Legum v. Blank

65 A. 1071, 105 Md. 126, 1907 Md. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 16, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 65 A. 1071 (Legum v. Blank) 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
Legum v. Blank, 65 A. 1071, 105 Md. 126, 1907 Md. LEXIS 18 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instuted in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City. There are six common counts and a special one (7), which alleges that the plaintiff purchased, by contract in writing, of the defendants two leasehold properties in the city of Baltimore, subject to an original ground rent of one cent each, with the further condition that “should said ground rents not be original rents,” said contract could, at the option of the plaintiff, be declared null and void; that the plaintiff paid upon the purchase price of said properties a deposit of $25 *128 upon the express condition, recited in the contract, that said deposit should become immediately due and payable from the defendants to the plaintiff, should said ground rents not be original rents. It is then alleged that “an examination of the title of said properties discloses the fact” that the said ground rents were not original rents, but were sub-ground rents, and the plaintiff notified the defendants that he would not accept title to said properties by reason thereof, and demanded said $25 so paid as a.deposit, but the defendants failed and refused to pay the same. The narr. concluded with a claim of $75 damages.

A demurrer was filed to the narr. and the following reasons assigned: A. Because the amount claimed ($75) is not within the jurisdiction of the Court, and this suit should have been brought before a Justice of the Peace; and B. Because this is an action of assumpsit, and the title to land is' not involved in such action, and therefore the amount claimed is not within the jurisdiction of the Court; and for other reasons to be assigned at the hearing. The demurrer was sustained, judg-" ment on the demurrer entered and the plaintiff appealed. At the argument it was stated that the appeal was prosecuted because it often happened in Baltimore that such contracts provided fora deposit of less than $100, and there was uncertainty as to whether suit could be brought for the recovery of such deposit before a Justice of the Peace, by reasons of the provisions in Art. 52 of the Code, prescribing their civil jurisdiction. After providing in sec. 6 of that Article that such jurisdiction “extends to all cases for the enforcement of contracts and to obtain redress for wrongs where the debt or damages claimed shall not exceed one hundred dollars,” etc. Sec. 7 provides: “But no Justice of the Peace shall have any jurisdiction in actions where the title to land is involved, nor in actions for slander, for breach of promise to marry or to enforce any lien for work done or materials furnished.” Sec. 8 (which was sec. 33 of Art. 51 of Code of 1860) makes this provision: “If the defendant in an action before a Justice of the Peace for cutting, destroying or carrying away timber or wood *129 to or from any land in this State, or for doing any other injury to such lands shall allege in writing that he claims title to said lands, or that he acted under a person claiming title to the same, whom he shall name in such allegation, and shall verify said allegation by oath, the justice shall take no further cognizance of the case.”

Sec. 28 of Art. 4 of the present Constitution provides that “The Superior Court of Baltimore City, the Court of Common Pleas and the Baltimore City Court shall each have concurrent jurisdiction in all civil common law cases, and concurrently all the jurisdiction which the Superior Court of Baltimore City and the Court of Common Pleas no'w have;” except in equity and other cases mentioned. The jurisdiction those Courts “now have,” as used in that clause, referred to that under the Constitution of 1864. The test of jurisdiction in actions ex contractu of the three Courts above named, “is not merely the amount claimed, but also the amount recovered, which recovery must exceed one hundred dollars." 1 Poe, sec. 31. That was so decided in Rohr v. Anderson, 51 Md. 218, in which case a verdict was rendered for $87.84, and on motion a non pros of the action was entered. In Reese v. Hawks, 63 Md. 130, an action was brought in the Court of Common Pleas on two promissory notes each for the sum of $50.00. As the plaintiff was entitled to recover, as of right, interest on the two notes, the amount due him, including interest, exceeded one hundred dollars, but .inasmuch as the jurisdiction of that Court was limited to suits “where the debt or damages claimed, exclusive of interest, shall be over one hundred dollars” the defendant filed a plea to the jurisdiction. That of Justices of the Peace being limited to cases in which “the debt or damages claimed shall not exceed one hundred dollars,” the amount recovered in actions ex contractu being the test, there was presented a case where a Justice of the Peace could not enter judgment, because the amount, with interest, exceeded -one hundred dollars, ahd the Court of Common Pleas could not enter one under sec. 34 of Art. 4 ot the Constitution of 1864, because the amount of the debt, ex- *130 elusive of interest, was not “over one hundred dollars.” But sec. 33 of that Article gave the Superior Court jurisdiction “where the debt or damages claimed, exclusive of interest, shall exceed the sum of one thousand dollars * * * and in all other civil cases not hereinafter assigned to the Court of Common Pleas.” This is termed in the opinion of Reese v. Hawks, “a residuary jurisdiction covering all civil cases not assigned to the Court of Common Pleas,” and this Court said in speaking of it; “The. residuary grant of jurisdiction to the Superior Court, we take it, was designed to cover such a claim, and so applying it, a forum was supplied for a claim otherwise remediless, and jurisdiction was completed, in conjunction with that already expressly allotted, for every kind of demand.” It was then held that as the Constitution of 1867 gives the Superior Court, the Court of Common Pleas and the Baltimore City Court, concurrently, all the jurisdiction previously exercised by the first two, except as otherwise provided, the last two named “share the residuary jurisdiction to entertain a suit where the interest recoverable carries a claim, which otherwise would not exceed one hundred dollars, beyond that sum.” The Court then distinguished that case from Rohr v. Anderson, showing that the amount involved in the latter was within the jurisdiction of a Justice of the Peace.

So in this case inasmuch as Justices of the Peace have no jurisdiction in actions where the title to land is involved, it would seem to be clear that the Court of Common Pleas', as well as either of the other two Courts named, would have jurisdiction in an action ex contractu where such title is involved, within the meaning of the statute, although the amount that could be recovered would not exceed one hundred dollars, there being no other tribunal vested with jurisdiction to entertain such suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 1071, 105 Md. 126, 1907 Md. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legum-v-blank-md-1907.