NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY
v.
SAMUEL R. ROSOFF, LTD., ET AL. HOME INSURANCE COMPANY
v.
SAMUEL R. ROSOFF, LTD., ET AL. (Two Appeals in Separate Records)
Court of Appeals of Maryland.
*424 The cause was argued before MARBURY, C.J., COLLINS, GRASON and HENDERSON, JJ.
A. Frederick Taylor, with whom were Harry W. Allers and Allers & Cochran on the brief, for the appellant, the Northwestern National Insurance Company.
Charles Markell, Jr., with whom were Clayton A. Dietrich and Cook, Ruzicka, Veazey & Gans on the brief, for the appellant, the Home Insurance Company.
Donald N. Rothman, with whom was Simon E. Sobeloff on the brief, for the appellee, Samuel R. Rosoff, Ltd.
F. Clifford Hane, Assistant City Solicitor of Baltimore, with whom was Thomas N. Biddison, City Solicitor, on the brief, for the appellee, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.
MARBURY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two cases are samples of 40 odd cases in which the same questions have been raised below. Appeals in the other cases are contingent, as to their completion, upon the decision in the cases before us. All of the cases are suits by homeowners against their insurance companies for damages to their premises alleged to have been caused by explosions in the period from February through July, 1948. The several insurance companies in each case filed motions to implead Samuel A. Rosoff, Ltd., a corporation, and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City, contending that the explosions occurred during the construction of a water tunnel in the City of Baltimore by the use of dynamite and other explosive materials by Rosoff, the contractor. The City and Rosoff were made third party defendants, declarations were filed against them by the insurance companies, and, thereafter, motions were filed by the City and Rosoff to strike out the orders impleading them. The motions in the two cases before us were heard by Chief Judge Smith in the Superior Court of Baltimore City. Other *425 similar motions in the other cases were heard by Judge Moser in the Court of Common Pleas, and by Judge Sayler in the Baltimore City Court. No opinions were filed in any of these cases, but two of the cases were removed to the United States Court and similar motions were heard there by Judge Chesnut who filed an opinion which will be hereafter referred to. All of the judges hearing all of the cases granted the motions to strike out the impleading orders, and appeals were taken in the cases in the city courts to this Court. The only two which have been perfected are the two now before us.
It may be noted that in some of the cases the plaintiffs also filed motions to strike out the impleading orders, but we are advised that these were all withdrawn with the exception of two. In case No. 163, the plaintiff did not file such a motion. In case No. 164, the plaintiff did, but later withdrew it in open court at the hearing.
The original suits are in contract, alleging that the plaintiffs were insured by their companies against explosions. The third party suits, which the defendants desired to have heard with the original suits, are in tort for damages done by the City and its contractor through the same explosions. The plaintiffs in these cases have not attempted to bring separate tort actions against the City or the contractor, but the insurance companies say that if and when they are found liable to the plaintiffs, and have to pay the damages, they will then become subrogated to the rights of the original plaintiffs against the City and the contractor, and, therefore, the question of who is ultimately to pay the damages, if any are found, should be settled in one suit as to each house or building damaged.
The theory of impleading third parties is an outgrowth of what was found to be a defect in the common law. There were frequent cases where it was necessary to give relief to a defendant when he had a genuine claim for exoneration against some person not a party to the suit. For example, when the payee of a note sued the *426 surety, and left out the maker. The first efforts to bring all the parties into one suit was the old remedy of "vouching" which started in the English land laws. If A sold land to B with a warranty, and C claimed the land belonged to him and sued B, then B could give A notice of the pendency of the suit and an opportunity to join in the defense. Whether he did nor whether he did not, a judgment against B would then be conclusive in a subsequent action against the vouchee both as to plaintiff's right to recover and as to the amount. This right was extended to chattels, and the theory of it has been generally applied to cover all claims for indemnity expressed or implied. Where the vouching-in remedy was used, there might still have to be two suits. There were other situations where vouching-in did not apply, such as cases where several people committed the same wrong against the plaintiff, but he elected to sue only one. Statutes were passed giving one tort feasor against whom a judgment had been obtained, the right to sue the others for contribution, but this still required two suit. Subsequently, other statutes were passed giving the one sued the right to implead the others. Without detailing further the history of the various efforts to give relief and to combine in one suit all parties whose rights arose out of the same matter, there was finally passed Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 14, 28 U.S.C.A., which is the proto-type of our rule invoked in this case. It may be noted that the English third party procedure was started with the Supreme Court of Judicature Act of 1873, Chapter 66, paragraph 24(3) and paragraph 39 of the Consolidation Act of 1925, and that in the leading case of Jasperson v. Dominion Tobacco Co., [1923] A.C. 709, it was held that actions of contract and actions of tort could be impleaded in the same case. The old remedy of vouching-in is discussed in Consolidated Hand-Method Lasting-Machine Co. v. Bradley,
Our Rule 4 of the General Rules of Practice and Procedure, Part Two, III, is based upon Federal Rule 14. It will be found in the 1947 Supplement to the Annotated Code, pages 2042, 2043, and the explanatory notes on pages 2103-2105. The procedure outlined in the Rule was followed in the cases before us, and the questions we are now called on to decide are first the right of immediate appeal from the order striking out the impleader, and, secondly, if such an appeal is now permissible, did the trial court abuse its discretion? The appellees in each of the cases have filed motions to dismiss the appeals on the ground that they were prematurely taken, because the orders are not final judgments.
Article 5, Section 2, Code 1939, allows an appeal from any judgment or determination of any court of law in any civil suit or action. That has been construed to mean a final judgment or determination which settles the rights of parties. Thus in the early case of Mitchell v. Smith,
In the case of Baltimore Transit Co. v. State to use of Schriefer,
Our Rule, as we have stated, is based upon the Federal rule, and there is, so far, only one case which has directly decided this issue. That is the case of Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co. v. United Fuel Gas Co.,
The sequel to the Baltimore & Ohio case is instructive. It was tried below without the United Gas Fuel Co. A judgment was entered against the Baltimore & Ohio, and a second appeal was taken. On that appeal the ruling declining to implead the United Gas Fuel Co. was considered by the court at some length. The ground of the refusal by the District Court had been that the third parties sought to be impleaded were citizens of West Virginia which was the state of the original plaintiff. Under these circumstances, the Circuit Court of Appeals, speaking through Judge Parker, (Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Saunders, 4 Cir.,
There are other Federal cases which have entertained similar appeals before trial without any suggestion that they were premature, and where it does not appear that the point was made. One of these is Brown v. Cranston,
Both before and after the decision in Baltimore & Ohio R.R. v. United Fuel Gas Co., supra, therefore, in three other Federal Circuits, four immediate appeals were considered and decided, and district courts were affirmed in denying impleader without a suggestion that the appeals were premature. We cannot consider these decisions as deciding that question since it was not specifically raised, but, on the other hand, we cannot assume that the judges, who passed upon these cases, were ignorant of it, or that it did not occur to them. We have, in this State, as we have shown, decided two cases in which it was tacitly assumed that the orders were immediately appealable. It seems to us in the nature of things that to decline to hear an appeal from an order dismissing third party complaints, thereby requiring the original defendant to try his case without having the third party in it, and then, on a second appeal to have a judgment against the original defendant reversed on the ground that the third party defendant should have been in, *433 would make somewhat of a mockery of the rule which is designed to have all parties in one action if they can be properly brought before the court, and to prevent a multiplicity of suits. The judgments for costs do not change the nature of the decisions, (Emersonian Apartments v. Taylor,
That brings us to the other question, which is whether the court below abused its discretion in striking out the orders. The rule for making third parties was designed to facilitate trials, and was intended to be administered *434 in the discretion of those judges who would preside over those trials. In the explanatory notes of the Reporter, 1947 Supplement, Annotated Code, page 2104, it is said "The granting of the motion is within the discretion of the court in all cases." That does not necessarily mean, however, that where the action of the lower court is clearly arbitrary or has no sound basis in law or in reason, it could not be reviewed, but it does mean that we will not reverse the judgment of the trial court, unless there is grave reason for doing so.
The appellants contend that the spirit of the rule requires that all suits growing out of the same transaction be tried together if possible. They say that in this case the claim of the plaintiffs is based upon an explosion caused by the blasting of a tunnel for the City by Rosoff. That it will be necessary to prove in the case against them that the damage was caused by such an explosion, and the question whether it is necessary for them to allege negligence in their suit against the City and the Contractor, can, and probably will, be raised by demurrers, so that when the cases are tried, if they have to be tried separately, there will be duplication of a great deal of the evidence, and a possibility of two juries disagreeing on the same facts. They state that the rule permits an action of contract and an action of tort to be tried together, and that the fact that they may have a right of subrogation against appellees brings them within the rule. See Lee's, Inc. v. Transcontinental Underwriters of Transcontinental Ins. Co., D.C.,
On this last question there is authority for the appellant's construction of the running of the statute. *435 American Bonding Co. of Baltimore v. National Mechanics' Bank,
As to the other arguments of the appellants, the reasons why they are not controlling, are set forth in the opinion of Judge Chesnut in the case of Lee's, Inc. v. Transcontinental Underwriters, supra. This was one of these cases in which the question was decided in the United States Court. Judge Chesnut held that the impleader was within the authority of the Federal rule because that rule contemplated the service of a third party complaint on a person not a party "who is or may be liable to him for all or part of the plaintiff's claim against him." [
We are unable to find any abuse of discretion in the conclusions reached by Chief Judge Smith in the instant cases, which it may be presumed were based upon the same reasons as those set out by Judge Chesnut. Even if we thought that time might be saved and other considerations might lead to a better result, if the cases were tried together, we could not hold that the judge of the nisi prius court, which is to hear the cases, has abused his discretion in holding otherwise. Questions of this nature are much better decided by the trial judges than by appellate courts, and the decisions of such judges should only be disturbed where it is apparent that some serious error or abuse of discretion or autocratic action has occurred. There is nothing in the cases before us which shows any of these considerations to be present in the slightest degree, and we will, therefore, affirm the orders of the lower court.
In No. 163 motion to dismiss denied, order affirmed with costs.
In No. 164 motion to dismiss denied, order affirmed with costs.
