81 Md. 14 | Md. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Some of the preliminary stages of this -controversy will be found to have received consideration in the case of Riley v. Carter and Aiken, trustees, reported in 76 Md. 581. In that case, the decree was neither affirmed nor reversed, but the case was remanded for further proceedings under Art. 5, sec. 36 of the Code, in accordance with the views of this Court therein expressed. After the case had been remanded the Circuit Court of Baltimore City overruled the demurrer to the bill of complaint, and the defendants therein answered the same. At this juncture the counsel for plaintiffs filed orders with the Clerk of that Court directing him to enter the case dismissed as to' all of the attaching creditors, but the same counsel continued in the management of the case representing certain co-plaintiffs, who were general creditors of Nicholson & Sons, and conducted said case to final decree. The legal effect of the manner adopted by counsel in seeking the dismissal of the attaching creditors as parties to said proceeding is a question on this appeal to be hereinafter considered. In the further progress of the case in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, replications were filed to the answers, and the case was heard upon the pleadings and testimony. The Court, by its decree, declared that the deeds of trust which had been executed by Johns H. R. Nicholson to Carter and Aiken, trustees, were not fraudulent in law or in fact as against the creditors for whose benefit the same were executed, but as against the claim of the permanent trustee in insolvency they were void and inoperative ; and said Carter and Aiken, trustees, were directed to deliver to said trustee in insolvency all the assets and property conveyed to them by said Nicholson, which they did: In accordance with the practice sanctioned by this Court in Buschman v. Hanna, 72 Md. 1, the trustee in insolvency intervened as claimant in all of the attachment suits and procured judgments in his favor, whereby the litigation under the attachments was transferred to the Insolvent' Court for its decision. The trustee in insolvency, in accordance with
The Circuit Court for Baltimore County overruled the objections to the Auditor’s Account and ratified the same, and this appeal is taken from the order of that Court. Many interesting questions arise on this appeal, but it will not be necessary to give all of them consideration. Those which are requisite to a proper determination of the rights of the parties are few, but not free of some difficulty.
It will be proper in the first instance to consider the legal status of those attaching creditors, who, through the intervention of the plaintiffs below, had been made parties defendant in Riley and others v. Carter and Aiken, trustees, by an order of the Court based upon a petition of the plaintiffs, in which it is averred that, in consequence of said attachments, they were necessary parties. Nothing in the progress of the case occurred to render them less necessary parties, so far, at least, as the reasonable purposes of the cause indicate; yet, after having remained parties litigant during the progress of this case on the appeal in 76 Md. 581, and until the demurrer filed to the bill of complaint had been overruled, plaintiffs’ counsel, without the authority
Mr. Daniel, in his work on Chancery Pldg. and Pr. 790, says, “When there has been any proceeding in the cause, which has given the defendant a right against the plaintiff, the plaintiff cannot dismiss his bill as of course ; thus, where a general demurrer has been overruled on argument, Lord Cottenham was of opinion that the plaintiff could not dismiss his bill as of course.” Wiswell v. Starr, 50 Me. 384; Camden and Amboy R. R. Co. v. Stewart, 4 C. E. Green, (19 N. J. Eq.) 69. As having some bearing on this subject, it will be found by reference to the case of Roberts v. Gibson, extr., et al., 6 H. & J. 117 (1826), that the names of certain parties had, by methods somewhat similar to those adopted in this case, been stricken out of the bill, but Kilty,
The order of the Court below, overruling the objections to the audit and ratifying the same, must be affirmed.
Order affirmed with cbsts.