36 Md. App. 67 | Md. Ct. Spec. App. | 1977
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Hemisphere Pictures, Inc. (appellant) obtained a monetary
The receiver filed a plea in the attachment case acknowledging that he was in possession of funds in excess of the amount of the judgment of appellant but alleging that such funds were held by him as trustee
Treating the receiver’s plea as a confession of assets (Maryland Rule G52), appellant moved for judgment of condemnation absolute. Maryland Rule F3.
The receiver filed a document entitled “Opposition to Motion for Judgment of Condemnation” in which he denied that his plea had constituted a confession of assets and reasserted his prior claim that the funds were in custodia legis.
The trial court conducted a hearing upon the motion for judgment of condemnation absolute and on July 9, 1976, denied the same.
The attachment on judgment was not issued or served upon the receiver until after the order for his appointment had been passed in the equity cause. More, the receiver came into actual possession of the assets of Lust prior to the issuance and service of that attachment.
In Forest Lake Cemetery v. Baker, 113 Md. 529, 538, 77 A. 853, 857 (1910), it is said:
“The possession of a receiver, who is the agent of the Court appointing him, is the possession of that Court, and while prior liens are not divested by the appointment of a receiver, and he takes the*69 property subject to all existing liens, lien creditor's cannot enforce their claims and thus disturb his possession without the permission of the Court.”
In the subject case there is no proof that execution of the writ of attachment occurred prior to the time that the receiver came into possession of the assets of Lust. This is fatal to appellant’s present appeal. Compare Obrecht v. Ensor, 162 Md. 391, 394, 159 A. 899, 901 (1932).
In effect, the appellant seeks to attack the validity of the appointment of the receiver collaterally.
In 1 Clark, Receivers, Ch. IX, § 305 (3rd Ed., 1959), it is said:
“When the court appointing the receiver had jurisdiction of the necessary parties to the suit and of the subject matter of the controversy and the court in the exercise of its jurisdiction has appointed a receiver, such appointment of the court is not open to collateral attack, and even if the order was made improvidently it is not open to attack in a collateral suit.”
This principle is the law of Maryland. See Obrecht, supra, at 393 [900].
Corporations and Associations Article § 10-109 provides in pertinent part as follows:
Ҥ 10-109. Rights of a limited partner.
(a) A limited partner shall have the same rights as a general partner to:
(3) Have dissolution and winding up by decree of court."
The equity action in which the receiver was appointed had been initiated by a limited partner and had sought; dissolution of the limited partnership and the appointment
Order denying judgment affirmed.
Appellant to pay the costs.
. Partial summary judgment upon the issue of liability had been given on August 26,1975.
. An order had been passed on August 22, 1975, in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County in a cause entitled Kolbe v. Lust, Equity No. 45,933, in which John C. Keating was “appointed Trustee in Liquidation of the partnership to take control of all assets and operation thereof and proceed to dissolution of the partnership." This Court in Lust v. Kolbe, 31 Md. App. 483, 356 A. 2d 592 (1976), declared that, We hold that the trustee m liquidation, in the matter now before us, is a receives? within the meaning of the law of this State." Id. at 491 [597-98],
. Ellicott v. U.S. Ins. Co., 7 Gill 307 (1848), principal reliance of appellant, is inapposite. The creditor in Ellicott proceeded by petition in the equity proceedings. Compare Albert v. Winn, 7 Gill 446, 448 (1849).