Picking v. STATE FINANCE CORPORATION

332 F. Supp. 1399, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13413
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 6, 1971
DocketCiv. 70-920
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 332 F. Supp. 1399 (Picking v. STATE FINANCE CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Picking v. STATE FINANCE CORPORATION, 332 F. Supp. 1399, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13413 (D. Md. 1971).

Opinion

FRANK A. KAUFMAN, District Judge.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

In Shakespeare v. Wilson, 40 F.R.D. 500, 502 (S.D.Cal.1966), Judge Irving Hill wrote:

This action * * * is a typical example of the kind of action being filed with increasing frequency under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981-1986. Having been defeated in state court proceedings and being unhappy and somewhat humiliated and frustrated by the results of such proceedings, these persons lash out at judges, attorneys, witnesses, court functionaries, newspapers and anyone else in convenient range, terming all of them corruptly evil and charging them with perjury and conspiracy in a last desperate effort to re-litigate the issues on which they have once lost and hoping to secure sizeable damages to boot.

On August 1, 1968, plaintiff herein filed an action in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County seeking removal 1 of an automobile allegedly stored without plaintiff’s consent on her property. 1a On the basis of the pleadings, Judge John Grason Turnbull, sitting in that Court, entered summary judgment in favor of State Finance Corporation, one of three defendants in that action, and one of the defendants herein. That ruling was affirmed by the Court of Appeals of Maryland in Picking v. State Finance Co., 257 Md. 554, 263 A.2d 572 (1970), in which Judge Digges held that Judge Turnbull’s ruling in favor of State Finance left unadjudicated the claims against the other two defendants and that therefore the case was not ripe for appeal to the Court of Appeals of Maryland under the applicable Maryland Rule of Procedure. However, Judge Digges also stated (at 558, 263 A.2d at 574):

It may be appropriate, however, to state that we have reviewed the record and concluded that Judge Turnbull was correct in granting the motion for summary judgment in favor of State Finance. * '* *

Subsequently, plaintiff instituted this action, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1343 2 and 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, naming originally as defendants State Finance Corporation and Judges Digges, Turn-bull and Hall Hammond (Chief Judge and one of the five members of the panel of the Maryland Court of Appeals which heard and dismissed the appeal in Picking, supra). In her complaint herein, plaintiff seeks “to have her Maryland property freed from unlawful trespass; to redress by money damages, deprivation of her civil rights * * *; and, to have a Declaratory Judgment declar *1401 ing that judicial immunity of Judges from liability * * * is itself unlawful. * * * ” Plaintiff appears pro se, as she did in the Court of Appeals of Maryland. 3

All of the original defendants herein filed motions to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b) (6). Following written and oral argument in this Court, plaintiff filed a “Motion to Supplement Complaint and Add Defendants.” By that motion, plaintiff seeks to add as defendants Messrs. Melvin A. Yates and Joe Judge and Judge John N. Maguire of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, and alleges, inter alia,:

On August 1, 1968, Plaintiff filed a Civil Action in the Baltimore County Court, numbered 71760, against an automobile salesman Melvin A. Yates, used auto dealer Joe Judge, and State Finance Corp., for conspiracy to place, and placing, on her Arbutus, Md. property, a repossessed automobile (on default of buyer’s payments) (sum $701.-00) financed by State Finance Corp., as shown by the Md. Title Certificate. (Original sum, $1,320.00.)
On Sept. 11, 1970, Melvin Yates and Joe Judge, in County Action (#71760), obtained on Petition from a (non-named) Balto. County Judge, — an ex parte Order for Plaintiff to Show Cause why the First Count of her Complaint should not be dismissed (Md. Rule 203a), on the ground that she was not the real party in interest, because she held title to the said Arbutus property with her husband Guy W. Picking. Facts are established that husband and wife own title in entirety, as publicly recorded since 1938 in the Balto. County Court House, and at all times they were in possession of the property. The First Complaint Count relates to a continuing trespass by automobile on Plaintiff’s vacant lot adjoining her improved property. The Second Count relates to destruction of parts of Plaintiff’s building, which parts, had been no part of any oral monthly rental agreement with Yates as “roomer.”
On Oct. 13, 1970, at the Hearing of said Motion and Answer to Show Cause Order, presided by Judge Maguire, it was clearly evident that the Motion to Dismiss was based on conspiracy for the benefit of State Finance Corp., especially, in effecting Dismissal of the First Count, in which it was involved, by having Judge Maguire coerce Plaintiff into coercing her husband to join as an unwilling nonresident plaintiff in order that State Finance Corp. could immediately attach and sell Plaintiff’s property to effect payment of its Judgment for Brief costs resulting from the action of the Md. Court of Appeal Judges, when they ignored Plaintiff’s ground of appeal, from the ignoring of ruling by County Judge (Turnbull), on her Petition for Mandatory Injunction against the trespass (Contained matter in the original Complaint) (County #71760). (The Order for Appeal Costs had not been signed by any Appeal Judge, but, ex parte by a non-named County Judge). The unlawful purpose was to effect payment of Brief costs without waiting for final adjudication of all of the issues as to all of the parties.
The evident designs of the conspiracy are: (1) To prevent Plaintiff from proceeding in the Balto. County Court and to prevent her from taking an appeal to the State Court of Appeals because the Order being conditional and uncertain does not constitute finality; (2) To subject the Complaint, by duress, — and unlawfully, — to the defense of statutory limitation of time by adding a new party after the limitation of time has expired; (3) To indirectly and by trickery, unlawfully subject Mr. Picking to Mrs. Picking’s financial obligations; (4) To deprive Plain *1402 tiff of her “personal Constitutional Right” to sue “for separate redress” from defendants’ tortious damage to her, apart from any damage sustained by her husband for the same wrong. * * *

Whether plaintiff’s complaint is considered as originally filed or as amended in accordance with plaintiff’s motion to amend plaintiff is not entitled to any relief herein.

Because plaintiff’s complaint seeks redress for an “infringement of property rights,” Hague v.

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Bluebook (online)
332 F. Supp. 1399, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picking-v-state-finance-corporation-mdd-1971.