199 A. 877 | Md. | 1938
The bill of complaint in this case alleges that the defendant has been engaged for many years in the manufacture of shirts under the name of "Baltimore Shirt Company"; that the plaintiff has been employed as general manager of the business for a compensation which was to include a percentage of its net profits; that prior to the end of the year 1935 he was credited with ten per cent. of such profits, but it was then agreed that he was to receive thereafter twenty per cent. of the first $15,000 and ten per cent. of the profits in excess of that amount; that the books and records showing the credits and debits to the plaintiff's account under the terms of his employment are in the possession and under the sole control of the defendant; that according to the entries in the account from December 1st, 1935, to December 31st, 1936, there was a balance of $8800 due the plaintiff as of the latter date, of which amount he has since received $1500, leaving a balance of $7300 which he now claims; but that the defendant disputes the plaintiff's claim and asserts that it is subject to certain offsets or deductions as to the details of which the plaintiff is not informed. The specific relief sought by the bill is an accounting to ascertain the exact sum due from the defendant to the plaintiff and a decree for the payment of the amount so determined.
The defendant demurred to the bill of complaint, and has appealed from an order by which the demurrer was overruled. It is argued on behalf of the defendant that the bill discloses no ground upon which the jurisdiction of a court of equity could properly be invoked for an accounting, since the claim of the plaintiff is for a definite balance, resulting from credits and debits stated in the bill, and is therefore recoverable, if valid, in an action *102 at law, with the aid, if needed, of the discovery provisions of the Code (article 75, sections 106, 107). But it is admitted, for the purposes of the demurrer, that the plaintiff's demand is opposed by a counter claim for deductions and offsets of which he has not been informed, and that the compensation sued for includes a share of the net profits earned in the business of which he was the manager.
In Legum v. Campbell,
The Code provisions for discovery in actions at law have been held not to affect the equitable jurisdiction which may ordinarily be exercised in appropriate suits for discovery and accounting. Hill v. Pinder,
In the cases of Anderson v. Watson,
Order affirmed, with costs, and cause remanded for furtherproceedings.