May Department Stores v. Montgomery County

702 A.2d 988, 118 Md. App. 441, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 187
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 3, 1997
Docket661, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 702 A.2d 988 (May Department Stores v. Montgomery County) 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
May Department Stores v. Montgomery County, 702 A.2d 988, 118 Md. App. 441, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 187 (Md. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

CATHELL, Judge.

May Department Stores, Inc. (May), and Avenel Community Association, Inc. (Avenel), judgment lien holders, appeal from the decision of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County that denied them the priority of their judgment liens in *443 respect to the disbursement of surplus funds following a judicial foreclosure sale. The court instead disbursed the entire surplus to an agency of Montgomery County (County) pursuant to the purported authority of a Montgomery County ordinance. Appellants present several issues on appeal:

1. Whether the court below erred by failing to order that Appellants’ valid judicial liens be satisfied from the surplus proceeds of a foreclosure sale[.]

2. Whether the Montgomery County Moderately Priced Dwelling Unit Ordinance is violative of the Maryland and U.S. Constitutions when applied in a fashion that deprives judgment lienholders of surplus proceeds in a foreclosure sale[.]

3. Whether the Court below erred by failing to address the equity argument presented by Appellant, Avenel Community Association, Inc.

In the resolution of this appeal, we shall resolve only the first issue. Resolution of this issue renders it unnecessary to address extensively the constitutional issues or the equity argument made by Avenel. We shall be concerned primarily with arguments relative to the first issue. We shall hold that the County is preempted from asserting the provisions of a local ordinance that provide for a priority of liens that is in direct conflict with provisions of the Maryland Code, the Maryland Rules of Procedure, and Maryland cases. We will explain our decision after we briefly recount certain pertinent facts.

The Facts

Montgomery County adopted a local ordinance designed to encourage developers to provide for low and moderate-income housing. 1 Apparently, in order to ensure that the program excluded speculators who could purchase the properties at a low price and then quickly resell for a high profit, the County ordinance contained provisions limiting the resale of proper *444 ties for an extended period of time. These restrictions set up methods for establishing resale prices and a method for computing the sums required to be remitted to the housing authority if the housing units were sold within the prohibited resale periods.

In 1992, Deborah Farr purchased one of the units through the Montgomery County Department of Housing and Community Affairs from Rock Run Limited Partnership, the developer. Farr’s deed was from the limited partnership. Farr obtained financing from the Housing Opportunities Commission for Montgomery County in the amount of $94,100, secured by a deed of trust. Farr defaulted on the loan, and the property subsequently was sold at a foreclosure sale on August 14, 1996, to William T. Wheeler for $147,000. 2 A surplus resulted.

On October 26, 1994, after Farr had obtained title to the property but before the foreclosure suit was filed in 1996, May Department Stores, Inc., d/b/a/ Woodward and Lothrop, obtained a judgment against Farr. The judgment subsequently was filed as a “Notice of Lien” in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. Farr also defaulted on her payments to her homeowner’s association, Avenel Community Association, Inc. Prior to the filing of the foreclosure action, Avenel also had obtained a judgment against Farr. It was filed in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County in November of 1995.

Both May and Avenel filed claims against the surplus resulting from the foreclosure sale. After the foreclosure proceeding was instituted but prior to the sale itself, the Department of Housing and Community Affairs of Montgomery County wrote a letter to a law firm informing them that

[t]he MPDU Law provides that if an MPDU is sold through a foreclosure or other Court-ordered sale during the first ten years after the original sale, any amount of that sale price that exceeds the total of the approved resale price plus reasonable foreclosure costs must be paid into the *445 County’s Housing Initiative Fund. After payment is made, the covenants will be released by the County.

Apparently, lawyers in that firm were the trustees conducting the foreclosure sale.

As far as we can determine, the County, prior to the auditor’s report, never filed a claim against the surplus proceeds of the sale in the proceeding. The auditor brought this to the attention of the court in the Auditor’s Answer to Exceptions to Auditor’s Report. The answer provided:

|E]xamination of the Docket Entries does not disclose a claim being file[d] on behalf of County Department of Housing and Community Affairs. That there is attached to the vouchers furnished to the Trustee letter 7/29/96 from Department of Housing and Community Affairs requesting surplus proceeds.

The County’s letter, however, must have caused concern for the auditor because after the sale was ratified, he notified the trial court that he was unable to determine payment of the surplus proceeds and requested a hearing be held before the trial court to determine the apportionment of the surplus. Montgomery County then filed what it termed “Exceptions to Auditor’s Report, Motion to Pay Excess Proceeds to Montgomery County” 3 and requested a hearing. A hearing was held after which the trial court rendered its opinion. It found:

According to the County, said excess triggers distribution pursuant to Section 25A-9(e), which in essence means the County receives the entire surplus notwithstanding any prior “junior” liens on the property.
... According to the ... County, “senior liens” mean either a first mortgage or first deed of trust. No other lienholder, including judgment lienholders, fall within the definition of senior lien. Hence, the only liens to be paid *446 prior to the county obtaining proceeds pursuant to Section 25A-9 are first deeds of trust and liens filed under the Maryland Contract Liens Act.
The [CJounty further asserts that the Declaration of Covenants for Avenel, incorporated into the Deed, act to protect the count[y’]s interest and to put any creditors on notice----
Upon review ... this Court finds that pursuant to Section 25A-9(e) of the Montgomery County code, surplus proceeds from the foreclosure sale ..., shall be paid to the Montgomery County Housing Initiative Fund. In support of its ruling the court further finds that the restrictions set forth in this section as provided in the Declaration of Covenants for Avenel Subdivision are covenants that run with the land---Clearly, the covenants run with the land and judgment liens arising after the covenants had been recorded are bound [and] áre subject to Section 25A-9(e) of the [Montgomery County] Code.
The next issue ... is whether judgment liens constitute “senior liens” for the purposes of Section 25A-9(e)(4) of the County Code.

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Bluebook (online)
702 A.2d 988, 118 Md. App. 441, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-department-stores-v-montgomery-county-mdctspecapp-1997.