State Founders, Inc. v. Oliver

169 A. 59, 165 Md. 360, 1934 Md. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 14, 1934
Docket[No. 24, October Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 169 A. 59 (State Founders, Inc. v. Oliver) 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
State Founders, Inc. v. Oliver, 169 A. 59, 165 Md. 360, 1934 Md. LEXIS 154 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Oeeutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This proceeding was instituted by Joseph Oliver, receiver of the Great National Insurance Company, against Standard Founders, Inc., State Founders, Inc., the American National Real Estate Holding Corporation, the Berhenid Building & Loan Association of Baltimore City, Inc., Maurice Company, Inc., Merchants’ Building & Savings Association, Inc., National Title Guarantee Corporation, Tri-State Investment Corporation, Henry L. Sinskey, Raymond A. Sinskey, and Maurice Eisenberg, to the end that the defendants be de *365 dared to be debtors of the complainant, and, as ancillary to that relief, that the defendants discover under oath all moneys received by them from the Rational Fidelity Insurance Company of America and the Great Rational Insurance Company, and discover and account for all profits made by them or any of them as a result of certain transactions described in the bill of complaint; that moneys received from said insurance companies be declared to be impressed with a trust in favor of the complainant; that the defendants be required to account for all profits made by them from the use of money obtained from said insurance companies; that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the assets, books, and other goods and effects of the corporate defendants (except the Rational Title Guarantee Corporation), to collect debts due them, and to preserve and dispose of the properties belonging to them under direction of the court; that the officers of said corporation be required to deliver up to the receiver all property severally belonging to them ;• that the natural defendants, the two Sinskeys and Eisenberg, be enjoined from in any way intermeddling with the affairs or property of the said corporate defendants and from disposing of any evidence of stock ownership of the corporate defendants held by them or for their account; that said natural defendants be required to deliver to said receiver all property of the corporate defendants held by them; that they be restrained from disposing of a certain yacht named “Rujopa,” and that said yacht be declared to be the property of the complainant; that the defendants (except the Rational Title Guarantee Corporation) be restrained from withdrawing any funds standing to their credit in any banking or savings institutions or building’ associations, and from entering any safety deposit box or other place of safe-keeping, and from withdrawing therefrom any funds or securities stored therein.

Upon that bill, with its accompanying affidavit and exhibits, the court on April 27th, 1933, appointed A. Wirt Duvall, Jr., and Joseph Oliver receivers, and enjoined the defendants, substantially as prayed, reserving to the defendants leave to move for a rescission of the order at any time *366 after filing their answer upon giving the complainant five days’ notice of such motion. On the same day, on petition of the complainant, the court enjoined the Emerson Hotel Company, the Baltimore Trust Company, and the Equitable Trust Company from permitting Henry L. Sinskey, Raymond A. Sinskey, and Maurice Eisenberg from having access “to their safe deposit boxes” until the further order of the court, and also enjoined them and the National Central Bank and the Savings Bank of Baltimore from paying to the Sinskeys any cash deposited in said banks or trust companies. The defendants filed their answer to the bill on April 29th, 1933, and on the same day appealed to this court from “the decree” passed in this cause'on April 27th, 1933. There were two orders passed on April 27th, 1933, but since both parties treat the appeal as from the order appointing receivers rather than from the order on the receivers’ petition passed later on the same day, it will be so treated in this court. On May 9th, 1933, upon the petition of certain of the defendants, and upon the filing of an approved appeal bond, the court suspended and superseded the order of April 27th, 1933, as to such defendants, and directed Oliver and Duvall to return to said defendants all money and other property, including the yacht Rujopa, taken from them, and dissolved the injunction against them and the banks and trust companies affected by the second order of April 27th, 1933. From that order the complainant appealed. So that there are two appeals in this record, one from the first order of April 27th, 1933, the other from the order of May 9th, 1933, suspending and superseding that order.

The appeal from the order of May 9th, 1933, is free from difficulty. Article 5, section 33, of the Code, after providing for appeal bonds in appeals from the orders or decrees of courts of equity, further provides “and upon giving such bond the appeal shall stay the operation of all such decrees or orders; provided, however, that if in its discretion the court in which such proceedings are pending shall decide that the case is not a proper one for such stay, such court may pass an order upon such terms (as to duration, keeping *367 an account, giving security, etc.) as to it may seem fit, directing that the decree or order appealed from shall not be stayed by such appeal, or only so far or on such terms as the court shall therein direct.” The language quoted is explicit and mandatory, and from it it appears (1) that if the trial court does not act at all, an appeal bond automatically stays the operation of the orders, or decrees, from which the appeal is taken, but (2) the court may “in its discretion” order that such bond shall not stay the operation of such orders or decrees. In this case a mere staying of the order appealed from may not have been adequate to restore to the appellants property and rights of which they had been deprived by the operation of the order appealed from, or to give to them the privileges in respect to such rights and property which, in the absence of adverse action by the court, the statute obviously intended they should have upon the filing of an approved appeal bond in a penalty fixed by the court. Certainly it was not intended that, when an appellant complies in all respects with the requirements of the statute by filing a bond in compliance with its provisions, that he should be only partially relieved from the effect of the order or decree from which the appeal was taken, and should, unless the court so directs, be compelled to submit to having his rights and property in alien control pending the appeal. In such a case it is clearly in the power and discretion of the lower court to obviate any hardship incident to such a condition by appropriate action. The word “stay,” used in the statute, ordinarily means to stop, arrest, or forbear. Literally, as used in the statute, it could mean to arrest the operation of the order as of the time at which the appeal bond was filed, leaving what had previously been done under it unaffected. But such a construction would be wholly unreasonable and too narrow, for it might well be that what had been done under the order or decree prior to filing the bond would more seriously affect the appellants than anything that could possibly be' done afterward. The manifest purpose of the statute was to repose in the trial court the power and the discretion to obviate any hardship incident to such a condi *368 tion by taking sncb action in respect to tbe effect of tbe bond upon tbe order or decree appealed from as might be necessary to afford to the appellant the full protection offered by the statute. In Shirk v.

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Bluebook (online)
169 A. 59, 165 Md. 360, 1934 Md. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-founders-inc-v-oliver-md-1934.