Wanamaker v. Bowes

36 Md. 42
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 10, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 36 Md. 42 (Wanamaker v. Bowes) 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
Wanamaker v. Bowes, 36 Md. 42 (Md. 1872).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, plaintiff below, claimed title to certain goods and chattels, consisting of a stock of goods 'in a store, with the furniture and store fixtures, under a bill of sale, by way of mortgage, executed on the 24th day of June, 1869, by J. H. Smith. The mortgage contained a provision entitling the mortgagor to retain possession of the property until default, which could not occur until the 24th day of June, 1870, that being the date fixed for the payment of the first instalment of the debt secured by the mortgage.

On the 19th day of October, 1869, the appellant sued out an attachment, under the Act of 1864, ch. 306, against Smith, and caused the same to be laid on the property conveyed by [55]*55tho mortgage, and the same was seized by the sheriff and sold; and this suit was instituted by the appellee to recover damages for the alleged illegal seizure.

The declaration contains three counts: the first is in case, counting on the plaintiff’s ■’ title under the mortgage; the second is in trespass de bonis asportatis, and the third in trover.

The Court below, at the instance of defendant, granted by consent an instruction to the jury which denied to the plaintiff the right to recover upon either the second or third counts of the declaration; the recovery was therefore exclusively upon the first count.

The first exception taken by the defendant was to the ruling of the Circuit Court, declaring the bond which had been given under the Act of 1864, for the purpose of obtaining the attachment, to be void, and tho attachment proceeding illegal; and that the defendant had no right to offer evidence to impeach the bill of sale as fradulent against creditors.

There can be no doubt of the insufficiency of the bond. It was, perhaps, intended as the bond of John Wanamaker (the attaching creditor) as principal, and of Wm. H. Wanamaker and Robert Cathcart as his sureties; but John is in no respect bound; for in the body of the instrument it is declared to be the obligation of William H., and in the recital he is called the “ above bounden William H.”

By the second resolution in Combe’s case, 9 Coke, 76, b, it was resolved that “ when any has authority as attorney to do any act, he ought to do it in his name who gives the authority; for he appoints the attorney to be in his place, and to represent his person; and therefore the attorney cannot do it in his own name, nor as his proper act, but in the name, and as the act of him who gives the authority.” And such is the law at this day with respect to deeds and other instruments under seal, except in so far as the same has been altered by the provisions of the Code, which have no application here. Frontin vs. Small, 2 L. Raymond, 1418 ; Harper vs. Hamp[56]*56ton, 1 H. & J., 622, 709 ; Lessee of Clarke vs. Courtney, 5 Peters, 318, 349.

Affixed to the bond are the name and seal of John, put there by William H., but it does not appear that he had lawful authority to bind his principal, it being conceded in the argument that the authority under which he claimed to act was verbal merely; it is not therefore the bond of John. Nor is William H. bound as principal, for it is expressly stated that he and Robert Cathcart bind themselves as sureties, and a party cannot be both principal and surety in the same obligation. This distinguishes this case from Stewart vs. Katz, 30 Md., 334.

The bond being invalid, it follows that the attachment was illegal and void,” for so it is declared by the Act of 1864, section 41.

The defendant thus being without the protection of valid legal process, was it competent for him to impeach the bill of sale as fraudulent, as against the creditors of Smith the mortgagor ? It is objected that it is not competent for him to do so, because he had not obtained any lien by judgment and execution, or other valid judicial process; and a number of authorities have been cited to show that in order to entitle a creditor to impeach a deed as fraudulent under the statute, it is necessary for him first to obtain a judgment, or other lien, upon the property conveyed by the deed. This general proposition is supported by the case of Birely and Holtz vs. Stanley, 5 G. & J., 433, 452, and has long been the recognized law of this State.

By the Act of 1835, now embodied in the Code, Art. 16, section 35, it is provided that a creditor may maintain a bill in equity to set aside a fraudulent deed without having first obtained a judgment at law upon his demand. This provision has materially enlarged the-rights of creditors and extended their remedies; but it is by its terms confined to proceedings in Courts of Equity, and cannot be construed as changing the rights of the parties in a case like this. The [57]*57general rules of law must apply. The defendant not having acquired a lien by attachment, or other valid legal process, cannot, merely because he is a creditor of the mortgagor, be permitted, in defense of an action for wrongfully and illegally seizing the goods, to impeach the mortgage as fraudulent against creditors. As between the parties to the mortgage, it is a good and valid conveyance; and third parties cannot impeach it at law, unless they have a lien upon the property; a-mere creditor of the mortgagor having no jus in rem, cannot be heard to set up this defense either as a bar to the suit or in mitigation of damages. We therefore affirm the ruling of the Circuit Court in the first bill of exceptions.

The .second bill of exceptions was taken to the refusal of the Circuit Court to permit the defendant to prove in mitigation of damages, that at the time of the seizure under the attachment, there was rent in arrear due upon the promises occupied by the mortgagor, in which the goods were, amounting to $1,048; that after the seizure by the sheriff and before the removal of the goods, there were filed with the sheriff, by the landlord, notices and affidavits of such rent in arrear, and that the sheriff in pursuance of such notices, and of an order of Court passed in the attachment case, paid' over to the landlord the amount of rent so in arrear, out of the proceeds of the sales of the property seized.

The defendant was without the protection of valid legal process, and being a wrongdoer “he could not appropriate the property wrongfully seized either to pay a debt due to himself, or to any other creditor, except by the consent of the debtor or by the sanction of the law;” and therefore, if the rent had been voluntarily paid by the defendant or by the sheriff, (who was a co-trespasser,) the defendant could not be allowed for such payment in mitigation of damages. This proposition is supported by all the authorities. Sowell vs. Champion, 6 Ad. & E., 407, (33 E. C. L., 92;) Gillard vs. Brittan, 8 Mee. & W., 576; White vs. Binstead, 76 E. C. L., 303; Attach vs. Bramwell, 41 L. J., 146, (C. Law, 1863.) [58]*58Many other cases might be cited, both English and American, to the same effect. The law is so correctly stated in Addison on Torts, 543, 664, 665.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Md. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wanamaker-v-bowes-md-1872.