delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is now before the Court on the appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeals and writs of error. The proceedings are characterized by so much procedural informality and confusion as to necessitate a rather lengthy statement of the course which the controversy has taken.
The facts of the case are simple enough. The appellees filed an application with the Board of Liquor License Commissioners for Baltimore County (the “Board”) for a package goods liquor license for the sale of beer, wine and liquor at a drugstore located at the intersection of the Joppa Road and
On August 15, 1955, the applicants took an appeal to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County under Code (1951), Article 2B, Section 166, seeking a reversal of the Board’s decision. Pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 166, the Board transmitted to the Court on August 30th a transcript of the testimony taken at the hearing and other pertinent papers. The covering letter from the Secretary of the Board to the Clerk of the Court listed the “opinion of the Board” as one of the enclosures. This statement was erroneous, and it appears that no opinion had actually been written and filed up to that time. The covering letter requested that notice of any hearing in court be given to counsel for Mrs. Sheeler, counsel for the applicants and counsel for the Board. The latter happened to be away on his vacation from some date prior to the date of the Secretary’s letter of transmittal until September 12th. He received no notice of the hearing and learned only on his return that it had been held during his absence.
On September 6, 1955, Mrs. Sheeler filed a petition for leave to intervene in the case, and such leave was granted. The case was heard on September 7th by Judge Barrett. He had before him the record of the proceedings before the Board. The record transmitted to this Court contains docket entries showing that on September 7, 1955, the hearing was held, the action of the Board was affirmed and the court’s opinion was filed. Judge Barrett’s opinion, delivered orally, states that he had read the record of proceedings before the Board, that it showed the presence of other liquor stores in the vicinity and that in the face of this testimony he was of the opinion that the applicants had failed to meet the burden of showing that the action of the Board was arbitrary or capricious in denying
There was some stipulation between the parties (at least those represented at the hearing) with regard to the absence of an opinion of the Board. The stipulation was doubtless oral and no verbatim copy of it appears in the record. The parties give somewhat different versions of it. We think that the portion of Judge Barrett’s opinion which we have quoted above supports the appellees’ contention that the stipulation was to the effect that no opinion had been filed and that the appeal would be heard, argued and decided on that basis. If the stipulation had gone so far as to amount to a waiver on the part of the appellees of any requirement for an opinion or an estoppel against them to insist upon one, Judge Barrett in all probability would have so stated.
On September 19, 1955, the applicants filed, apparently
ex parte,
a petition for rehearing in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in which they stressed the absence of any opinion of the Board and cited a decision of Chief Judge Gontrum in another case in the same court in which he was said to have “reversed the action of the Liquor Board, stating that in the absence of an opinion or some other indication by said Board of its findings of facts, it was impossible for the Court to sustain its action.” No copy of this opinion was filed. The petition prayed that “the instant proceeding may be reopened and counsel allowed and permitted to fully argue this matter.” An order in accordance with the prayer of the petition and directing the Clerk of the court to set the matter for hearing was entered by Judge Barrett on the same day. This was equivalent to granting a motion for a new trial. See
Psalmist Baptist Church v. Board of Zoning Appeals,
On September 21st a petition was filed on behalf of Mrs. Sheeler which recited the filing of the applicants’ petition for a rehearing and the passage of “an appropriate Order granting same”, alleged that a matter of considerable importance and novelty was involved, which would require a reasonable time to answer, and prayed that any hearing on the petition for rehearing should be stayed for fifteen days. An order to that effect was entered on the same day. Mrs. Sheeler filed her answer to the petition on September 26th. In it she asserted that the Board’s opinion had been filed in these proceedings [as it was on September 22nd] and she prayed that the court should pass its order “reaffirming its previous ruling which affirmed the decision of the Board * *
Meanwhile, on September 22nd, the Board filed its answer to the applicants’ petition for rehearing. In it the Board denied the need for its filing an opinion, and complained of the lack of notice of the hearing in this and other appealed cases. It also filed its opinion, which it incorporated by reference in its answer. The opinion rested the Board’s denial of the license on the ground urged by the protestants and adopted by Judge Barrett in his oral opinion of September 7th — that there was no need for another package store in the neighborhood in question.
On October 7, 1955, the applicants filed a motion to strike the Board’s opinion on the ground that it had not been filed within the time prescribed by Section 166 (c) of Article 2B of the Code (1951). No formal action was taken on this petition, though the practical effect of the opinion and order of April 25, 1956, referred to below, was to sustain the objection.
At some time not disclosed and (presumably) before some judge not identified, the applicants made a motion for Judges of the Third Judicial Circuit of Maryland to sit
in banc
to hear the case. The appellants assert and the appellees do not deny that this motion was made without prior notice to the appellants, and since no such written motion is to be found in the record, it must be supposed that it was made orally. Much of the present confusion arises from questions as to the capacity
Judges Gontrum and Day concurred in holding that the Board’s failure to make findings of fact pursuant to Code (1951), Article 2B, Section 57, and to transmit them to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County within the time provided by Section 166 (c) of the same Article, required a reversal of the Board’s action and the granting of the license. Section 57 provides that in the absence of adverse findings an application shall be approved and a license issued, and Section 166 (c) requires a transcript of the proceedings before the Board and of all pertinent papers to be transmitted to the Circuit Court within fifteen days after notice of an appeal. Judge Barrett dissented. An order was entered' in accordance with the views of the majority of the three-judge court and the appeals are from that order.
On May 15, 1956, Mrs. Sheeler filed her order of appeal. On the same day the Board of County Commissioners sought and obtained leave to intervene and took an appeal. Also, on the same day, the appellants — Mrs. Sheeler, the Board and the County Commissioners — -filed petitions for writs of error, upon which the Circuit Court entered orders “that the record herein be removed and an appeal to the Petitioners be allowed as on writ of error or appeal, as the case may be, to the Court of Appeals of Maryland.”
No objection appears to have been raised by either Mrs. Sheeler or the Board until after the adverse decision of April 25, 1956, to either the reopening of the case by the order of September 19, 1955, or to the constitution of the three-judge court or to the delay in determination beyond thirty days after the filing of the record in the Circuit Court. Indeed, Mrs. Sheeler’s petition filed on September 21, 1955, apparently conceded the propriety of the reopening and asked for a stay for
Furthermore, insofar as acquiescence in the reopening is concerned, we note that in her answer filed on September 26, 1955, Mrs. Sheeler asked the court to reaffirm its previous ruling. In addition, the appellants’ brief in this Court states that the “Board presumably could have resisted the reopening of the case because of the statute, but, in the public interest, the * * * Board acquiesced in a reopening of the case and supplied the missing paper to make the Transcript complete with the expectation that the Judge who had heard the case without the local Board’s opinion would come to the same conclusion after reading the * * * Board’s decision.” Since the County Commissioners did not seek to become parties to the case until after the decision of the three-judge court, all parties before the court at the respective times of the reopening of the case, of the extension of the time for hearing and of the actual final hearing either sought, assented to or acquiesced in those proceedings. Had the care and thoroughness which are manifest in the briefs filed in this Court been applied to shaping the course of this litigation in the Circuit Court, the numerous problems now presented or sought to be presented would have
Out of the welter of confusion these things seem clear: first, that the appellants concede that Judge Barrett had revisory power for thirty days over his order of September 7, 1955, and hence had power to reopen the case; second, that as a result of his reopening it, his order of September 7, 1955, did not finally decide any question of law or anything else; third, that as a result of that order having been set aside, it could not thereafter constitute a decision of a point of law at variance with the subsequent decision of a majority of the three-judge court; and hence, fourth, that the jurisdictional basis for an appeal to this Court under Code (1951), Article 2B, Section 166 (e) is lacking. Suttleman v. Board of Liquor License Commissioners for Baltimore City, supra.
The appellants seek to sustain their appeals or writs of error on the ground that the three-judge court sat as a court
in banc
in the attempted but unwarranted exercise of special, statutory, appellate jurisdiction, and that its lack of jurisdiction is open to direct attack on appeal or writ of error, citing
Board of Medical Examiners v. Steward,
One point may as well be disposed of here. This is that this Court has no greater power of review in this case because of the use of petitions for writs of error than it has on simple appeals. Rule 1 of our former Rules relating to Appeals, which were in force when this case was decided below and was brought to this Court, provided that formal writs of error should be dispensed with and the case proceeded with as if on writ of error; but, as is said in
Poe on Pleading and Practice (Tiffany’s
Ed.), Vol. 2, Section 821: “Writs of error have no peculiar power which give them a greater range or wider effect than appeals. They are but different methods of accom
It is perfectly clear that in this case the Circuit Court for Baltimore County did not have power .to sit as a court
in banc
under Section 22 of Article IV of the State Constitution for two reasons. One is that no motion for the reservation of points or questions to be determined by the court
in banc
was entered at the sitting where the adverse rulings sought to be reviewed were made.
Costigin v. Bond,
It does not follow that because the three judges of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County who heard this case together on Eebruary 17, 1956, could not then have been sitting as a court
in banc
under Section 22 of Article IV of the Constitution,
Since we are constrained to grant the motion to dismiss the appeal and since other questions sought to be raised on the merits have not been fully argued before this Court, we shall not undertake to state our views with regard thereto, as has sometimes been done where a question of public interest has been fully argued, but the Court has determined that the appeal had to be dismissed. In order to avoid any possible misinterpretation of the effect of the dismissal of these appeals, we state explicitly that these dismissals neither indicate nor imply any holding by this Court to the effect that the Board of Liquor License Commissioners is obligated to record a formal finding of fact in any case where, as here, only one question of fact is shown by the record to have been presented to the Board for determination and its decision and action upon the application before it can be consonant with only one finding on such an issue, or that the provision for the filing in court of pertinent papers within fifteen days after notice of an appeal is received by the Board is mandatory rather than directory so that no such
Appeals and writs of error dismissed, with costs.
