Shoop v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

91 A. 753, 124 Md. 130, 1914 Md. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 91 A. 753 (Shoop v. Fidelity & Deposit 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
Shoop v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 91 A. 753, 124 Md. 130, 1914 Md. LEXIS 4 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

*133 Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The record in the above entitled case contains two appeals, one appearing on the docket of this Court as No. 48, being the appeal of Nettie J. Shoop against the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, and the other being No. 60, an appeal of the Fidelity and Deposit Company from a judgment rendered against it in favor of Nettie J. Shoop.

A motion has been filed to dismiss the first appeal, and that motion must prevail. The suit in this case was one instituted under what is known as the Practice Act of Baltimore City [Balto. City Charter, sec. 312 (see Balto. City Code, 1906, p. 265)], to recover for the death of Frank J. Shoop, husband of Nettie J. Shoop, npon an accident policy issned by the Fidelity Company in June, 1911. To the suit so brought the defendant at first filed five pleas, within the time required by the statute, and on Feb. 18, 1914, by leave of the Court in writing withdrew all of the pleas theretofore filed on its behalf and filed in lieu a new plea supported by affidavit and certificate. This ruling of the Court, in permitting the defendant to withdraw the pleas as originally filed constituted the ground of Mrs». Shoop’s» appeal. The order for the appeal states that it is also from the ruling of Ihe Court overruling the motion of the plaintiff for a judgment, but no such motion appears in the record. On the same clay that the pleas were withdrawn and the new plea filed, the plaintiff filed a replication thereto, a jury was empanelled for the trial of the case and on the next day a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff fo»r $2,88L50, the full amount claimed. There are two obvio-ns reasons wby the motion to dismiss must prevail. In the first place by the filing of replication and proceeding to trial the plaintiff waived her right to raise, on appeal, the correctness of the ruling of the Court. The.pro»per course to have pursued, if it was desired to call in question the correctness of that ruling, would have been to decline to reply and suffer a judgment by default to1» be entered against her, and appeal from *134 such judgment. Hot having done so, she is now precluded from raising the question. Traber v. Traber, 50 Md. 1. In the second place, even if the ruling of the Court had been incorrect, and she could raise that question on her appeal in this case, she was, nevertheless, not injured by the ruling of the Court because the verdict returned, and upon which judgment was entered, was for the full amount of her claim. Coates v. Mackey, 56 Md. 420; Bear v. Robbins, 117 Md. 213.

Turning now to Case Ho. 60, the appeal of the Fidelity and Deposit Company against Shoop. the case presented is briefly as follows: Mr. Shoop was the agent of the Mianus Motor Works. On the 5th of June, 1911, he took out what is commonly known as an accident policy of insurance, with the defendant company, for the sum of $2,500. The policy contained a provision that in addition to the sum named, the same should be augmented by an accumulative amount, such as would increase the sum specified in the said policy by 10%, upon an annual renewal of the policy. The policy was renewed in June, 1912. On the 20th of Hovember in the same year Mr. and Mrs. Shoop separated about half-past eight in the morning, she going to the store or office on Market Space in the City of Baltimore, and he to the shipyard of which he was the tenant, at or near the foot of Stevenson Street. A little after 12 o’clock Mr. Shoop' telephoned his wife. Hot far from the same hour he was seen by a witness, Crispens, standing with another man at the engine room door in the shipyard. About an hour later as this witness, Crispens, passed the shipyard he saw a man lying underneath a boat which had been hauled up on the shipyard railway, and going over there found that the man so< prostrate was Mr. Shoop, who was lying under the boat, dead.

Under this state of facts the plea which was filed by the defendant company to the suit brought on the policy, was as follows:

*135 “This policy constituted the entire contract of insuranee, except that if the insured sustains injury, fatally or otherwise, or contracts disease while exposed to the hazard of an occupation classed by the company as more hazardous than that stated in the schedule of warranties, except ordinary duties about residence or while engaged in recreation, the company will pay such proportion of the indemnities provided in the policy as the premium paid by the insured will purchase at the rate hut within the limits fixed by the company for such more hazardous occupation.
“That said Prank J. Shoop was, at the time he sustained the injury set out in the declaration, exposed to the hazard of an occupation classed by the company as more hazardous than that stated in the schedule of warranties, to wit: That of machinist or ship-carpenter or shipwright; and that the proportion of the indemnities provided in said policy which the premium paid by the insured will purchase at the rate fixed by the company for such occupation of machinist or ship-carpenter or shipwright is six-elevenths; so that the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this action the sum of $1,500, and no more.”

When the case was reached for trial and the jury had been sworn,, the defendant moved the Court to grant to it the right to open and close the case, which motion the Court-refused, and this ruling constitutes the -first bill of exceptions. The theory of the defendant upon this motion is substantially this: That by its plea it admitted the prima facie right of the plaintiff to- recover, and that it had tendered the only issue in the case and, therefore, had assumed the burden of proof; that having assumed the burden of proof, it followed as a matter of right that it was entitled to the opening and closing of the case, and that the denial of this right operated to the prejudice of the defendant and forms a sufficient ground for reversal. Many cases were cited to sustain this view, and in fact if *136 the cases as presented corresponded with the theory announced by the defendant, the vast weight of authorities is in favor of the position contended for. In the Federal Courts, and in some cases in the State Courts it has been held that the conduct of the trial and the ruling of the trial Court upon a matter of this nature is within the discretion of the Court, and that from the exercise of such discretion no appeal will lie. In some States there are procedural rules which regulate the matter, but independent of these the general principle is that stated in 15 Ency. Plead. & Prac. 183-4, and adopted in this State in the case of Baltimore City v. Hurlock, 113 Md. 674, that “The test is that the right belongs to the party against whom judgment would be rendered if no evidence were introduced on either side.” Many other cases might be cited which lay down the same rule, but a careful examination of these cases shows the essential point of difference between them and the case at bar. This suit was instituted by the plaintiff for the recovery of $2,500, together with a 10% accumulation, making $2,750.

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Bluebook (online)
91 A. 753, 124 Md. 130, 1914 Md. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoop-v-fidelity-deposit-co-md-1914.