Lee v. Lee

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 30, 2019
Docket1732/17
StatusPublished

This text of Lee v. Lee (Lee v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Lee, (Md. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Won Sun Lee v. Won Bok Lee, No. 1732, September Term, 2017. Opinion by Fader, C.J.

ENTRY OF JUDGMENT – TIME FOR FILING APPEAL

To enter a final judgment that triggers the time for filing an appeal, the clerk must make an entry of it on the docket of the court’s electronic case management system such that both the fact and date of entry of the judgment are available to the public through the case search feature on the Judiciary website. The date of the judgment, for purposes of appellate jurisdiction, is the date on which the clerk enters the judgment on the electronic case management system.

A docket entry that does not provide clear notice of the date on which judgment is entered, as required by Rule 2-601(b), does not trigger the beginning of the appeal period. If the docket entry is later clarified, a notice of appeal that is filed after the judgment is announced but before the docket entry is clarified is treated as being filed after, but on the same day as, the docket entry is clarified. Rule 8-602(f).

RENEWAL OF JUDGMENT – CREATION OF LIEN

A judgment creditor’s filing of notice of a federal judgment in a state circuit court establishes a lien, not a new money judgment.

RENEWAL OF JUDGMENT – EXPIRATION OF LIEN

When a judgment creditor’s original judgment on which a lien is predicated expires, the lien is destroyed and neither the original judgment nor the lien it created may be renewed. Circuit Court for Howard County Case No. 13-C-55-045573 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 1732

September Term, 2017

______________________________________

WON SUN LEE

v.

WON BOK LEE ______________________________________

Fader, C.J., Beachley, Kenney, James A., III (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Fader, C.J. ______________________________________

Filed: January 30, 2019

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2019-01-31 08:54-05:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk Won Sun Lee, the appellant, challenges the Circuit Court for Howard County’s

refusal to vacate a renewed judgment the court’s clerk entered against him and in favor of

his brother, Won Bok Lee. Before we can address the merits of this appeal, Mr. Bok Lee

asks us to determine whether it is timely. We conclude that it is. The clerk’s entry of the

order from which Mr. Sun Lee appeals initially failed to comply with the requirements of

Maryland Rule 2-601(b) because the docket entry available through the case search feature

on the Judiciary website did not identify the date on which judgment was entered. As a

result, the appeal period did not start to run and Mr. Sun Lee’s appeal was premature when

it was filed. However, subsequent changes to the docket entry fixed the problem and Mr.

Sun Lee’s appeal is now properly before us.

Turning to the merits, Mr. Sun Lee asks us to decide whether his brother’s 2015

attempt to renew a judgment in the circuit court was effective. The answer to that question

revolves largely around two others: (1) whether Mr. Bok Lee’s 2004 filing in the circuit

court of notice of a 2002 federal court judgment created a new state court judgment or just

a lien; and (2) if that filing created a lien only, whether it extended the period for renewal

of the underlying judgment, which otherwise expired by operation of law in 2014. We

conclude that the 2004 filing created a lien, not a judgment, and so could not be renewed

once the underlying federal court judgment had expired. We therefore reverse the

judgment of the circuit court and remand with instructions to vacate the renewed judgment. BACKGROUND

Initial Proceedings in Federal and State Court

In 2002, Mr. Bok Lee obtained a judgment by default in the amount of $141,059.44

against Mr. Sun Lee in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland.

In May 2004, Mr. Bok Lee filed a “Request to File Notice of Lien” in the Circuit

Court for Howard County based on the federal judgment. On June 1, 2004, the circuit court

entered a “Notice of Lien of Judgment Received From United States District Court” and

made the following docket entry: “Judgment entered on 06/01/04.”

The Howard County case remained dormant until July 23, 2015, when Mr. Bok Lee

filed a “Request to Renew Judgment.” The request stated that “[j]udgment in this case was

entered on June 1, 2004,” claimed that it had “not expired (12 years from entry),” and asked

the clerk to renew it. The clerk promptly entered the renewed judgment on the docket.

On March 24, 2016, Mr. Sun Lee moved to vacate the renewal. He argued that Mr.

Bok Lee’s 2004 filing had created a lien, rather than a new judgment, and so could no

longer be renewed once the federal judgment had expired. Although the circuit court

agreed with Mr. Sun Lee that the 2004 filing had created a lien, not a new judgment, it also

agreed with Mr. Bok Lee that it was nonetheless still subject to renewal.

Three writings relating to the circuit court’s ruling are central to our discussion

below, so we present them in some detail. First, after a hearing, the court issued a one-page

written order containing a single substantive sentence that identifies what the court

considered (the motion to vacate, the opposition, and the arguments of the parties) and

2 states that the motion to vacate is denied. The order is dated June 2, 2016 and bears (1) the

signature of the judge, (2) a stamp identifying that it was “ENTERED” on June 3, 2016,

(3) a true test certification, and (4) a notation of “6000” in the bottom right corner. We

refer to this order as the “June 2 Order.”

The second and third writings of significance are both docket entries. Each appears

slightly differently in the circuit court’s own system than it appeared as viewed through the

case search feature on the Judiciary website at the relevant time—which, for purposes of

determining the timeliness of the appeal, is the period between June 3 and July 6, 2016.

The first, which we refer to as “Docket Entry 6000,” appears in the court’s case

management system as:

At the relevant time, that same entry appeared through the case search feature on the

Judiciary website as:1

1 As explained further below, the entry now appears differently when viewed through the case search feature on the Judiciary website.

3 The second entry, which we refer to as “Docket Entry 14000,” appears in the court’s

case management system as:

At the relevant time, that same entry appeared through the case search feature on the

Judiciary website as:

We discuss both docket entries in more detail below.

Mr. Sun Lee noted an appeal on July 6, 2016. Mr. Bok Lee moved to strike the

notice as late, arguing that the June 2 Order had been entered on June 3 and that any

appeal—after accounting for weekends and a holiday—was due by July 5. The circuit

court granted the motion and struck the notice of appeal. Mr. Sun Lee then appealed timely

from the order striking his first notice of appeal.

The First Appeal

In an unreported opinion, a panel of this Court concluded that the record did not

reflect when, or even if, Mr. Sun Lee’s time to appeal had begun to run. Lee v. Lee, No.

945, Sept. Term 2016, 2017 WL 3634056, at *3 (Aug. 24, 2017). The panel identified

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Bluebook (online)
Lee v. Lee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-lee-mdctspecapp-2019.