Mylander v. Page

159 A. 770, 162 Md. 255, 1932 Md. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 7, 1932
Docket[Nos. 22-24, January Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 159 A. 770 (Mylander v. Page) 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
Mylander v. Page, 159 A. 770, 162 Md. 255, 1932 Md. LEXIS 119 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

*258 Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Each, of the appellants, plaintiffs helow, brought suit at law to recover shares of stock, or their value, and damages for the detention of them, from the Chesapeake Bank, the Coale Corporation, and the two individuals, Delcher and Coale; and, after the appointment of the bank commissioner as receiver of the assets of the bank, he was, upon petition and order of the court of law in which the suits had been filed, substituted in each case as defendant in the place of the bank. The stock sought was first pledged with the bank by Coale, Incorporated, or Coale, individually, for a loan of his own. It appears that he later sold 300 shares of it to the plaintiffs in equal proportions, and the plaintiffs paid him the full purchase price, and new certificates were procured in their names, but Coale failed to pay off the loan as security for which the stock was held, and deposited the new certificates, too, as security, along with powers of attorney or assignments, in blank, from the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs produced, evidence to show that these powers or assignments had been given for another purpose never carried out, and that Coale used them fraudulently to continue their stock pledged as security for his unpaid debt to the bank. The bank, they contend, released its lien on the stock by surrendering the old certificates to have the new ones issued in the plaintiffs’ names, and, further, could not hold the new certificates as a bona fide pledgee, because it had notice, or knew facts to put it upon notice, of the plaintiff’s actual rights in the stock, and through- one of its officers, Delcher, became a participant in the fraudulent act of the broker, Coale, in misusing the powers or assignments.

The three suits, all of which involved identical facts and questions of law, were consolidated and tried as one before the court without a jury, and verdicts and judgments were rendered in favor of the bank commissioner, the substituted defendant, and Delcher, and against the remaining defendants. On appeal the plaintiffs contest the judgment in favor of the receiver and Delcher, alleging errors in rulings on evi *259 deuce and prayers for declarations of the law applicable to the case.

The receiver is in possession of the stock certificates, and is apparently the only defendant in possession of any considerable assets: and he is substantially, therefore, the one defendant pursued. The plaintiffs’ prayers for rulings of law referred only to the receiver and the bank as defendants. There was no dismissal of the other defendants, however’, and verdicts and judgments were duly rendered for or against them as stated. A question of the propriety of maintaining such actions against the bank commissioner, as receiver, in place of the bank, arises at the outset, and should not be passed without comment, although it was not discussed in argument, and the record contains no mention of it.

Plainly, we think, the bank commissioner, when he becomes receiver of a state bank, does not become the successor of the corporate personality, as does a statutory receiver upon dissolution. The statue under which he is appointed, Code, art. 11, sec. 9, designates him as the receiver and possessor of the assets for whatever liquidation may prove to be necessary. The corporation itself is not only left in existence, but it may, according to the terms of the statute, be permitted to resume business. And by those terms, too, the court of equity, when applied to, assumes jurisdiction over only the property and assets of the corporation. This being true, how are these suits excepted from the resulting general principle that a receiver does not succeed as defendant in the suits pending against the corporation ? Emory v. Faith, 113 Md. 253, 77 A. 386; 1 Clark, Receivers, sec. 561; St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. San Benito Co., 4 Fed. (2nd), 1007; Fountain v. Stickney, 145 Iowa, 167, 123 N. W. 947; Green v. Coleman-Nelson Corp., 115 Okl. 144, 242 P. 196; People v. Smith Co., 230 App. Div. 268, 275, 243 N. Y. S. 446; Deschenes v. Tallman, 348 N. Y. 33, 36, 161 N. E. 321. And if these particular suits can be excepted on proper, grounds, then has the equity court which has jurisdiction of the assets consented to the substitution of the receiver as defendant?

Counsel for the appellants describe the actions brought as *260 in detinue, the old form of action for the recovery of goods in specie, and the judgments demanded in the declarations were for “the return of said goods, or their value, and $5,000 for the detention,” the established form of demand in detinue. Code, art. 75, sec. 28. But detinue for the return of goods, like replevin, is maintainable only against one who has the goods in his possession (1 Poe, Pl. & Pr., see. 521), and here Delcher, the Ooale Corporation, and Coale, the individual, who were not in possession of the stock sought, were joined as defendants, and the verdict and judgment rendered against the Coale Corporation and Coale, without any objection made to form or contents, were for damages only. If the plaintiffs should succeed further and obtain a verdict and judgment against the bank commissioner and Delcher, there would apparently have to be a distinction drawn, and the recovery against Delcher restricted to damages, treating the suits as the equivalents of actions in trover, while the receiver would be required to return the stock claimed. “Every judgment in detinue, and replevin,” says the Code, art. 75, sec. 128, “and every verdict therein shall ascertain separately the value of the goods and chattels and the damages, if any, for their detention.” But the verdict and judgment taken in these suits against the Coale corporation and Coale were “for $2,000, the sum found by the court, with interest from April 2, 1931, and costs of suit.”

Eor recovery of the stock in specie from among the assets taken charge of by the receiver a proceeding against the receiver would naturally be proper, when a dispute of the claimant’s right makes any proceeding necessary. The appropriate form would seem to be that upon petition in the receivership case in equity. 1 Clark, Receivers, secs. 543 and 664; Praeger v. Implement Co., 122 Md. 303, 89 A. 501. But there are some situations in which the equity court may find reasons for authorizing the l’eceiver to intervene and defend a pending suit for the same purpose. And, if the suit is confined to the demand for the return of property from among the assets, there would be no objection to making the receiver a defendant in his own name. Possibly the *261

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 770, 162 Md. 255, 1932 Md. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mylander-v-page-md-1932.