Steed Mortgage Co. v. Arthur

378 A.2d 690, 37 Md. App. 592, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 335
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 18, 1977
Docket78, September Term, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 378 A.2d 690 (Steed Mortgage Co. v. Arthur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steed Mortgage Co. v. Arthur, 378 A.2d 690, 37 Md. App. 592, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 335 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Gilbert, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is concerned with the procedural mechanics of attachment on judgment. As it developed, a monkey wrench was thrown into the machinery, 1 and a malfunction, requiring reversal, resulted.

The taproot of this litigation is a divorce decree a vinculo matrimonii severing the marriage between Margaret C. Arthur and Brian Arthur. The decree, passed by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County on March 24, 1975, contained a provision for the payment of alimony in the sum of five hundred fifty dollars ($550) 2 per month by Brian Arthur to Margaret C. Arthur, together with one hundred fifty dollars ($150) per month child support, counsel fees, and *594 investigative costs. Evidently, Mr. Arthur did not pay because Mrs. Arthur, in August 1975, moved for summary judgment in which she asserted her claim for past due sums. A judgment for two thousand one hundred fifty dollars ($2,150) was entered by the court against Mr. Arthur on July 2, 1976. The stage was then set for the subsequent events leading to this matter’s being before this Court.

Mrs. Arthur caused a Writ of Attachment to be issued out of the circuit court and laid in the hands of Steed Mortgage Company (Steed) as garnishee. The writ commanded the Sheriff of Montgomery County:

“[To] attach the lands, tenements, goods, chattels, and credits of . . . Brian Arthur to the value of $2,150. dollars and 00/100 cents current money and cost of this attachment. .. . And . .. further . .. that you make known unto the person into whose hands you shall lay this attachment that he, she or they, be and appear before the Judges of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, .., on the 1st Monday October next, to show cause, (if any he, she or they have) why the lands, tenements, goods, chattels and credits by you attached, by virtue of this writ, in his, her or their hands, shall not be condemned and execution thereof had and made to and for the use of the said Margaret C. Arthur as of the lands, tenements, goods, chattels and credits of ... Brian Arthur...

The sheriffs return read:

“Attached and laid in the hands of Steed Mortgage Co., Garnishee and Garnishee, summoned with service on Michell [sic] Fry, Senior Vice Pres., this 22nd day of September, 1976.”

The October return day passed without a response of any type from the garnishee, and Mrs. Arthur filed a “Motion for Judgment of Condemnation Nisi. ” She cited as authority for *595 the motion, Md. Rule G54 b. 3 By certificate of service, the motion indicates that copies thereof were mailed to Steed and Mr. Arthur.

We observe that the procedure for the issuance of writs of attachment is set out in Subtitle F of the Maryland Rules. Rule FI provides:

“Where an attachment on a judgment shall have been issued pursuant to this Subtitle, it shall be served pursuant to Rule G47 (Service of Writ — Garnishment) and the procedure shall conform to the provisions of Section d of Rule G42 (Documents to Be Filed — Instructions to the Sheriff) and Rules G51 (Motion to Quash), G52 (Appearance of Garnishee), G56 (Interrogatories to Garnishee — Notice — Failure to Answer), G57 Dissolution of Attachment), G58 (Claimant of Property Attached), and G60 (Sale of Attached Property).”

Subtitle G is limited to Attachments on Original Process unless it, or subsections thereof, are specifically made applicable to other proceedings as is the case with Rule FI. That Rule, by its language, makes clear that portions of Subtitle G are incorporated into Subtitle F. Conspicuous by its absence, however, is any reference to Rule G54 b. That Rule pertains to Attachments on Original Process and is not applicable to Subtitle F. It seems that the provision for a judgment of condemnation nisi against a garnishee applies only when the attachment is issued on original process. 4 The motion of Mrs. Arthur for a judgment nisi was improper. In *596 filing such a motion, Mrs. Arthur lost sight of the fact that an attachment on a judgment serves approximately the same function as a writ of fien facias. They are both forms of execution to enforce payment. Northwestern National Ins. v. Wetherall, 267 Md. 378, 384, 298 A. 2d 1, 5 (1972).

When, as here, a garnishee of attached property fails to file a pleading within the time prescribed by Rule F2, the plaintiff should move for a judgment by default, Md. Rule 310, against the garnishee. When the default judgment is entered, the plaintiff should proceed by way of inquisition, Md. Rule 648, and “prove the amount of assets of the defendant in the hands of the garnishee subject to attachment; thereupon, judgment of condemnation absolute shall be entered against the garnishee.” Md. Rule F2.

Steed did not challenge the “Motion for Judgment of Condemnation Nisi” on the basis of its being inapplicable to an attachment on judgment, but elected to file two motions, 1) one raising preliminary objection, Md. Rule' 323 on jurisdictional and constitutional grounds, and 2) a motion to quash the writ of attachment, bottomed on the same foundation. 5

The motion raising preliminary objection was heard on oral argument in the circuit court. The hearing judge denied the motion, and in the same order entered Judgement of Condemnation Absolute against Steed, as garnishee for the amount of Mrs. Arthur’s judgment against Mr. Arthur, one hundred seventy four dollars ($174) in costs and interest accounting from July 2,1976.

The procedure followed in this case, commencing with the “Motion for Judgment of Condemnation Nisi” and ending with the entry of Judgment Of Condemnation Absolute, was at odds with the Maryland Rules. The Judgment of Condemnation Absolute is a nullity inasmuch as the judgment creditor, Mrs. Arthur, has not as yet proven, on inquisition, the amount of assets of the judgment debtor, subject to attachment, in the hands of the garnishee.

*597 The Judgment of Condemnation Absolute must be reversed for failure to follow faithfully the prescribed procedures mandated in Subtitles F and G of the Maryland Rules. “Procedure,” Mr. Justice Frankfurter wrote in Cook v. Cook, 342 U. S. 126, 133, 72 S. Ct. 157, 162, 96 L. Ed. 146, 152 (1951) (dissenting opinion), is not “just folderol or noxious moss.” Rather, as the Justice earlier observed in McNabb v. United States, 318 U. S. 322, 347, 63 S. Ct. 608, 616, 87 L. Ed. 819, 827-28 (1943), “The history of liberty has largely been the history of observance of procedural safeguards.” To the same effect, see Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
378 A.2d 690, 37 Md. App. 592, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steed-mortgage-co-v-arthur-mdctspecapp-1977.