Roth v. Baltimore Trust Co.

152 A. 227, 159 Md. 580, 1930 Md. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 14, 1930
Docket[No. 10, October Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 152 A. 227 (Roth v. Baltimore Trust Co.) 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
Roth v. Baltimore Trust Co., 152 A. 227, 159 Md. 580, 1930 Md. LEXIS 150 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

*582 Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court-.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Baltimore City in favor of the plaintiff in an action in assumpsit brought- by the Baltimore Trust Company, a corporation, against John 0. Roth and others. It was brought under the Speedy Judgment Act of Baltimore City. Balto. Charter .% P. L. L., sec. 312, et seq. The judgment was entered by default for want of “sufficient pleas and affidavit/7 and extended by the court for $45,622.85. The declaration contained one count, which stated in effect that the defendants had by their agreement under seal guaranteed to the plaintiff the punctual payment to- it at maturity by the Provident Building Association of Baltimore City of discounts, loans or advances made or to be made to that association by the plaintiff during the life of the agreement, not to exceed $45,000; that the building association was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $43,961.18 with certain arrearages of interest for discounted loans and advances to it by the plaintiff under and upon the faith of the agreement which were not paid at maturity, and that the defendants, although requested so to do, had not only failed to pay said sum to the plaintiff, but had refused to pay the same. To that declaration John 0. Rot-h, one of the defendants, pleaded nunquam indebitatus and non assumpsit, and filed with said pleas an affidavit of defense and certificate of counsel in strict and literal compliance with the requirements of the Baltimore City Speed Judgment Act, and at the same time filed a written election for a jury trial. Thereupon the plaintiff demanded of the defendant the particulars of his defense, to- which demand the defendant Roth excepted. The exception was overruled, and Ro-th then filed a bill of particulars, in which he alleged that, simultaneously with the execution of the agreement to which we- have referred, the building association had assigned to- the plaintiff mortgages aggregating in value $99,105 as collateral security, but that, the building association having passed into- the hands of a receiver, the plaintiff had without his consent delivered them to> the receivers of the building association, and thereby effected such *583 a change in the guaranty agreement as to discharge the obligation of the guarantor Roth. The plaintiff thereupon moved for a judgment by default against Roth, and upon that motion a judgment was entered and the damages assessed by the court.

The important question raised by the appeal is whether, in an action under the Speedy Judgment Act of Baltimore City, where the defendant has, in literal and strict compliance with the terms of such act, filed general issue pleas appropriate to the form of action, an affidavit of defense, and a certificate of counsel, the plaintiff is entitled, under the; act, to a judgment by default upon the failure of the defendant, in response to the plaintiff’s demand, to' file a bill of particulars alleging facts sufficient to constitute a defense to. the action.

The act, Balto. Charter & P. L. L,, secs. 312, 313, itself prescribes precisely and affirmatively what the plaintiff must do1 in an action brought under it before he can claim any benefit from its provisions, and also what steps the defendant must take to prevent the entry of a judgment by default against him in such an action. The jurisdiction of the court in such cases is special and statutory, and neither plaintiff nor defendant can have any rights in respect to the remedies and procedure established by the act, except such as it itself creates and confers. Fick v. Towers, 152 Md. 339; Mueller v. Michaels, 101 Md. 191; Councilman v. Towson National Bank, 103 Md. 474, et seq.; Laubheimer v. Naill, 88 Md. 176; Thillman v. Shadrick, 69 Md. 530, et seq.; DeAtley v. Senior, 55 Md. 481. And when both plaintiff and defendant lave complied with those provisions of the act applicable to their respective contentions, the case is no longer governed by the act, but proceeds as an ordinary action at law before the court, sitting in the exercise of its general common law-jurisdiction. Councilman v. Towson National Bank, supra; Laubheimer v. Naill, supra; Newbold v. Green, 122 Md. 652 ; Williar v. Nagle, 109 Md. 83. In Adler v. Crook, 68 Md. 494, it was held that a general issue plea to an action on the common counts is a denial of the whole cause of action, *584 and that conclusion was cited with approval in Codd Co. v. Parker, 97 Md. 324. In Adler v. Crook, supra, the.expression that “The object of the act was, in cases to which it applied, to obtain from both plaintiff and defendant a definite and sworn statement of both the claim and defense (if any), so that the parties might know exactly wherein they differed and shape their action accordingly,” tends to1 support the appellee’s contention. But when the whole opinion is examined, it is found to have no such effect, for earlier in the opinion it is said: “The object of these acts is the speedy collection of debts in the City of Baltimore, and we see no difficulty in applying them in practice. They do' not change or affect the rules of pleading-. Whatever defense the defendant has to1 the action, that he must plead. All that this act requires is that in addition to the plea he must state specifically to what part of the plaintiff’s claim his plea applies. If to- the whole he must so state, and if to- part he must state what part. The affidavit- only narrows the scope of the plea to the precise point in issue.” In Codd Co. v. Parker, supra, the defendant filed the general issue and a special plea. The affidavit alleged that the pleas were true, and disputed the whole claim, but it failed to state whether anything less than the whole claim was due and owing, and also failed to state that the defendant at the trial would be able to produce evidence to sustain such part as was disputed. The court, however, construed Adler v. Crook as establishing the rule that, in cases where the general issue is pleaded, and where the affidavit distinctly disputes the whole claim and alleges that the pleas are true, it is a sufficient compliance with the act, and that in such cases it is unnecessary to further aver that no part of the claim is due, because such a denial of the whole claim is necessarily a denial of every part of it. And this language in Adler v. Grook tends to support that view:

“In the case before us the plaintiffs swore that the defendant was indebted to them for $229.95, upon a promissory note filed with the declaration. To this the defendant pleaded that he was not indebted as alleged, and swore that the plea *585 was true. How, as a matter of fact, the defendant may not have owed the whole sum which the plaintiffs alleged he did, but may have owed a part only, and therefore felt that he could conscientiously make the affidavit. But his omission to state in the affidavit whether his plea embraced the whole or only a part of the claim renders it fatally defective.

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Bluebook (online)
152 A. 227, 159 Md. 580, 1930 Md. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roth-v-baltimore-trust-co-md-1930.