McClayton v. McClayton

515 A.2d 231, 68 Md. App. 615, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 396
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 8, 1986
Docket535, September Term, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 515 A.2d 231 (McClayton v. McClayton) 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
McClayton v. McClayton, 515 A.2d 231, 68 Md. App. 615, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 396 (Md. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BLOOM, Judge.

At issue in this appeal is the propriety of the action of the lower court in making a monetary award in a divorce case payable in future installments, reducing the award to judgment, and then, moré than thirty days thereafter, “defining” the judgment as carrying no interest except as to installments not paid when due.

Ruth Ann McClayton, appellant, and William R. McClayton, appellee, were divorced a vinculo matrimonii by a decree of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County on 31 October 1985. That decree expressly reserved to the court the power to make later dispositions with respect to the issues of marital property, alimony, monetary award, costs, and counsel fees. Pursuant to this reservation, the court, by judgment dated 3 December 1985, granted appellant, inter alia, a monetary award in the following language.

“The Plaintiff and Cross-Defendant be and she is hereby awarded a monetary award in the amount of Two Hundred Fifty-One Thousand Eight Hundred Six Dollars and Seventy-nine Cents ($251,806.79), Fifty-One Thousand, Eight Hundred Six Dollars and Seventy-nine Cents ($51,806.79) thereof representing her interest in the real estate owned by the parties as tenants by the entireties.
“Two Hundred Thousand Dollars ($200,000.00) of the monetary award is hereby reduced to judgment and to be paid by the Defendant and Cross-Plaintiff to the Plaintiff and Cross-Defendant in the following manner: Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00) to be paid within sixty (60) days from the date hereof; thereafter, the Defendant and Cross-Plaintiff shall pay to the Plaintiff and Cross-De *619 fendant the sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00) one year from the date hereof and the sum of Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00) per year for the next four (4) years thereafter. The balance of the monetary award will be received upon settlement of sale of the marital home.”

Upon timely payment of the first $50,000.00, appellant made demand for interest (60 days interest on $200,000.00 at 10% per annum) which she claimed was due on the judgment. When appellee refused to pay interest, appellant caused a Writ of Garnishment to be issued and attached bank accounts of appellee in order to recover the interest she claimed was due.

On March 5, 1986, appellee filed a Petition to Define and Modify Judgment and Quash Writ of Attachment. There was a hearing on that petition on 16 April 1986. After explaining from the bench in open court that in balancing the equities in this case he did not intend that any of the sums awarded appellant would bear interest until due and payable under the schedule of payments set forth in the judgment of 3 December 1985, the Chancellor granted the Petition to Define Judgment and Quash Writ of Attachment and denied the Petition to Modify Judgment. An order to that effect was signed on 1 May 1986, the pertinent part of which states:

“ORDERED: That the Petition to Modify Judgment is denied, the Petition to Define Judgment is granted and the Judgment, as defined in oral statement in open Court, means that each of the sums set forth in paragraph 3 of the Judgment of December 3, 1985 shall become an enforceable judgment and collectible and shall bear interest at the statutory rate only on and after the date set forth in said paragraph on which said sum is payable. No interest is payable on any of said sums until the due date has passed; and interest shall then be payable on any amount unpaid on the due date set forth in said paragraph with respect to said amount, said interest to run from the due date.”

*620 Appellant contends that the trial court erred or abused its discretion when it modified the judgment of December 3, 1985, and that she is entitled to post-judgment interest on that part of the monetary award reduced to judgment. Appellant urges that since Maryland Rule 2-604(b) mandates that “a money judgment shall bear interest at the rate prescribed by law 1 from the date of entry,” any modification of the lower court’s judgment of December 3, 1985, would have had to comply with Md. Rules 2-534 and 2-535 governing amendments of judgments and the exercise of the court’s revisory power over judgments, respectively. Appellant urges there was no such compliance.

Rule 2-534 provides in pertinent part that “[i]n an action tried by the court, on motion of any party filed within 10 days after entry of judgment, the court may ... amend the judgment, or may enter a new judgment____” In the case sub judice, appellee’s motion was filed approximately three months after the order of 3 December 1985. Thus, it is clear the court would not have had the authority to amend the judgment pursuant to Rule 2-534.

Rule 2-535(a), defining the court’s revisory power over judgments, provides that “[o]n motion of any party filed within 30 days after entry of judgment, the court may exercise revisory power and control over the judgment and, if the action was tried before the court, [the court] may take any action that it could have taken under Rule 2-534” had a motion been filed within 2-534’s ten day time limit. Section (b) of Md. Rule 2-535 further provides that where a motion is filed more than 30 days after entry of judgment, the court may exercise its revisory power and control over a judgment only in cases of fraud, mistake or irregularity. In the case at hand, there was no suggestion of fraud. Neither was there any mistake within the meaning of the rule, which has been defined as a jurisdictional mistake, not *621 a unilateral error of judgment on the part of one of the parties. Hamilos v. Hamilos, 52 Md.App. 488, 497, 450 A.2d 1316 (1982), aff'd, 297 Md. 99, 465 A.2d 445 (1983).

Section (d) of Rule 2-535 authorizes the court, on its own initiative or on the motion of a party, to correct a clerical mistake in a judgment at any time, but there is lío suggestion here that any clerical mistake was made in the entry of the judgment of 3 December 1985.

For the reasons discussed below, we believe that in reducing the monetary award to a separate money judgment the court exceeded its statutory authority. Consequently, that portion of the 3 December 1985 judgment granting the monetary award was, if not a total nullity, at least an “irregularity” within the meaning of Rule 2-535(b). As the Court of Appeals has repeatedly noted, “an irregularity which will permit a court to exercise revisory powers over an enrolled judgment has been consistently defined as the doing or not doing of that, in the conduct of a suit at law, which, conformable to the practice of the court, ought or ought not to be done.” Weitz v. MacKenzie, 273 Md. 628, 631, 331 A.2d 291 (1975); Cohen v. Investors Funding Corp., 267 Md. 537, 539, 298 A.2d 154 (1973). See also Hamilos, supra, 52 Md.App.

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Bluebook (online)
515 A.2d 231, 68 Md. App. 615, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclayton-v-mcclayton-mdctspecapp-1986.