Court Opinion

ID: 7900416
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:55:04.851645+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:21:06.886798
License: Public Domain

Briscoe, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a proceeding by attachment instituted on July 14th, 1897, in the Superior Court of Baltimore City by the appellee, Calvin R. Nutt, a citizen of Frederick, Maryland, .against the appellant, John F. Waggaman, a resident of the city of Washington. The trial below was upon the short note case. The cause of action was. as follows: “John F. Waggaman'to Calvin R. Nutt. To amount due for the stock in the Sinepuxent Beach Company, which the said Waggaman agreed to pay the said Nutt, upon the said Nutt giving the said Waggaman notice that he wanted a return of the valuation put on said stock by agreement between (which notice was. duly given), $2,200.00.” The attachment was dissolved on appearance of the defendant and upon bond filed.
The case was tried upon the pleas of never indebted, never promised and limitations.
The defendant reserved three exceptions to the rulings of the Court, and the judgment being against him, he has appealed. As the questions in the case are presented by the bills of exception, we will consider them in their regular order.
It appears from the record, that sometime in the year 1892, the plaintiff purchased nineteen shares of the capital stock of the Sinepuxent Beach Company, which owned the summer resort, Ocean City, Maryland, for the sum of $2,090 upon certain representations previously made by one Harvey L. Page and the defendant Waggaman. The certificate of stock, which was issued by the company, contains the contract'of sale and reads as follows:
“ Whereas, John F. Waggaman and Harvey L. Page-have secured a controlling interest in the capital stock of the Sinepuxent Beach Company, a corporation duly created and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Maryland. .
“ And whereas, the money necessary to make the pur*271chases of said controlling interest was advanced by divers persons.
“ And whereas, the —-—, who had advanced said money, have agreed with the said Waggaman and Page, and with each other, that the stock representing such controlling interest shall be issued in the name of Samuel Maddox, John F. Waggaman and Harvey L. Page, trustees, to be held by them in one block for eight (8) years; and have further agreed that proxies or powers of attorney, irrevocable except as hereinafter provided, shall be given to the said Waggaman and Page, or the survivor of them, to vote upon the said controlling interest at all meetings of the stockholders that may be held during the said period of eight years; and have also agreed to pay the said Waggaman and Page, as compensation for their services in procuring such controlling interest and looking after the affairs of said company, a sum equal to fifty per centum of any profits on the stock so purchased, whether such profits be in the shape of dividends on said stock from the sale of lands, or otherwise, which compensation said trustees are authorized to retain and pay to the said Waggaman and Page, their executors and assigns; and have further agreed that at the end of the said period of eight years, the said trustees shall cause to be issued to each of the said beneficial owners of said stock, a separate certificate for the number of shares owned by him, when and after such beneficial owner shall have paid or caused to be paid or satisfactorily secured to the said Waggaman and Page, their executors or administrators, one-half of the difference between the market value of the said stock at that time, and what was paid for it, to wit, one hundred and ten dollars ($110.00) per share. -
“And whereas, the said Waggaman and Page have secured that if at any time during said period of eight years, any beneficial owner of said stock becomes dissatisfied with their management of the affairs of said company, he shall, after six months’ notice in writing to the said Page and Waggaman be entitled to demand a return of the money advanced by him with six per *272cent, interest thereon, and on the receipt thereof his interest in the property of the said company shall straightway cease and determine; and if after notice given as aforesaid, the money advanced by such beneficial owner with six per cent, interest thereon is not returned to him, then the said Waggaman and Page have agreed that the said proxies or powers so as aforesaid, to be given to them may be revoked by a vote of the beneficial owners of a majority of said stock, which majority may authorize and empower some other person or persons to vote on said stock at all meetings of the stockholders in the place and stead of the said Waggaman and Page, and may also fix upon some reasonable time within which the affairs of the company shall be closed up. But before the said proxies or powers of attorney to said Waggaman and Page are revoked, they shall have the right to demand and receive the compensation hereinbefore provided, to be determined in case of disagreement by arbitrators, one to be selected by the said Waggaman and Page, and one by the beneficial owners of a majority of said stock, the two so selected to have power to nominate a third, and the decision of said arbitrators to be final and conclusive upon' said Waggaman and Page, and the said beneficial owners. And whereas, the beneficial owners of said stock representing the controlling interest in the affairs of said company are desirous of having written evidence of such ownership.
“ Know, therefore, know all men by these presents, that we, Samuel Maddox, John F. Waggaman and Harvey L. Page, do hereby certify and declare that we hold nineteen (19) shares of the capital stock of the Sinepuxent Beach Company, for the use and benefit of Calvin Routh Nutt, his executors, administrators and assigns, subject, nevertheless, to all the conditions, provisions and agreements hereinbefore set forth.
“ This certificate, on being surrendered, may be transferred only on our books in persons or by power of attorney.
*273“ In testimony whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and seals this seventh day of April, A. D. 1892.
Sam. Maddox, (seal)
Trustee.
John F. Waggaman, (seal)
Trustee.
Harvey L. Page, (seal)
Trustee.”
On the 3rd of April, 1893, the appellee served upon Messrs. Waggaman and Page a notice in these words:
“ Washington, D. C., April 3rd, 1893. “To Messrs. John F. Waggaman, Harvey L. Page.
“ Gentlemen: — This is intended to inform you that I am not satisfied with the management of the affairs of the Sinepuxent Beach Co. As you have control of the stock of the company, you are probably willing to accept responsibility for the course things have taken. On reference to the pool agreement, 1 find a provision requiring you after six months’ notice to return to holders of pool stock, who may be dissatisfied with your management, the money paid by them therefor, with six per cent, interest added. This will notify you that I shall expect you to comply with this provision in my case, and repay me within six months from this date, the sum of $2,090.00, with interest thereon at six per cent, from the 19th day of March, 1892, to date of payment. On receipt of this sum and interest, I will assign to you the certificate of ownership of 19 shares of stock, issued to me by yourself and Mr. Samuel Maddox as trustees, under date 19th March.
Yours respectfully,
(Signed) C. R. Nutt.”
On the 22d of August, 1895, proceedings were begun by the appellee in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against the trustees of this company for the purpose of having transferred and delivered to him, his 19 shares of capital stock in the Sinepuxent Company held by the trustees, free of all trusts, whatsoever. This *274proceeding was subsequently abandoned by the appellee, but the trustees in their answers filed in that cause, and admitted as evidence in this case, practically admit the indebtedness as contended for by the appellee, here. Waggaman in his answer states that he “ offered to give him (the appellee here) a check for the amount and interest, provided he would procure from his wife a written request to that effect.” And the trustee, Page, states in his answer, he was not then able to meet the demand so made on him.
The appellee testified that at the time he gave Mr. Waggaman the second notice, that he would sue under the agreement, he (Waggaman) asked him not to sue; that he intended to fix the matter up, and he allowed two years to elapse before bringing the suit. “ I had the last conversation, I think, with him in reference to the matter after he had bought the property down at Ocean City, within the past year.” . . . “ I had hardly ever allowed a month to go by that I did not call on him or have a conversation with him.” . . . “ He never did deny owing me the money; he never refused to pay it; he always told me he was going to settle it, and told me not to sue him, not to bring any suit; there was no use of he and I having any trouble.” He further stated, in 1895, “ I wanted to settle with him, he promised to pay me this money; he told me to get my paper, and when I went to him, he offered me his note for $1,500.00 if I would surrender this to him, and I could get the note discounted at my bank; he was to pay me the balance whenever it was convenient to him. I declined to take his note and surrender my paper.”
Now we do not think it necessary to further consider or review the evidence of the case. It is quite clear, that it was legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover, and unless the Cqurt committed some error in its rulings upon the law, the judgment must be affirmed. We come then to the questions raised b)!- the exceptions.
The first prayer offered by the defendant, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, upon the legal sufficiency of the evidence and which was rejected by the Court, was *275clearly erroneous. It sought to withdraw the case when the evidence was sufficient to be left to the jury.
The question raised by the second bill of exception is identical with the question presented by the motion in arrest of judgment, and relates to the plea in abatement, which was properly refused by the Court.
It was settled by this Court in Spencer v. Patten, 84 Md. 421, that “ a plea in abatement cannot be pleaded after a plea in bar has been filed, unless the facts relied on to abate the action arise afterwards. If it be conceded, as contended by the appellants, that a plea in bar only waives matter in abatement then existing, and of which the party was aware at the time when his plea in bar was filed, this additional qualification cannot aid the appellants, as the plea does not allege that they were not aware of the facts stated when they filed the plea in bar. . . . The matter relied on in abatement existed at the period when the plea in bar was filed, and although the leave granted to plead de novo gives to the defendant the right to plead any plea to the action which he may select, it does not confer the right to raise dilatory objections, of which the party was aware when he exhibited his plea in bar and which he had thus surrendered.” And in Cruzen v. McKaig, 57 Md. 464, it is said: “ The principle has long since been settled that in case where two or more are jointly bound by contract and one only be sued, it is no matter in bar of the action, or ground of demurrer, or in arrest of judgment, that the others are not joined, except where the declaration discloses upon its face that the contract was joint, and the plaintiff fails to show why all the parties jointly liable have not been joined as defendants; nor does it form ground of variance in the evidence upon the trial. Though the contract be joint, it is still the contract of the party sued, and recovery may be had against him; and though he be declared against as the only party bound, or as being severally bound, by the contract, if he does not take advantage of the non-joinder by proper plea in abatement, he cannot object to the reception in evidence of the joint contract upon the ground of variance between the allegata and probata.”
*276(Decided June 30th, 1898.)
The plaintiff’s first prayer, and the defendant’s first, fourth and eighth prayers, which were granted by the Court, and which we have carefully examined fully and fairly, stated the law of the case, and as favorably to the defendant as hie could require.
The defendant’s second, third, fifth, sixth and seventh prayers proceeded upon an entirely, different view of the law, and presented different questions from those embraced in the instructions granted by the Court and were properly refused. The ninth and tenth prayers related to the legal sufficiency of the evidence and were properly rejected for the reasons we have given. The eleventh prayer embraced the question as to the nonjoinder of the trustee, Page, and has been passed upon by us in the second bill of exception.
There was no evidence to sustain the twelfth prayer and the Court was right in rejecting it. For the reasons we have given the judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed with costs.