Keighler v. Savage Manufacturing Co.

12 Md. 383, 1858 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 21, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 12 Md. 383 (Keighler v. Savage Manufacturing Co.) 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
Keighler v. Savage Manufacturing Co., 12 Md. 383, 1858 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 1858).

Opinion

Le Grand, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

The bill filed in this cause has several objects in view, which may be thus stated: first, to enjoin the execution of a judgment in favor of appellants, and against the appellee; second, to procure, a full atid accurate account, embracing items and dates, of the dealings between the parties, the appellants having been the factors or agents of the appellee, for the sale of goods manufactured by the latter. The bill, in substance, alleges that the judgment sought to be enjoined was confessed by the appellee, not as an acknowledgment, absolutely, of so much indebtedness, but merely as a security for any which might thereafter be ascertained to exist. It also charges the accounts rendered by the appellants to be incorrect; that sales were reported to have been made, and at rates, when none such were made, and at the rates stated; that its agents, the appellants, took, on frequent occasions, to their own account goods, and reported them as bona fide sales, to its great loss. It asks for a full account of the dealing of the parties, including certain specifications and details, so that the complainant, when furnished with such information, may be enabled to surcharge and falsify. On this bill the court granted the injunction as prayed. The defendants answered, and the complainant excepted to the answer, both on the ground of impertinency and insufficiency. Testimony was taken, and a motion to dissolve the injunction and the exceptions were heard together. The court continued the injunction, afid Sustained of complainant’s exceptions to the sufficiency of the answer, those numbered in the record 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13. From this action of the court this appeal is taken.

A motion has been made to dismiss the appeal, because of the want of an answer. This motion is founded on the language of the acts of 1835, eh. 346 and 380, which provide that an appeal will not lie from an order granting, or from the refusal to 'dissolve an injunction, until the defendant has filed his answer, and on the case of Richter & Wheat vs. Pue & Wife, 9 G. & J., 475, which determines an insufficient answer to be no answer within the view of the acts of Assembly. It follows, therefore, that if the court below was right in hold[413]*413ing good (he exceptions of the complainant, or any of them of material importance, then this appeal must be dismissed. Before alluding to (he exceptions, we think it proper to say that we do not. agree with the counsel for the appellee, that no appeal would lie until the court below should adjudge the sufficiency of (he answer. It is for this court alone to determine when an appeal will lie. Excrs. of Oliver, vs. Palmer & Hamilton, 11 G. & J., 137. Thompson vs. McKim, 6 H. & J., 302.

To confide the decision of this question to the court of original jurisdiction, would be, in many cases, to deny all review by the appellate tribunal. Besides, the language of the decree in the case of Richter vs. Pue, shows plainly that it was the judgment of this court, and not that of the court below, which determined the insufficiency of the answer. It says, that the defendants having ‘ failed to file sufficient answers to the bill of complaint,” §'c. Not that the court below had so decided, but that this court so determined and adjudged, and, therefore, appeal dismissed.

It is a well settled principle of equity jurisprudence, that if a respondent submit to answer, he must answer fully; Warfield vs. Gambrill, 1 G. & J., 511; and that ‘‘the court expects from everyone seeking relief, unreserved frankness; and he who evidently and purposely holds back something, cannot complain if he should find himself regarded with suspicion, and distrust, and be refused that to which he may, in truth, be entitled, and under other appearances might have obtained.” 3 Bland, 132. By the same authority we are assured that whatever it may be in the English courts, “it has long been the practice of this court (chancery) to hear and decide upon the motion to dissolve and the exceptions to the answer at the same time.”

These citations are sufficient to show what are the questions before us, and the rules which are to decide them.

In the present condition of the record, it is impossible to •siate what, in fact, was the answer to the seventh exception. It refers to a paper marked X 4, as showing the dates and amounts of the receipts from collaterals in their hands. There [414]*414is no such exhibit in the record, and, of course, this court cannot undertake to decide upon its statements. It may, or not, have furnished a full and complete answer to the exception. All we can do, is to declare that the complainant is entitled to full knowledge of A he amount of collaterals in the hands of the defendants, and also what has been received from them, and, indeed, a correct and detailed statement of the condition of such securities. We must hold the exception to have been properly sustained. We are also of opinion that the eighth exception is well founded. The answer to it, to say the least of it, is ambiguous; it refers to books such as are supposed in the bill. It is the duty of the factor to keep books, in which shall be correctly entered the transactions on account of his principal, and the latter is entitled to a correct copy of the entries, including all memoranda connected therewith. The 9th, 10th, llth, 12th and 13th exceptions were, in our judgment, sufficiently answered. The answers, in substance, declare that the accounts were true in every particular, “and were fully examined, understood and approved;” that it is now impossible for the defendants to give the names of the purchasers in every instance; that had the demand been made within a reasonable time, they might have been able to have furnished the information. We think the settlement of accounts, with full knowledge of all the items of which they were composed, without any intimation given that the names of the purchasers would ever be required, is a fact entitled to considerable weight, for although in a case of actual fraud during the life time of the parties, limitations will not bar, (4 How., 561,) yet when parties with complete information adjust their accounts, it would be unreasonable to subject them, or either of them, at any considerable distance of time thereafter, to a demand for names which could have been readily furnished, if required, at the time of accounting, but which, in the lapse of time, if not absolutely impossible, it is very burdensome and expensive to obtain. The obligation of candor is reciprocal. If it were the intention ever to make such a demand, the defendants should have been notified of it at the date of some of the adjustments, of within a reasonable time thereafter. This view, [415]*415of course, is based upon the supposition that the conduct of the defendants has been honest and faithful in all things; if, on the contrary, they deceived the complainant by false statements, and by the concealment of material facts, then it, is competent to complainant to avail itself of every circumstance which will cast light upon the transactions of its factors.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Md. 383, 1858 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keighler-v-savage-manufacturing-co-md-1858.