Pizza v. Walter

694 A.2d 93, 345 Md. 664, 1997 Md. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 14, 1997
Docket48, Sept. Term, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 694 A.2d 93 (Pizza v. Walter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pizza v. Walter, 694 A.2d 93, 345 Md. 664, 1997 Md. LEXIS 58 (Md. 1997).

Opinion

RAKER, Judge.

We granted certiorari to consider whether the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County erred in overruling exceptions to a mortgage foreclosure sale and ratifying the sale.

Respondent, Citizen’s Bank of Maryland (the Bank), sold for $325,000 certain property located at 8203 Ventnor Road, Pasadena, Maryland under the power of sale conferred by a Deed of Trust. The Bank held a first Deed of Trust on the property. The house was owned by Robert A. Diemer. Evelyn Pizza, Diemer’s sister, held a second Deed of Trust on the property and Samson Financial Group held a third Deed of Trust on the same property. When Diemer defaulted on his payments to the Bank, the Bank filed a Deed of Appointment prepared by its counsel, C. Edward Hartman, III, appointing Stefanie J. Walter as Substitute Trustee (the Trustee). Under the power of sale, the Trustee filed a foreclosure action in *668 the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County to sell the property-

The Bank served notice of the foreclosure proceedings to Diemer, and to Pizza and Samson Financial as holders of the second and third Deeds of Trust. The circuit court granted Pizza and Samson leave to intervene. The sale was conducted on March 3, 1995, at the courthouse door. The proceeds of the sale satisfied the indebtedness to the Bank, but did not produce sufficient funds to satisfy the indebtedness to Pizza or Samson. Aggrieved by the manner in which the sale was conducted, Pizza filed exceptions to the ratification of the sale.

The circuit court held a trial on Pizza’s exceptions. In an order dated June 21,1995, the court denied the exceptions and ratified the sale. On June 22, 1995, pursuant to Maryland Rule W 74, the Trustee filed a motion to substitute C. Edward Hartman, III, and Cynthia Hartman as purchasers, and the court signed the order on that date. 1 On June 26, 1995, the Trustee executed a Deed conveying the property to C. Edward Hartman, III and Cynthia S. Hartman, for $335,000; settlement was held the same day.

Pizza appealed to the Court of Special Appeals on June 27, 1995. On the same day, she moved to set supersedeas bond and to stay enforcement. The Trustee opposed Pizza’s motion, contending that the motion to set supersedeas bond as well as Pizza’s appeal were moot because the property had been resold to a bona fide purchaser, namely Hartman. The circuit court agreed with the Trustee and ruled that the motion for stay of enforcement pending appeal was moot in light of the transfer of the subject property before Pizza had filed a bond.

Before the Court of Special Appeals, Pizza again moved to set supersedeas bond and to stay enforcement. By an order *669 dated August 22, 1995, the Court of Special Appeals enjoined Hartman from alienating or encumbering the property and referred the case to the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County to set a bond. On remand, the parties agreed on a nominal bond of $1000.

The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit court in an unreported opinion. The court concluded:

The trial court recognized that when the purchaser at the foreclosure sale is the mortgagee or his assignee the court will examine the sale closely to determine whether it was bona fide and proper. A sale will be set aside, furthermore, upon “slight evidence of partiality, unfairness or a want of the strictest good faith.” The trial court concluded, however, that Pizza’s assertions did not establish unfairness or lack of good faith in the conduct of the sale that would render the sale void. We conclude that the court’s decision ... should be affirmed, (citation omitted).

We granted Pizza’s petition for a writ of certiorari.

Robert Diemer owned a large, single family dwelling on a waterfront lot comprising approximately 3.6 acres with 600 feet of water frontage. The house measured over 4,300 square feet and included four bedrooms, 3/é baths, a fireplace, an in-ground pool, a dock, a three car garage, a tractor garage, marble tile, hardwood floors, an alarm system, two central air conditioning units, and an oil fired hot water furnace with three zones.

Hartman prepared a Deed of Appointment on behalf of the Bank, appointing Stefanie J. Walter, a paralegal in his law office, as Substitute Trustee. The Trustee contacted Robert Campbell, an auctioneer and professional appraiser, to conduct the sale of the property. Campbell appraised the property as having a fair market value of $625,000 and provided the Trustee with a twenty-seven page appraisal report. 2 The *670 home and improvements were valued at $297,650.00 and accounted for approximately fifty percent of the property value; the land was valued at $296,860.00 and accounted for the other fifty percent. With Hartman’s aid, the Trustee prepared the foreclosure action and legal advertisement.

The legal advertisement was placed in The Annapolis Capital by the Trustee and ran once a week for three successive weeks prior to the sale. 3 The property improvements were described in the advertisement as follows:

The property is improved by a waterfront single family dwelling consisting of 4 bedrooms, 3}£ baths, fireplace, pool, dock, and 3 car garage.

The advertisement also included the address of the. property and described it in the following manner:

Lot Numbered One (1) in the Diemer/Pizza Minor Subdivision, as per plat thereof recorded among the Land Records of Anne Arundel County, at Plat Book 4019, at Plat 623.

Before the advertisement was placed in The Annapolis Capital, the auctioneer recommended to Hartman that he purchase additional advertising. Hartman refused, but passed the suggestion on to Pizza. After the advertisement was placed in The Annapolis Capital, the auctioneer received only a few telephone inquiries regarding the property. At Pizza’s request, the auctioneer placed supplemental advertisements that ran on one day, the Sunday before the sale, in The Baltimore Sun and The Washington Times. The supplemen *671 tal advertisement ran under the heading of “Waterfront Real Estate” and read as follows:

The subject property containing approximately 3.668 acres +/- contains a large one story rambler with basement with approximately 4,388 s.f. on the first floor. The residence contains a living room, dining room, kitchen, pantry, den, master suite with private bath, 3 additional bedrooms, Vk additional baths on the first floor and recreation room, bedroom, laundry/utility room, full bath, built-in 3-car garage w/tractor garage on the basement level. The residence is heated by an oil fired hot water furnace with 3-zones, cooled by two central air conditioning units, and has many amenities such as fireplace, marble tile and hardwood floors, alarm system, and many executive home extras. The property has a large concrete patio, in-ground swimming pool, storage shed, and a boat dock/pier.

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Bluebook (online)
694 A.2d 93, 345 Md. 664, 1997 Md. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pizza-v-walter-md-1997.