65 A. 42 | Md. | 1906
This is an appeal from an order passed by Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, on the sixteenth day of January, 1906. By that order a demurrer to the appellant's bill of complaint was sustained and the bill was dismissed with costs. As the right to the relief sought on the facts stated in the bill is the single question involved, we proceed at once to set forth briefly its averments. It appears, then, that in January, 1904, a certain Robert L. Miller recovered a judgment against The Bankers Life Insurance Company of New York City, in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore, and from that judgment an appeal was taken by the insurance company to this Court where it was heard and determined during the October Term of the same year.
The sole ground upon which the appellant relies to secure a reversal of that order and to procure the injunction which he sought is, that at the time this Court reversed the judgment which had been entered to the extent of one-half to the use of Mr. Ruddell, he no longer appeared on the docket of the Court of Common Pleas as a party to the case, since he *375
had transferred his interest to the legal plaintiff therein who in turn had assigned it to some one else. Does that fact relieve him of liability for the costs imposed upon the appellees in
Such being the liability for costs that a party incurs by having a suit or action marked to his use, what effect upon that liability did the transfer in the Court below by Mr. Ruddell to the legal plaintiff, have? The judgment for costs entered by this Court when it reversed the judgment in favor of Miller use of Ruddell against the Insurance Company, was a judgment rendered on the record in this Court. It had no relation whatever to the state of the record in the Court of Common Pleas. Entries made in the last named Court after the transcript of the proceedings had been filed in this Court can have no effect upon the status
of the case here, when the transcript had not been amended in an appropriate way to correspond with the changes made in the Court below. We pass judgment here on the record as it remains in this Court and not upon it as it may have been changed in the Court below after the transcript of it had been transmitted to this Court. An *379 ex parte substitution in the lower Court of one cestui queuse for another after the record disclosing the name of the latter as the equitable plaintiff had been filed in this Court, cannot defeat or nullify the effect of the judgment for costs which this Court may render on the record as it appears here. Whatever effect, if any, the retransfer to Miller may have had in the Court below, it is obvious that it had none at all in this Court, since no entry was made here at all. So far as concerned the proceedings in this Court Mr. Ruddell continued to be the party to whose use the suit was marked, notwithstanding the entries made in the Court of Common Pleas; and as such party he was and still is liable for costs, "as if he were the legal plaintiff." Whilst it is true that the right to costs does not become vested until final judgment has been pronounced, nor do they, until then, become a debt against the party on whom they are imposed, 5 Ency. Pl. Pr., 121; Ross v. Harper,
Since the appellant is liable to pay the costs adjudged against him and Miller, by this Court in the case of The Bankers LifeInsurance Co. v. Miller,
Order affirmed, with costs above and below.