30 A.2d 249 | Md. | 1943
On October 3, 1941, a decree was signed by Judge J. Abner Sayler in the Circuit Court of Baltimore, dismissing a bill of complaint filed by Ella Bailey, praying for divorce and alimony from her husband, Shannon Bailey, The bill was dismissed without any hearing on the merits or argument of counsel. On January 12, 1942, Judge Sayler inserted the words "without prejudice" in the decree. Bailey thereupon petitioned the court to strike out these words from the decree. From an order dismissing his petition, he brings this appeal.
At an early day in England, when the courts possessed unrestricted power to make amendments to their records, they exercised the power so recklessly that the King issued this admonition to correct the abuse: "Although we have granted to our Justices to make record of pleas pleaded before them, yet we will not that their own records shall be a warranty for their own wrong, nor that they may raze their rolls, nor amend them, nor record them contrary to their original enrollment." Blackstone remarked that this declaration meant that the justices could not, by their own private erasure, change a record already made up or alter the truth for any sinister purpose. 3 Blackstone'sCommentaries, 408; Wight v. Nicholson,
In Maryland it is well established that before a decree is enrolled, it is entirely subject to the control of the *388
court, and may be revised or revoked on petition. Norris v.Ahles,
The appellant relied on General Equity Rule 49, which provides: "Clerical mistakes in decrees or decretal orders, *389
or errors arising from any accidental slip or omission, may, at any time before the enrollment of such decrees or orders, be corrected by order of the court or judge thereof upon petition, without the form or expense of a rehearing." Code, 1939, Art. 16, Sec. 208. It was argued that since this rule authorizes the correction of clerical mistakes at any time before enrollment, the courts have no power to make any correction after enrollment. But we cannot hold that the Legislature, in enacting this rule, intended by implication to abridge the inherent power of courts of record to correct at any time clerical errors, deficiencies of form, inadvertent omissions or obvious mistakes in their records, as distinguished from judicial errors. In making such a correction, it is unnecessary to pass a new decree, for the court merely directs the clerk to produce the original decree so that the correction can be made in the presence of the court. Lovejoyv. Irelan,
The appellant also cited General Equity Rule 50, which provides that no rehearing shall be granted after the enrollment of a decree or decretal order. Code, 1939, Art. 16, § 209. However, no hearing is required when the amendment relates merely to a matter of form based solely upon the record, and does not necessitate a resubmission of the case, but involves simply the rendition of the decree as it should originally have been rendered. Of course, a court will ordinarily not make any material amendment of a decree, where the error or deficiency is of substance, without a rehearing on petition before enrollment, or a rehearing on bill of review or original bill after enrollment. But the court has power to correct or amend a decree summarily either as to clerical errors or by the insertion of words which should have been included in the decree as a matter of course as necessary and proper to give effect to the decision of the court. Bull v. International Power Co.,
We recognize that the power to make nunc pro tunc entries to make alterations or supply omissions in decrees must be exercised with great caution by the courts. Otherwise, their exercise of the power would tend to lessen the verity and destroy the sanctity of their own records. Consequently, while an equity court has the power to amend an enrolled decree where the error to be corrected is not substantial, this power should not be exercised in any case where there is the least room for doubt about the facts upon which the amendment is sought to be made. But when the facts stand undisputed, and it is desired to make a change of form and not of substance, it would be contrary to the spirit which pervades the administration of justice in the present day, and contrary to the law established by the courts of this country, to sustain an objection based solely upon the *391
technical point that the decree has been enrolled. Wight v.Nicholson,
If a bill of complaint is dismissed after a hearing on its merits, the decree of dismissal is a bar to any other suit brought for the same cause of action. It is true that when a decree of dismissal is unqualified, the presumption is that the issues were disposed of on their merits, and therefore they become res judicata. So when a dismissal is not upon the merits, the decree should contain the words "without prejudice" in order to reserve to the complainant the privilege of asserting his rights in a subsequent action, if, however, a bill of complaint has not been heard on its merits, but is dismissed under a rule for further proceedings, it is not necessary to qualify the decree of dismissal by stating expressly that it is without prejudice to the rights of the complainant. For it is only when the court has determined that the complainant has no right to the relief prayed in the bill that a decree of dismissal operates as a bar to other proceedings for the same cause of action. Cross v. Cohen, 3 Gill 257, 274; Royston v. Horner,
Inasmuch as Judge Sayler did not abuse his discretion in inserting the words "without prejudice" in the decree, the order of the court below dismissing the appellant's petition to strike these words from the decree will be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with costs.