was obtained, which was on the 24th of June, 1901. That was certainly very slight ground for taking such summary proceedings as were adopted. The appellant or his agent might at least have made some further inquiry of the appellee as to what he proposed to do, and if it was important that the grain should be threshed at the barn the appellant might have insisted upon Mr. Black allowing him to do so. If they had reason to believe that he would unnecessarily injure the oats, the appellant and Mr. Black, who owned them, might have taken steps to protect them — perhaps could have obtained an injunction for that purpose, if he insisted upon driving over them in such way as to seriously injure them. The allegation that he said he “will blow the straw all over the fields” is not only positively denied by the appellee, but the only witness who testified to it is flatly contradicted by another witness who was said to be present. Then, too, the allegation that the defendant was insolvent is not sustained by the proof. So without further discussion of the testimony, we think it clear that the appellant whollyfailed to make out a case that justified taking the crops out of the possession and control of the appellee, and therefore they were properly returned to him.

The question of costs in equity cases “is a matter resting *13 in the sound discretion of the Court, from the exercise of which no appeal will lie.” Hamilton v. Schwehr, 34 Md. 107; Dodge v. Stanhope, 55 Md. 113.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 576, 96 Md. 8, 1902 Md. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-bohn-md-1902.