Primrose v. Kendricks & Roberts, Inc.

2 Balt. C. Rep. 483
CourtBaltimore City Court
DecidedJune 22, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 483 (Primrose v. Kendricks & Roberts, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Primrose v. Kendricks & Roberts, Inc., 2 Balt. C. Rep. 483 (Md. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.—

It affords me great pleasure to comply with the request made by both counsel at the time the court gave its reasons for overruling the demurrer in this case on late Saturday, that the [484]*484court’s opinion should be put in some more tangible form, inasmuch as it was suggested the question was one of considerable importance to a number of persons and institutions not connected with this particular case.

On June 11th, 1904, the plaintiff issued an attachment on warrant for the sum of $1,171.56 open account, against the non-resident defendant, and laid it in the hands of the Resinol Chemical Company, garnishee. On June 27th, 1904, the defendant came in, filed a bond with surety, and dissolved the attachment. The Title Guarantee and Trust Company of Scranton was the surety on the bond.

On September 13, 1905, the defendant, the Kendricks and Roberts, was declared a bankrupt in the 'State of Pennsylvania. In the short note case, the defendant has filed a plea of discharge in bankruptcy. The plaintiff has replied to said plea, and the defendant has demurred to the plaintiff’s replication. The condition of the bond is: “That if the said Kendricks and Roberts, Incorporated, shall satisfy any judgment that shall be recovered in said case against it, then the said obligation shall be void, else to remain in full force and virtue in law.”

In the argument of the demurrer to the replication to the plea of discharge in bankruptcy no stress was laid on the particular form the pleading has assumed, it being conceded that the question was one of substance and the whole learned argument for the defense was addressed to the main proposition at the bottom of that replication.

That replication is founded upon the case of Hill vs. Harding, 130 U. S. 699, in which the Supreme Court of the United States affirmed an Illinois judgment against a discharged bankrupt with a “perpetual stay of execution”; and it is that form that this replication has borrowed and proposes to use.

Quoting from the case just referred to, “If an attachment of property in an action in a State court is dissolved by the defendant entering into a recognizance, with sureties, to pay within 90 days after final judgment against him, the amount of that judgment, and the defendant after a verdict against him, obtains his discharge in bankruptcy upon proceedings commenced more than four months after the attachment; the Bankrupt Act does not prevent the State court from rendering judgment against him on the verdict with a perpetual stay of execution, so as to leave the plaintiff at liberty to proceed against the sureties.”

Further quoting from the opinion in that case: “Whether the State court is powerless to render even a formal judgment against him for the single purpose of charging the sureties, when the attachment has been dissolved and bond given, depends not upon any provision of the Bankrupt Act but upon the extent of the authority of the State court under the local law. The bond of recognizance takes the place of the attachment as a security for the debt of the attaching creditors * * * the giving of the bond or recognizance, by dissolving the attachment, increases the estate to be distributed in bankruptcy. The judgment is not against the personal property of the bankrupt, and has no other effect than to enable the plaintiff to charge the sureties, in accordance with the express terms of their contract, and with the spirit of the provision of the Bankrupt Act which declares that “no discharge shall release, discharge or affect any person liable for the same debt for or with the bankrupt, either as parties, joint contractor, indorsee, surety or otherwise.” * * *

Quoting still further from the same decision: “If the bond was executed before the commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy, the discharge of the bankrupt protects him from liability to the obligees, so that, in an action on the bond against him and his sureties, any judgment recovered by the plaintiffs must be accompanied with a perpetual stay of execution against him, hut tMs discharge does not prevent that judgment from being rendered generally against them.”

The replication to the plea of discharge is founded on that case, while the demurrer is based upon the contention that there is no such practice known to the State of Maryland as the practice in Illinois.

It is objected that the practice is an absolute novelty in the State of Maryland, and not being among the established practices that warrant a special or qualified judgment in the form mentioned, viz.: a perpetual stay of execution, no court has the power to introduce such a practice. That is in brief the ground of the demurrer.

[485]*485It is true, as contended by the defendant, that the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States cannot be taken any further than simply to decide that such a judgment as that rendered by the Illinois court is not in conflict with any provision of the Federal law, and raises no question of Federal jurisdiction; and that is the extent to which the court went in that case. It cannot be said that the Supreme Court of the United Stares has decided for all States, as a general proposition, that such a qualified judgment is a proper judgment. That is left to the local law of each State.

A very strenuous and able argument has been offered to show that it is impossible for such a qualified judgment; to be entered in the State of Maryland, there being no precedent for it and no established law to that effect.

In reply to that it was argued by counsel for ifiaintiff that a sufficient warrant for such a qualified judgment can readily be found in the general language of Article 26, Section 14, of the Code, under the head of “Judgment” : “The court shall give judgment in all actions according as the very right of the cause and matter in law shall appear 'to them, without regarding any matters of mere form, as sufficient matter shall appear in the proceedings upon which the court shall proceed to give judgment, and it shall appear that the action has been commenced after the cause thereof did accrue.”

That is an old act passed as far back as 1763; and with respect to it we have a very interesting comment to which I called attention at the time the case was argued by a Maryland lawyer and judge, no less distinguished than Chief Justice Taney himself. The great jurist said this:

“There are many technicalities in common law proceedings which the courts ought to have reformed long ago. The power has been given them by the Legislature to give judgment according to the right of the matter, without regard to matter of form and yet they have obstinately, I must say, continued to treat as matter of substance what evidently was nothing but form, merely because it was called substance in some of the old law books.” Tyler’s Memoir of Taney, cited in Juridical Equity, Section 149.

It was argued on behalf of the plaintiff that the condition of this bond ought to be construed just as if this provision of the statute had been incorporated in it. In other words, the statute should be read into the bond, so that the undertaking of the surety would be that he would pay “any judgment" which a court would find to be “right” without respect to the particular form.

However that may be, it is at least palpably clear that the statute referred to is not to be wholly disregarded, put aside or ignored.

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Related

Peck v. Jenness
48 U.S. 612 (Supreme Court, 1849)
Doe v. Childress
88 U.S. 642 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Hill v. Harding
130 U.S. 699 (Supreme Court, 1889)
Butler v. Mullen
100 Mass. 453 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1868)
State ex rel. Buckey v. Culler
18 Md. 418 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1862)
Becker v. Whitehill
55 Md. 572 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/primrose-v-kendricks-roberts-inc-mdcityctbalt-1907.