delivered the opinion of the Court.
First Federated Commodity Trust Corporation and other individual appellants 1 are here seeking the reversal of an order signed by Judge Kenneth C. Proctor, sitting in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, which dismissed their motion to vacate three earlier decrees entered by that court in this equity case. As a preliminary matter, the appellee, *331 the Commissioner of Securities for the State of Maryland, filed a motion in this Court to dismiss the appeal. Because at the hearing held on this motion the merits of the controversy were also briefed and discussed, we shall, at this time, without requiring further briefs or argument, decide not only the commissioner’s motion but also all of the other issues raised by the appeal. To do so, however, we must first review the background of this dispute in order to place the legal issues now involved in their proper perspective.
The commissioner, by alleging that First Federated is engaged in the sale of securities in a manner which violated the Maryland Securities Act (Maryland Code (1957, 1971 Repl. Vol.) Art. 32A, §§ 13, 15, 19), and that while “making promises of fantastic profits [to its customers] and taking substantial investment funds from investors, ... [is] not now able to meet [its] obligations amounting to millions of dollars”, sought to enjoin the appellants from engaging in these activities and for the appointment of a receiver for the corporate defendant in his equity suit filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County on February 27, 1973. First Federated, in its answer to the commissioner’s bill, objected to the granting of the relief prayed by contending principally that the Maryland Securities Act applies to the sale of securities and not commodity options, 2 the business in which it was engaged. 3 A full trial became unnecessary, however, *332 when, following the appointment of a temporary conservator for First Federated by an order of the court dated February 27, 1973, the parties consented to the entry of a decree on March 7 which provided for the requested permanent injunction at that time, and for the appointment of a receiver at a later date, if this should become necessary. As it became imperative to preserve the assets of First Federated, the appointment was accomplished on April 5 by a further order designating Philip Z. Altfeld as the receiver. However, despite the apparent equanimity which the consent decree had engendered, on April 19, First Federated filed a motion to strike these decrees in which it alleges that each is void as the circuit court had no jurisdiction to enter them. Subsequent to a hearing, appellants’ motion was denied and this appeal followed.
(i) The Motion to Dismiss
The appellee moves to dismiss this appeal based on the principle that no appeal lies from a consent decree. For this proposition, he relies on
Mercantile Trust Co. v. Schloss,
It is now well settled in this State, that a plaintiff or complainant in a law or equity action, as the case may be, has the right to an immediate appeal from an order striking a judgment or decree which has become enrolled under Maryland Rules 625 (law) or 671 a (equity).
Ventresca v. Weaver Brothers,
(ii) The Merits
We come now to the central issue in this present case, and the one upon which the arguments of both sides on the motion to dismiss the appeal have focused; namely, whether the chancellor erred in refusing to set aside the 1973 decrees dated February 27, March 7, and April 5 because the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to enter each one of them. In doing so, we review the facts and the law solely to examine the validity of Judge Proctor’s conclusion on this point. In our consideration of this, we are of course mindful of the principle that the decree of any judicial tribunal which is without jurisdiction in its fundamental sense is void,
Fooks
’
Executors v. Ghingher,
What is meant by the lack of jurisdiction in its fundamental sense such as to make an otherwise valid decree void is often misunderstood. As Judge Horney noted for this Court in
Moore v. McAllister,
“Juridically, jurisdiction refers to two quite distinct concepts: (i) the power of a court to render a valid decree, and (ii) the propriety of granting the relief sought. 1 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (5th ed. 1941), Secs. 129-31.”
It is only when the court lacks the power to render a decree, for example because the parties are not before the court, as being improperly served with process, or because the court is without authority to pass upon the subject matter involved in the dispute, that its decree is void.
Moore v. McAllister, supra; Fooks
’
Executors v. Ghingher, supra.
On the other hand, the question of whether it was appropriate to grant the relief merges into the final decree and cannot thereafter be successfully assailed for that reason once enrolled.
Steinpreis v. Leet,
Looking now directly at the appellants’ contention, we perceive that they do not, nor can they, question the circuit court’s inherent or statutory power sitting in equity to issue an injunction or to decree the appointment of a receiver for an insolvent corporation, the remedies requested and rendered here. See generally,
T. Alexander, A Summary of the Practize of the Court of Chancery, and County Courts, as Courts of Equity in Maryland,
Ch. 1 (1839). Rather, they aver that under the particular facts which are present in this case, the
plaintiff
had no authority, under the Maryland Securities Act, to request the relief sought as the commissioner was overreaching in attempting to regulate what appellants contend is not a security as defined by Art. 32A, § 25 (1). But this involves the
right
of the ap
*336
pellee to proceed with his action, which has already been finally determined by the consent decree and cannot now be questioned, not the power of the court to hear and determine the case, which it clearly possesses.
Berlinsky v.
Eisenberg,
Motion to dismiss the appeal denied and order affirmed.
Costs to be paid by the appellants.
Notes
. The appellants, in addition to First Federated, are its officers, E. Kenneth Mulford, Albert Pomory, and John R. Singleton, Jr. The case comes before us pursuant to a writ of certiorari addressed to the Court of Special Appeals which was issued on our own motion before that court had heard the appeal. Maryland Code 1974, § 12-201 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article.
. The Maryland Securities Act, Code (1957,1971 Repl. Vol.) Art. 32A, § 25 (1) states:
“(1) ‘Security’ means any note; stock; treasury stock; bond; debenture; evidence of indebtedness; certificate of interest or participation in any profit-sharing agreement; collateral-trust certificate; preorganization certificate or subscription; transferable share; investment contract; voting-trust certificate; certificate of deposit for a security; certificate of interest or participation in an oil, gas, or mining title or lease or in payments out of production under such a title or lease; or, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a ‘security,’ or any certificate of interest or participation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the foregoing. ‘Security’ does not include any insurance or endowment policy or annuity contract under which an insurance company promises to pay money either in a lump sum or periodically for life or some other specified period.”
. The appellants initially questioned the court’s subject matter ju *332 risdiction in their answer to the original bill for substantially the same reasons as those assigned on this appeal. However, that issue was not specifically ruled upon by the trial court since the consent decree, at least temporarily, terminated the litigation. As we dispose of this case on other grounds, and as neither side raises the question (Rule 885), we do not consider whether res judicata bars the relitigation of the court’s jurisdiction. For a discussion of this problem see Restatement of Judgments, ,§ 10 and its comments (1942).
. No one disputes that the March 7 consent decree is, in essence, the final decree being attacked here. This is apparently so because the issues settled by the February action merged into it, and the April decree merely resulted from it.
