41 Md. 362 | Md. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented hy this appeal is whether an equity cause can be removed for trial, under the provision of the Constitution on that subject. That provision is (Cons. of 1867, Art. 4, sec. 8,) that “the Judge or Judges of any Court of this State, except the Court of Appeals, shall order and direct the record of proceedings in any suit or action, issue or petition, presentment or indictment pending in such Court, to he transmitted to some other Court, (and of a different circuit, if the party applying shall so elect,) having jurisdiction in. such cases, whenever any party to such cause, or the counsel of any party shall make a suggestion in writing, supported by the affidavit of such party or his counsel, or other proper evidence, that the party cannot have a fair or impartial trial in the Court in which such suit or action, issue or petition, presentment or indictment is pending, or when the Judges of said Court shall ■ be disqualified under the provisions of this Constitution to sit in any such suit, action, issue or petition, presentment or indictment; and the General Assembly shall make such modifications of existing law' as may be necessary to regulate and give force to this provision.”
The power of the Courts to remove a cause to an adjoining-county for trial, when justice required it, existed at common law as an acknowledged, if not an essential part of their ordinary common law jurisdiction. Price vs. The State, 8 Gill, 311; Negro Jerry vs. Townshend, 2 Md., 278. But the privilege has been secured and placed upon a more sure and certain foundation by constitutional provisions embodied in all our State Constitutions from 1806 to the present time. The object of these provisions, as of all laws, for the removal of causes from one venue to another is to secure a fair and impartial trial, and pro
But apart from any restriction which the Constitution may impose, there are others growing out of the origin and nature of the right itself, and the end it seeks to attain, which necessarily limit the broad and comprehensive terms in which the right is granted. In construing the instrument the Courts have adopted such restrictions as necessarily attending the rightful exercise of the power, and in order that the administration of justice may not be thwarted or wholly defeated under color'or pretence of exercising the right. Thus it has been held that as the object of the removal is to secure a fair and impartial trial, the removal must be made before the trial or any part of it is commenced in the Court ordering the removal, (8 Gill, 313,) and that the right can only be exercised by Courts exercising original and not appellate jurisdiction, and hence no removal could be made by a Circuit Court in a case pending before it on appeal, (Hoshall vs. Hoffacker, 11 Md., 362,) and where the right has been once exercised there can be no second or subsequent removal at the instance of the same party, as that might defeat the object for which the right was granted, and tend to almost infinite delay, and the great oppression of witnesses. 8 Gill, 301; State, use of County Commissioners vs. Gore, et al., 32 Md., 498. In the case last cited, one of two defendants in an action at law had the case removed, and the other defendant, then claimed the right to have it still again removed upon his suggestion, but we held that when a case' was once removed at the
This reasoning applies with still greater force against a construction which would allow the removal of equity causes. In a suit at law all the plaintiffs and all the defendants have the same interest, the former to sustain, and the latter to defeat the action. But in equity proceedings it is not unfrequent that a defendant has a common interest with a complainant, and the interests of several defendants are often in direct conflict. It would therefore be difficult in such cases to put the construction upon the term “party,” which we have placed upon it in reference to suits at law, and as the parties to equity causes are
It has been argued that as the terms used in the Constitution of 1806 and 1851, were “ suit or action at law,” and as the words “at law” are omitted from those of 1864 and 1867, the intention was, to extend the right of removal to proceedings in equity. But it must he observed, that in the Constitution of 1864, the restriction that it must he made satisfactorily to. appear to the Court, that the party cannot have a fair and impartial trial, is wholly inconsistent with the idea that it applies to equity proceedings, for it would be absurd to submit to a Judge the determination of his own unfitness to try the cause or the existence of such a prejudice in his mind as would render him incapable of trying it fairly and impartially. The changes made by the Constitution of 1867, are the omission of this restriction, the extension of the territorial limits of removal, provided by the words “to some other Court,-and
Order affirmed.