Wheeler v. Unsatisfied Claim & Judgment Fund

269 A.2d 593, 259 Md. 232, 1970 Md. LEXIS 799
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 15, 1970
Docket[No. 22, September Term, 1970.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 269 A.2d 593 (Wheeler v. Unsatisfied Claim & Judgment Fund) 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
Wheeler v. Unsatisfied Claim & Judgment Fund, 269 A.2d 593, 259 Md. 232, 1970 Md. LEXIS 799 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Code, Art. 66V2, Sec. 154 (a) (1967 Repl. Vol.) requires one who intends to make a claim against the Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund (Fund), “as a condition precedent” to his right thereafter to apply for payment from the Fund, to “give notice” to the Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund Board (Board) of such intention within 180 days after the accident or “within 30 days” of receiving a disclaimer of liability from the insurer of the person who “caused him to suffer damages.” The Board says it received no such notice from the appellants. They say they mailed a proper notice to the Board before the expiration of the 30 day period and that it makes no difference that the notice was not received by the Board. There is little if any dispute about what happened.

On 13 August 1966 the appellants were injured when the car in which they were riding was struck by a car owned by Williams and driven by Brady. Williams, at the time, was asleep on the rear seat. Suit was filed on 22 November 1966. On 16 January 1967 Williams’ insurer notified the appellants that there was “no coverage under its policy contract with Williams for the defendant Brady.” It suggested the appellants might “feel it ad *234 visaW° to put the uninsured motorist fund on notice in this case.” Appellants introduced a carbon copy of a letter dated 9 February 1967 the original of which they say was mailed on that date to the Board and which, it is conceded, might have been proper notice, had it been received by the Board. The letter was neither registered nor certified.

In September 1967 the appellants obtained a substantial verdict against both Williams and Brady. The ensuing judgment against Williams was reversed by this Court. Williams v. Wheeler, 252 Md. 75 (1969). Since Brady, a minor, was both uninsured and indigent, appellants sought payment from the Fund. The Fund opposed appellants’ application claiming noncompliance with Sec. 154 (a) in respect of notice. The trial judge denied appellants’ application.

It is true, as appellants point out, that the Maryland statute (1957) “was patterned after the earlier [1952] New Jersey law.” Maddy v. Jones, 230 Md. 172, 176 (1962). Appellants are quite correct also in suggesting that “from time to time [we have] looked to the New Jersey decisions for enlightenment as to the meaning and effect of the [Maryland] Statute”; Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund v. Hamilton, 256 Md. 56, 59 (1969); Goad v. Fisher, 255 Md. 131, 136 (1969); Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund Board v. Holland, 241 Md. 294, 299 (1966); but it must be observed that we have declined to follow the New Jersey decisions whenever they seemed to us to be contrary to the plain and unambiguous language of the statute. Mullins v. Thorne, 254 Md. 434, 438 (1969); Mundey v. Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund Board, 233 Md. 169, 173 (1963). Mindful of our occasional rapport with the New Jersey courts, appellants make much of Gervolino v. Porter, 75 N.J.Super. 246 (1962). Since they seem to lean upon it so heavily, we shall take a look at it.

The New Jersey statute requires the applicant to “give notice to the Board * * * within 90 [180 days in Maryland] days after the accident.” The accident (in Gervo *235 lino) happened on 25 December 1957; the notice was mailed to the Board on 25 March 1958; it was received at the office of the Board on 26 March 1958. We quote from the court’s opinion:

“Some of the considerations pertinent in determining the question here presented were discussed in the recent decision of another part of this court in Szczesny v. Vasquez, 71 N.J.Super. 347 (App. Div. 1962). There the accident occurred July 31, 1957; plaintiffs’ proofs purported to establish a mailing of the notice August 20, 1957; but when, on inquiry of the plaintiffs’ attorney March 24, 1958 as to why he had received no acknowledgment of the filing of the claim, a search of the records of the Board was made, it indicated no notice was ever received there. The court dealt with the contention of the claimants that they were entitled to a presumption of receipt of the notice by the Board from evidence of its proper mailing. However, the court found the evidence of the fact of such mailing to lack probative force and therefore ruled against the plaintiffs. The strict holding of the case is thus compatible either with the legal hypothesis that mailing within the 90 days is adequate giving of notice (but not established to have been the fact) or that receipt of the notice by the Board within the 90 days is legally necessary (a fact not established by aid of the presumption of receipt of mail in ordinary course because the mailing itself was not satisfactorily proven). What the court would have decided had it been satisfied as a fact that the notice had been properly mailed within the period, as alleged, although in fact never received, is not indicated. The only clue afforded by the opinion is the court’s distinguishment of Delaware Twp. v. Neeld, 52 N.J.Super. 63 (App. Div. 1958), on the ground that there the statute dealt with complaints *236 ‘made within’ a certain number of days, implying- a legislative intention to require a filing of the complaint. From this it may be inferred that the Szczesny court %oas not persuaded that the giving of notice required by the present statute necessarily called for its receipt by the Board.”
Id. at 248-49. (Last emphasis added.)

Appellants seem to extract much comfort from the concluding italicized language quoted above. But it is obvious dictum; indeed a more equivocal statement would be hard to concoct. Any doubt in this regard is dispelled by the following excerpt from the succeeding paragraph of the opinion:

“* * * facts before us do not present, and we do not here decide, the question whether receipt of the notice by the Board at some time must at all events be established by the claimant in order for him to be deemed to have performed the statutory condition precedent. Here the notice was concededly received by the Board, and at a time sufficient to enable it to give due protection to the Fund. The State’s interests in respect of the Fund were not prejudiced. See Giacobbe v. Gassert, supra (29 N. J., at p. 426). The question for our determination is simply whether the claimant has, on her part, timely complied with the legislative intent, as articulated by the language, and illuminated by the objects and purposes, of the act, that she give notice of the claim to the Board within 90 days after the accident, ivhen she mailed such notice to the Board on the 90th day after the accident and it was in fact received.” Id. at 249-50. (Emphasis added.)

The court concluded that the notice of the claim was “timely given.” It should be observed, however, that in doing so, it said:

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Bluebook (online)
269 A.2d 593, 259 Md. 232, 1970 Md. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-unsatisfied-claim-judgment-fund-md-1970.