161 A. 272 | Md. | 1932
The appellant, a citizen of West Virginia, obtained a judgment against Charles L. Gerling, and on that judgment issued an attachment out of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, under which attachment two horses then at Pimlico were levied upon as the property of Gerling. The appellee, by a petition, intervened and claimed the horses so levied upon as his property. The case thus made was tried before a jury in the Superior Court, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the claimant, the appellee. From this judgment the appellant, attaching creditor of Gerling, has appealed.
There are thirteen exceptions contained in the record; twelve to the rulings on evidence, and one to the action of the court on the prayers. As to the first twelve, having to do with rulings on evidence, without considering them in detail, it is only necessary to say that we have carefully examined the questions presented by these exceptions, and find no error in the rulings of the court thereon. The main question arises under the thirteenth exception to the court's action in granting the one prayer offered by the claimant, and refusing the plaintiff's A, B, third, fourth, fifth and sixth prayers. The court granted the plaintiff's first and second prayers.
The plaintiff's A prayer was for an instructed verdict for the plaintiff, on the theory that the claimant had offered no evidence legally sufficient to entitle him to recover. The *42 theory of this prayer is that the burden was upon the claimant to prove that the horses attached were his property, and that this he had failed to do. Considering that proposition, the contention is untenable, for two reasons: First, because the burden of proving title to and property in the horses was not upon the claimant, but upon the attaching creditor and, second, because the record discloses evidence which, if believed by the jury, would be amply sufficient upon which it might find a verdict for the claimant. As to the first reason, the law of this state provides two different modes of practice under which a claimant to personal property which has been levied upon by way of attachment or execution may assert his claim. The first is under the old and well-established practice of intervening by petition in the attachment suit; and the other is by proceeding under the provisions of section 47 of article 9 of the Code. When the first method is adopted, the claimant becomes a defendant in the attachment suit, and the burden remains upon the plaintiff, the attaching creditor, to show that the property levied upon is the property of the defendant in the attachment suit.
The substantial provisions of section 47 of article 9 of the Code were first enacted by chapter 285 of the Acts of 1876, and amended in minor particulars by chapter 507 of the Acts of 1888 and chapter 507 of the Acts of 1892. In the case of Kean v.Doerner,
In 2 Poe, Pl Pr. (3d Ed.), sec. 561, in speaking of claimants to property attached or levied upon under execution, after pointing out the method of asserting title by a claimant, the author says: "Upon the filing of such claim and plea, the clerk dockets the suit between the attaching creditor and the claimant, and at the trial, in order to entitle the plaintiff to a judgment of condemnation against the land or goods and chattels attached, it is incumbent upon him to prove title in the defendant. The burden of proof is not on the claimant to establish title and ownership in himself but on the plaintiff to show that the property belongs to the defendant and was liable to condemnation." Section 47 of article *44 9 declares that, where the claimant files a petition under its provisions, "it shall be the duty of the clerk to docket a suit against both the plaintiff and defendant in such attachment or execution and issue a summons directed to said plaintiff and defendant, giving notice of such claim and returnable to the next succeeding rule day or term of said court."
In Lemp Brewing Co. v. Mantz,
In the case at bar, the appellee proceeded under the old practice and became a defendant in the attachment case, leaving the burden upon the attaching creditor as it rested before his intervention. That he proceeded under the old practice is clear; because, if under section 47, it became the duty of the clerk to docket a new suit wherein the claimant would be plaintiff and the attaching creditor and debtor would be defendants. Again, in this case, even if the proceedings had been under section 47 and the burden was upon the claimant, it could not be said as a matter of law that he had failed to meet that burden. If this court believed that some of the witnesses on behalf of the claimant made inconsistent statements, or were untruthful, as to which we express no opinion, such would not be the basis for a directed verdict; because, under the firmly established law of this state, it is peculiarly the function of the jury to pass upon the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. It is abundantly apparent from the record that the claimant produced evidence, both oral and written, sufficient upon which to base a verdict, if in the opinion of the jury the facts so presented were true. It is evident, from the verdict, that the jury so believed. There was no error in the refusal of the plaintiff's A prayer, which asked for a directed verdict for the plaintiff and against the claimant.
In view of what we have said as to the burden of proof, the plaintiff's first prayer, which was granted, presented the case to the jury, so far as the plaintiff was concerned, in a more favorable light than he was entitled to; and, taken in connection with the plaintiff's second prayer, which was also granted, fixed the law of the case as favorably to the plaintiff as he had a right to demand. *46
The plaintiff's B, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth prayers are requested instructions on what the appellant calls "tests of credibility," and contain various abstract statements, constituting tests to be applied by the jury in determining the credibility of witnesses; such as, "the jury are the sole judges of the credibility of the several witnesses in this case and in weighing the testimony they may take into consideration the probability or improbability of the statements made by several witnesses, their demeanor upon the witness stand, the contradictory statements they may have made at other times and places, if the jury so find, together with all of the other facts and circumstances in the case; and if the jury believe from the evidence that any one or more of the witnesses has wilfully and intentionally testified falsely to any material fact, then the jury are at liberty to disregard such evidence of such witness as a whole, except such part thereof as may be corroborated by some other evidence herein and found to be credible by the jury". "The jury are entitled to pass upon the credibility of witnesses, and if they shall not believe the testimony of any witness, then they are at liberty to disregard so much of the testimony of that witness as relates to facts as to which there is no other credible evidence"; "a witness may be impeached by evidence that he has made at other times, statements inconsistent with his present testimony." It will be seen that these are statements of tests as to credibility which the common experience of mankind, over a long and indefinite period, has found proper to apply in judging the truthfulness of statements, whether given in or out of court, under oath or not. Dozens of such tests might be enumerated which are applied every day in business relations between men, and by jurors. There is hardly a case where counsel, in argument to the jury or to the court, do not, in an endeavor to have the testimony of a witness discredited, point out some or perhaps all of the propositions contained in these rejected prayers; and in addition, juries, being composed of men of average intelligence and business capacity, apply these tests, whether called to their attention or not. We have been referred to no case where such a *47
prayer has been passed upon by this court. It seems to be the practice in some states for the court to grant such prayers, although apparently left largely to the trial court's discretion. While, as stated, this court has not passed directly upon a request for such instruction, it has consistently condemned and held erroneous prayers which are mere abstractions. In Marshallv. Haney,
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *49