Murray v. Hurst

163 A. 183, 163 Md. 481, 85 A.L.R. 442, 1932 Md. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 30, 1932
Docket[No. 20, October Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 163 A. 183 (Murray v. Hurst) 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
Murray v. Hurst, 163 A. 183, 163 Md. 481, 85 A.L.R. 442, 1932 Md. LEXIS 44 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

John Hurst, a resident of Baltimore City, died testate, and letters testamentary were granted by the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City to his. executors, 3L Bertha Hurst and Benoni Price Hurst.

While the estate was in course of administration, George Henry Murray brought an action at law against the executors in their representative capacity. The suit was begun in the Superior Court of Baltimore City on July 1st, 1931, by the filing of a declaration, and was instituted, as is authorized by statute, in the jurisdiction where the executors were granted letters testamentary. Code, art. 75, sec. 158; Bonaparte v. State, 63 Md. 474. The cause of action was the breach by the testator of an alleged contract of agency between him and the plaintiff with respect to the development, management, and sale of certain real estate of the testator. The. plaintiff filed a bill of particulars, which was a purporting account of the receipts and disbursements of the agent and disclosed a balance due him of $2,453.72. The writ was returned “Summoned K. Bertha Hurst to July Return Day and copy left. Ron est as to Benoni Price Hurst.”

The action was not brought under the speedy judgment act in effect in Baltimore City, and the local statute applicable provides: “308. When a declaration in any action shall *484 be filed in court, and a copy thereof delivered to the defendant before the day of the return of the writ, and the defendant shall be summoned before the said day of the return of the writ, he shall plead before the next succeeding return day, or judgment by default for want of a plea shall be entered by the court or clerk thereof, upon motion in writing made by the plaintiff, or his attorney, then, or at any time thereafter, before the filing of a plea by the defendant, unless the court for good reasons shall have granted said defendant further time to plead; and upon such entry of judgment, the plaintiff may forthwith sue out his writ of inquiry, or otherwise enter up final judgment according to the course of the court.” Flack’s Code of .Public Local Laws, art. 4, sec. 308, p, 1048.

Ho appearance having been entered nor plea filed, the plaintiff filed on September 8th, 1930, a motion in writing for a judgment by default for want of plea against K. Bertha Hurst, co-executrix, and the court forthwith accordingly entered this judgment. As the plaintiff did not then extend the judgment, notice, according to the rules of practice, was later served upon K. Bertha Hurst to show cause why the judgment by default should not be extended.

The record contains rule 20 of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, which provides that “a judgment by default may be stricken out at any time within thirty days after its entry, unless otherwise provided by statute.” There was no statutory provision limiting the operation of this rule, and the attorney for the two executors, upon the service of the notice of an application for an extension of the judgment by default, prepared a petition for the executors reciting the state of the pleading's and the returns indorsed on the writ of summons, and prayed that the interlocutory judgment be not extended against the one executrix, because she had no knowledge that such a separate judgment could be entered until both defendants had been summoned, and prayed the court to allow the defendants to file proper pleas in order that the case might be tried on its merits inasmuch as the defendants had a valid and meritorious defense. *485 The allegations of this petition were verified by the attached oath of the defendant who had been served with the process, and at the foot of the petition was an order which was in conformity with the prayer of the petition and which had been prepared for the signature of the judge.

At this time the courts of Baltimore City were in the midst of the summer vacation, and this petition was presented by the attorney for the defendants to the particular judge who was then sitting under special weekly assignment. According to the record, the judge was informed that the attorney would enter his appearance for the defendant executor who had not been summoned, and who was not a resident of the State of Maryland. The attorney further told the judge that he had ready for filing the pleas of the executor Benoni Price Hurst, setting up a defense on the merits. The court orally stated that the counsel need not file the petition, but that he should file his pleas, and thereupon, on September 23rd, 1931, the attorney did not file the petition which he had shown to the judge, but filed for the nonresident executor the general issue pleas, which denied that his testator was ever indebted to the plaintiff or had ever promised him as alleged.

Mothing further was done of record until January 21st, 1932, when the parties appeared in court for a hearing. The defendants objected in open court to the extension of the judgment by default, on the ground that they had a meritorious defense, and that the pleas by one of the executors prevented the entry of a final judgment against the estate of the testator. The presiding judge ruled that the plaintiff had a legal right to have the judgment by default extended, and that, according to his practice in similar circumstances, he would immediately extend the judgment by default in the full amount claimed, and then strike out the judgment so entered and permit the executors to defend. The court was advised that $2,868.55 was the full amount claimed by the plaintiff, and, without testimony, extended the judgment in that amount, and forthwith struck down' the judgment on defendant’s motion, and then set aside the interlocutory *486 judgment against K. Bertha Hurst, executor of the testator, on condition that the executors file in the cause a bond in the penalty of $2,500 as security for the payment of any final judgment which might be entered against such executors. The bond was filed and approved, and the judgment by default stricken dow.n, and the court granted the defendants leave to plead, and directed that the cause stand for trial on its merits. The two executors thereupon jointly pleaded that their testator had never promised nor was he indebted as alleged; the plaintiff joined issue, and, on the same day, the case proceeded to trial before the court, without the aid of a jury, and late on the second day the verdict was rendered in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff afterwards moved for a new trial, which was overruled, and a judgment was entered in favor of the defendants for costs.

The principal questions on the appeal relate to the action of the court in annulling the interlocutory and final judgments. It has been observed that the extension of the judgment by default was a mere formality in which the court’s declared purpose to rescind inhered. The annulment of the judgment was within the period of thirty days, which in Baltimore City is the equivalent of the current term of court, and so was within the sound discretionary control of the court. Malone v. Topfer, 125 Md. 157, 163, 93 A. 397. The appellant does not argue that the final judgment, which was entered without any testimony of the amount due, was not properly set aside (Code, art. 75, sec. 94; McLaughlin v. Ogle, 53 Md. 610; Rutherford v. Pope, 15 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
163 A. 183, 163 Md. 481, 85 A.L.R. 442, 1932 Md. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-hurst-md-1932.