Court Opinion

ID: 7895383
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:52:10.542927+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:03.746525
License: Public Domain

Miller, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from the refusal of the Court of Common Pleas, to strike out a judgment of condemnation rendered against the appellant as garnishee of Hugh Crolly. The only grounds for the motion relied on here, or of which any proof was offered in the Court below, are that the judgment was irregularly entered, and was obtained by surprise.
The record shows that the appellee Cherry, on the 30th of May, 1867, issued an attachment on warrant in the-usual form, upon certain promissory notes of Crolly for $220. The writ was returned by the sheriff on the same day, “laid in the hands of Stephen M. Gibbons, at one o’clock P. M., in presence of John Lloyd, and garnishee summoned.” On the same day the garnishee appeared by counsel, and was laid under a rule to plead. No plea was filed, and no further steps were taken in the case by either side until the May term, 1878, and the cause in the-meantime had been placed on the stet docket of the Court. In the early part of that term, and at different times *147during the term, the Judge gave notice that after he had completed the trial of cases on the trial docket, he would call the cases on the stet docket, and accordingly on the 10th of July, 1878, began the call of cases on that docket, and on reaching this case entered a judgment of condemnation by default for want of a plea. Row it is insisted that the notice thus given by the Judge, respecting the call and disposition of cases on the stet docket, was ultra vires, in conflict with the rule of Court on that subject, and consequently the disposition of the case, and the entry of the judgment in this mode was irregular, and for that reason the judgment ought to have been stricken out.
By the Rules adopted by the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, for the conduct of business in the Superior Court, the Common Pleas, and the City Court, it is provided that the clerk at each term shall prepare a trial docket, and a stet docket, the latter of which shall 'contain all cases that have been twice called for trial and continued without affidavit, and not because of an outstanding commission; and in respect to cases on this docket, there is a rule which is set out in the record, to the effect, that if the assignment of cases on the trial docket for the day shall be disposed of before the usual hour of adjournment, the Court will proceed to.hear any cause on the stet docket, in which counsel on both sides shall be in Court ready to proceed to trial, and when two or more cases are in such condition, they shall he tried in numerical order. It is then provided that counsel in any cause upon the stet docket, may compel the opposite party to proceed to trial upon the first opportunity presented under the operation of the foregoing rules, by giving to such party five days’ notice in writing of his intention to call said case for trial on the first opportunity which shall occur after the expiration of said notice, and when thus called, it shall stand for trial as if it had been called in *148the regular assignment for the day ; but a case brought forward under such notice must be tried or disposed of when the opportunity for trial occurs, or the .party giving the notice will lose the benefit thereof, and the same case can only be brought forward again under the exigency of a new notice.
It is conceded these are the only rules the Supreme Bench has ever adopted in reference to a stet docket, and the appellant’s counsel has contended that it is beyond the power of any one of the Judges of these several Courts, to make any rule, or adopt any order, or take any steps for the trial or disposition of cases that have once been placed on this docket, except in the mode prescribed by this rule. This argument is founded on the idea that the Constitution has invested the Supreme Bench with the sole and exclusive power of making rules regulating the conduct of business in these Courts. It is true that the Constitution in establishing the jurisdiction, and prescribing the powers and duties of the Supreme Bench has declared {Art. 4, sec. 33,) that it shall have power, and it shall be its duty “ to make all needful rules and regulations for the conduct of business in each of said Courts, during the session thereof, and in vacation, or in chambers, before any of said Judges.” But we do not ascribe to this provision any such potency as counsel have contended for. The Court of Common Pleas was one of the existing tribunals for the administration of justice in the City of Baltimore when the Constitution of 1861 was adopted, and that instrument recognized, and continued it, and defined its jurisdiction. We cannot suppose it was the intention of those who framed or adopted the Constitution, that by the provision cited, the Judges of this and other' Courts of Baltimore City would be rendered powerless to act, to try causes, and to administer justice, in case the Supreme Bench neglected to adopt rules for their guidance; or if such rules when adopted failed to meet all possible *149emergencies, that the Judges should have no power to supply the deficiency, and adopt from time to time such orders and take such measures, not inconsistent with the rules in force, as in their judgment would secure the trial, or final disposition of all cases brought and pending in their respective Courts. The rule in question fails to provide for any regular' call of the cases on the stet docket. Under its operation it might happen that none of these cases could be tried for many terms or perhaps for several years, while those not pressed for trial under the five days’ notice are left to accumulate and remain forever open and undisposed of. Such a continuous and always increasing accumulation of open and untried causes on the dockets of the Courts would not only be an innovation upon the settled practice of the State but would probably result in most serious inconvenience and mischief. If, then, a Judge finds this to be the condition of his stet docket, and no existing rule has made provision for such a difficulty, we are clearly of opinion he not only had the power, but it was his duty to fix a time for calling and disposing of all the cases on that docket. Doubtless it would have been better if a rule had been adopted, requiring such calls to be made at stated and regular intervals, but in the absence of any such rule it was clearly competent for the Judge himself to fix as he did in this instance, some convenient time therefor. Ample and repeated notice of the time was given in open Court and we cannot regard the judgments rendered, or dispositions duly made of cases under such a call as either unlawful or irregular. It is not a case where a Court has arbitrarily suspended or dispensed with its own ■rules. It is well settled law that a Court has no discretion to dispense at pleasure with rules it has adopted for its government and that of suitors, or to innovate upon established practice. Hughes vs. Jackson, 12 Md., 463. But it is a case not provided for by any rule, and where the due *150and proper administration of justice fully justified, if it 'did not imperatively require the action taken by the Judge.
(Decided 12th February, 1880.)
There is no ground whatever for the allegation of surprise. The garnishee was not only duly summoned, but appeared to the suit by counsel, and so far as the record shows, was represented by counsel during all the time the case remained on the stet docket. He appears, moreover, to have been grossly negligent from the beginning. After summons and appearance by counsel, he failed to interpose any defence to the action, and he never attempted to press the case to trial under the rule. Piling or entering the simple plea of nulla bona would have prevented the judgment of which he now complains. All this may have been the fault and neglect of his attorney, and if so it affords good ground of complaint, and a right of action against him, but furnishes no reason why the Court should deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of his judgment. Not one of the numerous decisions of this Court on motions to strike out judgments, supplies a precedent for granting relief under such circumstances. It is true, he alleged as reasons for the motion that he was never duly summoned, and that the entry of the appearance of the attorney was unwarranted and unauthorized, hut he offered no proof in support of these reasons, and they were abandoned in argument in the Court below, and have not been, as indeed they could not be, relied on here. Again, there is nothing to show he did not know of the judgment, as soon as it was rendered, and yet the motion to strike it out was not made until nearly a" year thereafter. This delay is wholly unexplained.
We find no cause of reversal, and the judgment overruling the motion must he affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.