Thomas v. Hopkins

121 A.2d 192, 209 Md. 321, 1956 Md. LEXIS 305
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1956
Docket[No. 107, October Term, 1955.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 121 A.2d 192 (Thomas v. Hopkins) 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
Thomas v. Hopkins, 121 A.2d 192, 209 Md. 321, 1956 Md. LEXIS 305 (Md. 1956).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants moved to strike an enrolled judgment, based on a promissory note, for mistake, surprise, irregularity, deceit and fraud and the court refused the motion without hearing evidence, precipitating the appeal before us.

In January 1953, the plaintiffs below, the appellees here, sued on the promissory note signed by the appellants, William M. Thomas and Frances E. Wood, who later became Mrs. Thomas, in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. The note was filed with the pleadings. The affidavit of the plaintiffs in support of a motion for summary judgment recited the execution of the note by the defendants, that there was then due and unpaid the face amount of the note, with interest from its date, and that there was no genuine dispute as to any material fact. Both defendants were summoned. William M. Thomas, individually and as agent for Frances E. Thomas, nee Wood, swore to an affidavit of defense setting forth that he had a good defense to the claim, in that there was due him by the plaintiffs some $16,000.00, representing unpaid real estate commissions, and that the sum claimed to be due on the note was to be deducted from these commissions. The affidavit did not otherwise contravert the correctness of the amount sued for nor claim that there had been payments or credits. General issue pleas were filed. A suggestion of removal, made in December 1953, was withdrawn, but in August 1954, the case was removed to the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County on another suggestion of removal. In *324 Prince George’s County the appellants were represented by the same experienced lawyer who had represented them in Anne Arundel County. At a hearing on November 19, 1954, Judge Gray granted summary judgment against Mrs. Thomas, but because of the set-off and counter claim in the affidavit of defense, granted leave to Mr. Thomas to file additional pleas if he so desired. When the case came on for trial a few days later, no additional pleas had been filed and in open court defendant’s counsel announced that there would be no defense. The secretary of the plaintiffs testified to the exact amount due and unpaid and judgment was entered in open court against William M. Thomas. In March 1955, the motion to strike the judgment was filed by new counsel, who had been engaged by appellants. It alleged: (1) That the plaintiffs committed fraud and deceit against the defendants “by erasing credits towards payment of the note which is the basis of the claim, said credits having been entered on the back thereof in the total amount of $2,568.25” and by concealing the fact of the credits from the Court at the time of trial; (2) that the plaintiffs committed fraud and deceit against the defendants in that they willfully and deliberately withheld from the Court the information that the plaintiffs had agreed with the defendant, William M. Thomas, that amounts payable and to become payable to said defendant by the plaintiffs for real estate commissions would be set off against the amount of the note and that the commissions due totalled $22,000.00; (3) that the defendants were not informed when the trial was to be held and were not notified of the judgment against them until after it had become enrolled; (4) that the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendants was incorrect because it did not take into account “the aforesaid credits and set-offs to which the defendants were entitled.”

Normally a court would hear evidence on a charge of fraud and deceit, specified as failing to give credit for payments made and the erasure of notations of the credits on the note which was the basis of the judgment. *325 We find, however, from a close examination of the record and from concessions made in the brief of the appellants and at the argument that the trial judge reached the right result in denying the motion to strike, despite his unusual refusal to hear the testimony the appellants desired to offer.

It is now conceded that the only defense relied on in the affidavit of defense and one of the two grounds of the motion to strike, has been lost completely to the appellants. After the motion to strike had been filed, Thomas’ action for the $22,000.00 in commissions he claimed to be due him from the appellees came to trial in Montgomery County and judgment was rendered for the defendants as to all of the claims. However, it appeared from the evidence that appellees did owe Thomas $300.00 in another connection and Judge Anderson directed counsel for the appellees to give credit for this amount on the judgment, and this has been done. No appeal was taken from the Montgomery County judgment and it is settled now' that the appellees do not owe Thomas anything for commissions.

There remains the matter of the alleged failure to allow credits due when the judgment before us was taken by appellees. An intense inspection of the back of the note shows, despite the evident fact of erasure, that there once was written there the following:

“Payments:
Commission 1675.95T
" 1/24/ 500.00
2175.95
10135.20
2175.
7959. 5”

There is nothing in the case to explain the reason for the erasure nor what the figures erased represented. There comes to mind immediately that the credits on the note may have been part of the commissions claimed by *326 Thomas in the Montgomery County case which, for some reason, probably the one which caused Thomas to lose the case, the appellees decided were not due as had been thought, or had been forfeited, and therefore erased from the note.

Whatever the explanation of the erasure, we think it does not now help the appellants. First, the two erased credits totalled $2,175.95. In the motion to strike, the credits alleged to have been on the note, and erased, are said to be $2,568.25. Before the lower court and before us, the credits claimed total $2,819.20. But before us it was conceded that the credits now claimed had never been entered on the note since it was filed with the papers in the suit in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County before they came into existence.

At the hearing below on the motion to strike, the appellants did not formally abandon the charges of fraud and deceit, but did rely actually only on surprise, mistake and irregularity. We think none of these appear. The appellants were duly summoned in 1953 in the Anne Arundel County suit. They filed pleas through counsel and one of them, on behalf of both, swore to an affidavit of defense. They were represented by their lawyer at the hearings before Judge Gray and Judge Marbury. Thomas was given the chance to make any additional defense open to him before judgment was taken against him, and did nothing. “If the appellant was summoned and had an opportunity to make his defense and neglected to do so, and judgment was regularly entered, he will not now be heard to say, after the term has passed, that it was obtained by mistake or surprise.” Abell v. Simon, 49 Md. 318, 323. The appellants concede that the credits now claimed were known to them when the judgments were rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
121 A.2d 192, 209 Md. 321, 1956 Md. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-hopkins-md-1956.