Spivery-Jones v. Receivership Estate of Trans Healthcare, Inc.

91 A.3d 1172, 438 Md. 330, 2014 Md. LEXIS 355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 19, 2014
Docket66/13
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 91 A.3d 1172 (Spivery-Jones v. Receivership Estate of Trans Healthcare, Inc.) 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
Spivery-Jones v. Receivership Estate of Trans Healthcare, Inc., 91 A.3d 1172, 438 Md. 330, 2014 Md. LEXIS 355 (Md. 2014).

Opinion

*333 BATTAGLIA, J.

This case presents us with an opportunity to explore the law of receiverships in Maryland and the appealability of an order denying a “motion to vacate receivership order for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and declare receivership order void ab initio and request for hearing”, either as an interlocutory order, appealable under Section 12-303(3)(iv) of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, Maryland Code (1974, 2006 Repl.Vol.), 1 or alternatively, as a collateral order. 2

A “receivership” is a mechanism by which a court orders that property be placed in the control of a “receiver,” or a “[a] disinterested person appointed by a court ... for the protection” of the property. Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed.2009). Maryland recognizes two types of receiverships; a chancery receivership, the receivership which was developed in the chancery courts and which became part of our common law, as well as a statutory receivership that is “purely the creature! ] of statutes and without which statutes no receiver could be appointed ....” Ralph E. Clarke, A Treatise on the Law and Practice of Receivers 22 (1918).

*334 Prior to 1868, 3 only “equitable” or “chancery” receiverships existed or those that had their genesis in the chancery courts of England. 4 Clarke, supra, at 6, 18. As initially created by the English chancery courts, the appointment of a receiver was a “remedy” designed to protect property that was subject to a claim between two parties from being dissipated, because injunctive relief had not proven to be effective. 5 Id. The chancery court would appoint a “receiver,” who would act as an officer of the court and take possession or custody of the property to preserve it for the person or entity to which it was entitled. Id.

The first reported Maryland opinion to substantially discuss the law of receiverships, Williamson v. Wilson, 1 Bland 418 (Md.Ch.1826), an opinion by the High Court of Chancery of Maryland, 6 traced the roots of the power to appoint a receiver *335 back to the chancery courts of England. The authority to appoint a receiver in Maryland, therefore, was derived as part of Maryland’s adoption of the English common law in existence in 1639. 7 Such authority, apparently, had become “questionable” in the time period between the adoption of the English common law and the High Court of Chancery’s opinion in Williamson. See id. at 420. The Chancery Court in *336 Williamson, however, put to rest any such doubts and was explicit that the appointment of a receiver was a power that inhered to equity courts in Maryland:

That this Court should have the power in unusual and pressing emergencies, at the instance of a party interested, effectually and without delay to put its hand upon property, so far as to prevent waste, inextricable confusion, or total destruction, seems to be admitted by all to be clearly right, or at least highly beneficial.

Id. at 421.

Although the law applicable to receiverships continued to develop in the High Court of Chancery, this Court first had occasion to seminally explicate and apply the law applicable to the appointment of a receiver in Blondheim v. Moore, 11 Md. 365 (1857). In Blondheim, Moore sued Blondheim, alleging that Blondheim was heavily indebted and insolvent and that Blondheim had made a number of conveyances intended to delay and defraud his creditors. The complaint sought to set aside the allegedly fraudulent conveyances and also sought the appointment of a receiver. The circuit court appointed a receiver, and in considering the propriety of that decision, this Court looked to the “leading decisions” 8 of the chancery court, “wherein the doctrine applicable to the appointment of a receiver” was “clearly laid down” and derived the following principles:

1st. That the power of appointment is a delicate one, and to be exercised with great circumspection. 2nd. That it must appear the claimant has a title to the property, and the court must be satisfied by affidavit, that a receiver is necessary to preserve the property. 3rd. That there is no case in which the court appoints a receiver merely because the measure can do no harm. 4th. That “fraud or imminent *337 danger, if the intermediate possession should not be taken by the court, must be clearly proved;” and 5thly. That unless the necessity be of the most stringent character, the court will not appoint until the defendant is first heard in response to the application.

Id. at 374. We determined, ultimately, that there were insufficient allegations of fraud to justify the appointment of a receiver and, thus, reversed the order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City that had done so.

Since Moore, chancery receivers have been appointed in a myriad of situations, including partnership disputes, Lust v. Kolbe, 31 Md.App. 483, 356 A.2d 592 (1976), to collect rents and profits in a dispute between a mortgagor and a mortgagee, Baker v. Baker, 108 Md. 269, 70 A. 418 (1908), and even to preserve disputed properties in a divorce proceeding, Greenpoint v. Schlossberg, 390 Md. 211, 216, 888 A.2d 297, 300 (2005). Despite its diverse application, however, consistent with our pronouncement in Blondheim, the appointment of a chancery receiver has been limited to “extraordinary” circumstances, Lipskey v. Voloshen, 155 Md. 139, 144, 141 A. 402, 404 (1928), in which “there is fraud, danger of spoliation, or imminent prospect of loss or injury to property.” Del-Mar-Va Hardware Corp. v. Boss Mfg. Co., 230 Md. 477, 480, 187 A.2d 693, 694 (1963).

The legislative creation of the corporation posed a unique problem for courts in establishing receiverships, because a chancery or equity court could not dissolve a corporation absent statutory authority. Mason v. Supreme Court of Equitable League, 77 Md. 483, 484, 27 A. 171, 171 (1893); see also Clark, supra, at 236 (observing that a corporation “is created by the legislature and a court of equity without direct power by statute from the legislature has no power to wind up or dissolve that which the legislature has created.”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A.3d 1172, 438 Md. 330, 2014 Md. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spivery-jones-v-receivership-estate-of-trans-healthcare-inc-md-2014.