Thorne v. Fox

8 A. 667, 67 Md. 67, 1887 Md. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 16, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 8 A. 667 (Thorne v. Fox) 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
Thorne v. Fox, 8 A. 667, 67 Md. 67, 1887 Md. LEXIS 67 (Md. 1887).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee sued the appellant, and one George Kinnier, copartners, trading as George Kinnier & Co., upon a promissory note, at four months, for the sum of twenty-one hundred and two dollars and seventy cents, with in[69]*69terest. The note was drawn payable to the order of the appellee, and was signed George Kinnier, Jr. & Go.” The action was brought in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, on the seventh day of May, 1886, under the Act of 1886, chapter 184, by filing a declaration with affidavit and cause of action appended. The affidavit accompanying the declaration is as follows: “State of Maryland, City of Baltimore, Set: I hereby certify, that on this seventh day of May, 1886, before me the subscriber, a justice of the peace of said State in and for the city aforesaid, personally appeared Moses Fox and made oath in due form of law, on the five books of Moses, he being an Israelite, that there is justly owing by George Kinnier and John Thorne, copartners, trading as George Kinnier & Co., the defendants, in said cause, to the plaintiff in the annexed promissory note (the cause of action in said cause,) the sum of two thousand, one .hundred and two dollars and seventy cents, (with interest from the fifteenth day of January, 1883,) over and above all discounts, to the best of his knowledge and belief.” This was signed by Wm. S. Gorton, J. P.

The defendants appeared by different counsel, and pleaded separately. John Thorne, the appellant in this case, pleaded “that he was never indebted as alleged;” and “that he did not promise as alleged.” This plea was filed on the 13th day of May, 1886, and was.accompanied with affidavit that the plea was true, and that the affiant believed that at the trial he would be able to produce evidence to support the plea — and that he was advised by counsel to file the plea. — To that plea was appended the certificate of counsel that he advised the filing of the plea.

The other defendant pleaded a like plea, but in his affidavit disputed only $155 of the plaintiff’s claim, and admitted $1947.70 thereof to be due and owing, and judgment was entered against George Kinnier for the amount [70]*70admitted in his plea to he due, viz., for $1947.70, as the statute állows to be done.

The issue joined by the plaintiff and Thorne was submitted to the Court without the intervention of a jury. ‘ The Court rendered a verdict for nineteen hundred and forty-seven dollars and seventy cents; and rendered judgment therefor. From that judgment appeal was taken. •

At the trial hut one bill of exceptions was taken. It in substance states, that the plaintiff submitted his case “without the introduction of any testimony, upon what he claimed to he the presumption in his favor, created by the actual condition of the pleadings. The defendant then offered to prove by witnesses produced in Court, that no partnership had ever existed between the defendants, John Thorne and George Kinnier, but the Court refused to allow the introduction of evidence ; whereupon the defendant moved in writing to amend his pleas, and presented certain amended pleas to be filed.”

The amended pleas denied the partnership alleged in the declaration, and averred that Kinnier had no authority to bind the defendant Thorne. The motion offered to accompany the pleas with an affidavit, and the amended and additional pleas as tendered were verified with affidavit, and accompanied with certificate of counsel, that he had advised the filing of such pleas. The Court overruled the motion and refused to permit the amended pleas to be filed, and the exception states “whereupon the defendant excepted to the refusal of the Court to allow the amendment and prayed the Court to sign and seal this bill of exceptions.”

It thus appears that the sole exception before the Court is to the refusal of the Court to allow an amendment of the pleadings. The appellant, while conceding that amendment of the pleadings ordinarily is a matter of discretion, and the Court’s action on such application affords no ground for appeal, contends that in this case it was a [71]*71tender of an additional plea and comes within the decision of Shulze vs. Fox, 53 Md., 37, where the Court allowed an additional plea to he filed. This case of Shulze vs. Fox, however, we think, has no analogy to this case, to sustain appellant’s contention. In that case the plaintiff was allowed to amend his declaration, which, when amended during the trial, left the defendant at liberty to plead to it, as no plea had ever been interposed to the declaration as amended. The Court therefore in refusing the permission to file pleas to the amended declaration was denying him a right to which by law, he was entitled as of right, and the Court had no discretion in the premises; and so this Court held. The present case falls within the principle and reasoning of the Court in Knickerbocker Life Insurance Co. of New York vs. Hoeske, 32 Md., 324. That case had been brought under the Act of 1864, chapter 6. The defendant had interposed pleas without sufficient affidavit, as provided by the statute, to prevent the plaintiff’s right to judgment by default for the want of such verified plea. The defendant asked leave to amend, but was denied the privilege. This Court decided that as the Act of 1864, entitled the plaintiff to judgment by default for want of a sufficiently verified plea, it was his right, as matter of law, to have such judgment on •demand for it; and when asked for, it was too late for the defendant to plead ; and that to allow it would defeat the whole purpose of the Act of 1864. The positive right which the Act secured the plaintiff in such a situation, could not be denied him, and the Court in such case had no discretion about the proffered amendment, which if allowed, would have effectually defeated plaintiff’s right. The Act of 1886, chapter 184, under which this suit was brought and the question here presented arises, is an amendment of the Act of 1864, chapter 6. In section 170, after making provision for judgment by default in case the declaration accompanied with affidavit was not [72]*72met by the defendant with a good plea under oath within a specified time, it further provides: “And if the co-partnership or incorporation of any of the parties to the suit shall be alleged in the declaration, and the affidavit to be filed therewith as hereinafter provided, or if there shall be filed with the declaration in said cause any paper, purporting to be signed by any defendant therein, the fact of such alleged copartnership or incorporation, and the genuineness of the signature shall be deemed to be admitted for the purposes of the cause, unless the said affidavit shall further state, that the affiant knows or has good reason to believe such allegation of copartnership or incorporation to be untrue, or that such signature was not written by or by the authority of the person whose signature it purports to be.”

The plaintiff by his declaration had averred the indebtedness of the appellant and George Kinnier,-copartners, trading as “ George Kinnier & Company” upon the note, set out in the declaration and annexed to it, and had filed with the declaration an. affidavit in the words hereinbefore recited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 A. 667, 67 Md. 67, 1887 Md. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorne-v-fox-md-1887.