Murphy v. Penniman

66 A. 282, 105 Md. 452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 66 A. 282 (Murphy v. Penniman) 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
Murphy v. Penniman, 66 A. 282, 105 Md. 452 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint was filed in this case in the name of George Dobbin Penniman and Campbell Carrington, receivers of the City Trust and Banking Company, against seventeen of the eighteen directors of that company, who were elected at the annual meeting held on January 14th, 1903. The company was placed in the hands of the receivers on June 6th, 1903, by an order of Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, on a bill filed by John A. Sheridan Company et al., which, amongst other things, alleged the insolvency of the company, which the answer admitted. The bill in this case alleges that the defendants were all of the directors of the company from the election on January 14th, 1903, excepting one Frank J. Kohler, who left the State in the early part of June, 1903, and whose whereabouts-%, unkown to the complainants.

Thomas Hughes and Clifton Doll Benson, attorneys, were directed by the Court to institute and conduct, in the name of the receivers, the legal proceedings necessary for the enforcement of the liability of the directors of the company for certain losses, and this bill, as well as another against the di *456 rectors elected in 1502, which will be considered in a separate opinion, was accordingly filed by them. Frank J. Murphy, one of the defendants, filed two pleas which were overruled, and Wm. B. Thomas, another defendant, filed demurrers to the bill which were also overruled. Appeals taken by those defendants from the order overruling their pleas and demurrers, respectively, present the questions for our consideration. We will first consider that of Mr. Thomas. There are twelve causes for the demurrers assigned, some of which can be considered together.

1. It will be well to first consider the cause assigned which numbered two. It is that Campbell Carrington is both a party plaintiff and a party defendant, and that his position as defendant is wholly antagonistic, inconsistent and irreconcilable with his position as plaintiff Mr. Carrington was one of the directors of the company and was also one of the receivers. It is not a practice to be commended, to have a person in his representative capacity sue himself as an individual, especially under such circumstances as this bill discloses. It would generally be better for a receiver so situated to resign, or in case he declined to do that for the Court to remove him, and appoint another, if necessary. For even if a suit be brought in the name of the corporation,- the receiver has such control over its books, papers, effects, etc., as to make it very undesirable to continue in that control when a suit, particularly of this character, is being carried on against him. But in this case the Court having jurisdiction of the trust, authorized and directed Messrs. Hughes and Benson to institute and conduct the preceedings in the name of the receivers, and hence although the receivers are the technical plaintiffs of record the solicitors in reality have control over the case. Any interference or obstruction placed in the way of the solicitors by the receivers, or either of them, could be reported to and corrected by the Court having jurisdiction over them, and hence the reason for the rule prohibiting, or at least disapproving of, the same individual being on both sides of the record does not have the same force as it ordinarily would. *457 Of course, we do not mean to intimate that either of these receivers have acted, or would act, improperly about the suit, as there is no such suggestion in the record, but we are speaking of what might happen under such conditions. While the practice of a person appearing on both sides of the record was condemned in Owens v. Crow, 62 Md. 497, it was referred to as one -‘which has to some extent prevailed,” and neither in that case nor in those of Stein v. Stein, 80 Md. 306, and Loney v. Loney, 86 Md. 655, did this Court refuse to consider the questions involved by reason of such practice. Of course such a suit at law would present another question (Grahame v. Harris, 5 G. & J. 489), but in a Court of equity “where the Court can determine the respective rights of the parties without much regard to whether they appear as plaintiffs or defendants.” (15 Ency. Pl. & Pr., 482), the rule is.not of such importance as to require the Court in all cases to dismiss a bill, or sustain a demurrer to it because such practice has been followed. The other defendants cannot be injured and we do not deem this a sufficient cause for the demurrer under the circumstances of this case.

2. The first, third and fourth causes assigned are to the whole bill, and may be considered together. They allege that the bill does not state a case which entitles the plaintiffs to such discovery or relief as is sought against this defendant; that it is vague, indefinite, ambiguous, uncertain and argumentative and does not state with sufficient certainty any fact which would give the plaintiffs cause of complaint against him.

There is no longer any question in this State about the jurisdiction of equity in cases of this character, Emerson v. Gaither, 103 Md. 564, and cases there cited. In Booth v. Robinson, 55 Md. 438, Alvey, J., in delivering the opinion, said that the cases “all concur in holding that, in equity, the directors are personally liable for the consequences of their frauds or malfeasance, or for some such gross negligence as may amount to a breach of trust, to the damage of the corporation or its stockholders.” That principle has been re *458 peated in Fisher v. Parr, 92 Md. 245, and Emerson v. Gaither, supra. There is no charge of fraud against the defendants in this bill and with the possible exception of the charge of making loans to officers and directors, it can hardly be claimed that there is any malfeasance charged, which resulted in loss. So the question really is whether there is such negligence charged against Thomas as makes him responsible, if proven. The bill is undoubtedly very skillfully drawn, although it is difficult to avoid the impression when reading it that some of the allegations have been made in a way that may make them sufficient on demurrer, but will be very difficult to prove. The expression running through the bill of “the said directors, and each and all of them' was evidently used to meet one of the questions raised in Fisher v. Parr, as to whether all of the defendants were charged with the acts of negligence, etc., relied' on, but the use of it in some connections would seem to be inappropriate, and to make some of the allegations uncertain, as to the meaning of the pleader. For example in paragraph (7), division (a), the several defendants are left in great uncertainty as to whether they are charged with permitting loose conduct of the. affairs of the company by being abseitt from meetings of the board, or by being present and taking part in them.

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 282, 105 Md. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-penniman-md-1907.