Warfield v. Owens

4 Gill 364
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Gill 364 (Warfield v. Owens) 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
Warfield v. Owens, 4 Gill 364 (Md. 1846).

Opinion

Magruder., J.,

delivered his opinion as follows :

I signed the decree which was passed by the court in this case, but not for reasons which will be found in an opinion which has been filed. The reasons, which are set forth in that [368]*368opinion, for the decree, could not be my reasons for denying to the petitioner the relief which he sought; because, whether they exist in the case, I did not take the trouble to enquire; and because, if for such reasons the petition must be dimissed, then such an application could in no case be successful; for as soon as the chancellor ascertains that the complainants are creditors, and the personal assets are insufficient, he must proceed forthwith to decree a sale of the real estate. If such powers exist, it is obvious, that a case in which to ask for their exercise, never can arise: — a powerful reason for the conviction, that the court cannot, in such a case as this, appoint a receiver, or charge an occupation rent.

My reasons for dismissing the petition will be stated.

A simple contract creditor is entitled to all the relief, which the act of 1785, chap. 77, sec. 3, and its supplements, give to him. If the funds which the law of the land provides for the payment of the debts of a deceased person, (the personal assets and the proceeds of sale of real estate, devised or descended,) prove to be insufficient, the court of chancery can afford none other. If after the distribution of the real and personal estate, there yet remains a balance due to the creditors, they have, indeed, a right to that balance: but it is a right without any remedy, and must remain so until the legislature can provide some additional fund. To say that, if the two funds provided by the legislature proved to be insufficient, the court of chancety possesses jurisdiction inherent in it, or by virtue of any equitable maxim, to provide other remedies, to make the rents and profits a third fund for the payment of them, is to admit in that court the power of judicial legislation. The law may give to the courts power, and prescribe the mode in which that power may be exercised; or the latter may be omitted, because of existing rules, which will enable the courts to exercise the power. But if the power or right be such, “that according to their several modes of proceeding, neither of the courts, (common law nor equity,) can grant the proper redress, they cannot in any way supply the deficiency. Even upon English authority, a court of justice cannot be permitted, in any case, to legislate; and bv (he constitution of our republic, the three [369]*369departments having been directed to be kept separate, the judiciary has been expressly excluded from every species of legislation, and is precluded from supplying any omissions of the legislature, however obvious or necessary it may be, for attaining the object in view.” 1 Bland, 47. It is true, indeed, that the time was, when, in England, very extravagant notions were entertained in regard to the court of chancery, and its own power to extend, according to the whim and caprice of its judge, its jurisdiction. “According to these notions,” to use the language of Blackstone, “it would rise above all law", either common or statute, and be an arbitrary legislature in every particular case. ’ ’ Then it could find, in some of its maxims, which are often quoted without being understood: suchas, “ There can be no wrong without a remedy,” — the germ of all jurisdiction which it chose to usurp. “But this,” Blackstone adds, “ was in the infancy of our courts of equity, before their jurisdiction was settled.”

That the court of chancery is not supposed, in England, to possess the power to supply defects in the law, under the pretext, that there can be no wrong without a remedy, and the court may, of course, provide one, if the law has omitted it, is shown by the cases spoken of by the commentator, in his third volume, p. 430:—"Hard was the case of bond creditors, whose debtors devised away their real estate; rigorous and unjust the rule, which put the devisee in a better condition than the heir; yet a court of equity had no power to interfere. ’ ’ See the other cases there enumerated. The /¿ceres factus then could not, in the court of chancery, or without express legislation, be made responsible for one cent of a debt of the testator, for the payment of which his heirs, to the value of the real estate which came to them from the debtor, were expressly bound. The devise could not be considered fraudulent against the creditor, although it was made, and had the effect to defraud him of one security, which he was supposed to have, for his debt. The courts were powerless, and a remedy for this hardship and injustice could only be given by parliament.; and was given, for the first time, in 1691, (3 Wm. and Mary,) by a law, saying, that all devises should bn void, as against creditors, and giving [370]*370to them the same right of action against the devisee, as they had against the heir. “ The chancery court,” says Harrison, (1st Chan. Prac., 50,) "had been often attempting, before the statute, to make the devisee liable to specialty debts, but were not able to come at it; which was the occasion of the statute.” And speaking of an attempt to recover of the devisees, without making them a party, the opinion of the court is given: ££ It is the act of parliament which makes this assets in the devisees hands, and that requires the heir to be made a defendant. You must follow the remedy therein prescribed.”

Nothing of all this can be applicable to the court of chancery of Maryland; and it has powers and jurisdiction unheard of in England for centuries past, if, without any authority for it derived from the legislature, it can create an additional fund, (the rents and profits of the real estate, intermediate the death of the debtor, and the sale of his real estate,) to supply a deficiency which may exist, after the personal assets and proceeds of sale of the land have been exhausted. This cannot be maintained.

Much of the chancery system of our State, was, of course,, borrowed from that of England; some little of it, it may well be thought, was, in the infancy of the colony, and its judiciaL system, no where to be found, but in the supposed wants, and local and other circumstances, of our people; in short, in what one of our eminent judges of other days called, the common unwritten law of that court, of domestic origin.” Our statute book, however, clearly shows, that quite early, — years before the revolution — it was the settled policy of our State, to prevent any enlargement of the jurisdiction of the court, and even any change in its mode of proceeding, otherwise than by legislative enactment. How often this policy has been disregarded, not only occasional acts of legislation, but decisions of our courts, will evince. It is (to give one example,) deviated from, when modern treatises upon the practice of the court of chancery of England, as well as elsewhere, are introduced as the very best authority, to show what is the jurisdiction of, or the practice and correct mode of proceeding in, the chancery court of Maryland.

[371]*371Very much of the chancery jurisdiction which it is daily exercising, and with which we are most familiar, (the authority to sell the real estate of deceased persons, is a part of it,) is what the law books call, its “statutory jurisdiction;” — “A jurisdiction, which begins and ends,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McKaig v. James
8 A. 663 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1887)
Scott v. Scott
17 Md. 78 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1861)
Powles v. Dilley
9 Gill 222 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1850)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Gill 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warfield-v-owens-md-1846.