West v. William E. Wood Co.

118 A. 69, 140 Md. 514, 1922 Md. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 1, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 118 A. 69 (West v. William E. Wood Co.) 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
West v. William E. Wood Co., 118 A. 69, 140 Md. 514, 1922 Md. LEXIS 64 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

*516 Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The William E. Wood Company, a corporation, in 1907 recovered a judgment in the Baltimore City Court against John T. West for $883.59, with interest from October 30th, 1907, and $9.70 costs. That judgment was revived by judgment of fiat on a writ of scire facias December 8th, 1919.

A writ of attachment issued out of the Baltimore City Court on the revived judgment, returnable to the Circuit Court for Harford County, which was returned to that court on December 22nd, 1919, by the sheriff of Harford County. Under that writ, as shown by his return, the sheriff attached “a large number of bricks, supposed to be one million,” in the possession of the Susquehanna Power Company, and summoned that company as garnishee. There is nothing in the record to show that the garnishee filed any plea in the case, but on April 1st, 1920, the defendant John T. West filed two pleas, reading as follows:

“1. That there is no such record.
“2. That the bricks attached in this case are not the property of John T. West, and he has no interest therein.”

There is some confusion in the record as to what was done with these pleas, but the docket entries indicate that the plea of nul tiel record was withdrawn, and the second plea traversed and issue joined on the traverse. A trial of that issue before a jury in the Circuit Court for Harford County resulted in a verdict “for the plaintiff” on April 16th, 1920, and on the same day a motion for a new trial was filed, which the court, on May 8th, 1920, heard and overruled, and on May 31st, 1920, judgment on the verdict was entered in this form: “Judgment of condemnation of the interest of the defendant in the property attached in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the judgment, interest and costs mentioned in the writ of attachment with the costs of said attachment.” On February 11th, 1921, the defendant moved to strike out that judgment for the following reasons:

*517 “First: That said judgment was entered without his knowledge, and that he has just this day learned that said judgment has been entered up in said ease.
“Second: That this litigation grew out of a lot of bricks at the Susquehanna Power Company, in the Fifth Election District of Harford County, which was attached by the plaintiff on a judgment recovered by him in Baltimore City.
“Third: That at the trial of the case below, one John J. Hurst alleged that the bricks belonged to Harry West and the said John J. Hurst, as partners, and that John T. West, the defendant in this case, had no interest in said bricks. The plaintiff answered and stated that the said John T. West had an interest in said bricks, and that the issue went to the jury, and the jury found for the plaintiff, to wit, that the said John T. West did have an interest in said bricks, but il did not decide what his interest was.
“Fourth: The judgment recovered in the above entitled case is in error, because it condemns the interest of the defendant, John T. West, in said bricks, when the amount of said interest has never been determined, and it could not by any means be the sum of $981.00, as claimed by the plaintiff, because the total value of said bricks would not be that much, and it was conceded at the trial that the said Harry West had an interest in said bricks, and also that the said John J. Hurst had an interest in said bricks.”

On May 13th, 1921, the court passed an order overruling the motion to strike out the judgment and from that order this appeal was taken. The sole question presented by the record for our consideration therefore is, whether the judgment in the attachment case is so defective that it should be stricken out for the reasons stated in the appellant’s motion.

In addition to the facts to which we have referred, it also appears that, on January 13th, 1920, Harry E. West and John J. Hurst filed in the attachment ease a claim of title *518 to the property attached. The claimants’ case, thus instituted, was tried before the court on January 20th, 1920, and on the same day a verdict for the defendant was returned and judgment in due course entered thereon.

The only testimony taken in connection with the motion to strike out the judgment was that of Mr. John L. G. Lee, who said that neither he nor his client Mr. Hurst had any notice of the entry of the judgment of May 31st, 1920, in the Circuit Court for Harford County, and knew nothing of it until Mr. Hurst was served with the declaration in a suit in Baltimore City, and the testimony of Mr. Stevenson A. Williams, who testified that on several occasions, after the judgment had been entered, he asked Mr. Lee when the West claim would be settled. Mr. Lee in rebuttal said that, while Mr. Williams may have said that, he (Lee) always stated that the value of the West interest in the bricks had not been fixed. There is also incorporated in the record the testimony of John J. Hurst, which appears to have been taken at the trial of the attachment case, and the testimony of Harry E. West, John T. West, George W. Bagley, John S. Munders and William G. Towers, apparently taken in the claimant’s case, which tended to show that John T. West had no interest in the bricks, but that they were owned by John J. Hurst and Harry E. West. Since this is not an appeal from the judgment in the claimant’s case or from the judgment in the attachment case, and as the record contains no exception to any ruling of the court as to the prayers or the admission of evidence in either case, that testimony is wholly foreign and irrelevant to any question before us, and we are not aware of any principle of law which could authorize us to consider it, and it is not therefore necessary to refer to it in greater detail.

The appellant’s motion to strike out the judgment rests upon two propositions: first, that “the judgment of condemnation is an irregularity on the face of the proceedings,” and second, that “if it is admitted that there is a partnership, the *519 properties or credits of the partnership cannot be taken by attachment.”

The “irregularity” of the judgment upon which the appellant relies is that it does not value or define the defendant’s interest in the bricks, but there is nothing contained in the record to indicate that the value of the bricks, or of the defendant’s interest in them, was an issue in the case. The appellant in his second plea said that the “bricks attached are not the property of John T. West and he has no interest therein.” That was his defense, and that plea the plaintiff traversed. The issues then were, whether the bricks were the property of John T. West, and whether he had an interest in them, and not what they were worth or what his interest in them was worth, and, as the jury could only respond to the issues upon which they were sworn, they were neither required nor authorized to make any such valuation. The writ commanded the sheriff to attach any chattels, etc., of John T.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 69, 140 Md. 514, 1922 Md. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-william-e-wood-co-md-1922.