Wonder City v. Dipietro

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 22, 2025
Docket0311/24
StatusPublished

This text of Wonder City v. Dipietro (Wonder City v. Dipietro) 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
Wonder City v. Dipietro, (Md. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Wonder City, LLC v. Ralph J. DiPietro, et al., No. 0311, September Term, 2024. Opinion by Getty, Joseph M., J.

HEADNOTES:

FORECLOSURE SALES – SURPLUS FUNDS – WASTE

The purchaser of real property at a foreclosure sale is entitled to a remedy if the purchaser can prove that the property’s former owner committed voluntary waste following the foreclosure sale, while the former owner was still in lawful possession of the property, because such waste prejudices the purchaser’s inchoate equitable interest in the foreclosed property. Circuit Court for Baltimore City Case No. 24-O-22-000276

REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 0311

September Term, 2024

______________________________________ ______________________________________

WONDER CITY, LLC

v.

RALPH J. DIPIETRO, ET AL.

______________________________________

Berger, Leahy, Getty, Joseph M. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Getty, J. ______________________________________

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Filed: December 22, 2025 Government Article) this document is authentic.

2025.12.22 15:06:17 -05'00' Gregory Hilton, Clerk Foreclosures of real property in Maryland are court actions governed by Section 14-

103 of the Real Property Article of the Maryland Code and Maryland Rules 14-201 through

14-218. In a typical foreclosure, the property owner is in significant default. Once the

foreclosure sale is ratified and the audit report presented to the court, there are generally

no surplus funds remaining.

In the event that there are surplus funds, Maryland Rule 14-216(a) provides that, in

the time between the foreclosure sale and the final ratification of the auditor’s account, any

person with an interest in the property or the proceeds from the sale may file an application

for payment of that person’s claim from the surplus funds. The Rule then directs the court

to “order distribution of the surplus equitably among the claimants.” Md. Rule 14-216(a).

In this case, we must review an order from the Circuit Court for Baltimore City

denying a claim for surplus funds as payment for destructive actions allegedly carried out

on the foreclosed property by its former owner. The circuit court denied the claim based

on language in the sale contract that assigned the risk of loss or damage to the property to

the purchaser upon the date of sale but before legal title and possession had passed.

Appellant calls upon us to decide three questions, which we have consolidated into

one central issue: 1 0F

1 Appellant phrased its questions as follows:

1. Did the Circuit Court err by finding that the terms of a sale contract between a the [sic] Court as vendor (acting through the Substitute Trustees) and the foreclosure purchaser somehow prevented a foreclosure purchaser from filing a claim against a former owner’s foreclosure surplus proceeds for post-sale property damages caused by the former owner before the foreclosure purchaser gained possession of the Property Did the trial judge err in ruling, as a matter of law, that the terms of the foreclosure sale contract preclude Appellant’s claim for surplus funds for voluntary waste to the foreclosed property?

As we explain, we answer in the affirmative and remand this case to the circuit court.

BACKGROUND

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The property at issue in this case is a six-unit apartment building, located at 1422

Park Avenue in Baltimore, formerly owned by Zewdi Real Estate Holdings, LLC (“Zewdi”

or “former owner”). As a result of Zewdi’s ongoing default on a promissory note secured

by a deed of trust, the property was foreclosed upon in March 2022. Appellant, Wonder

City, LLC (“Wonder City”), purchased this property in a foreclosure sale on June 16, 2022,

for $580,000.

The Circuit Court for Baltimore City ratified the sale on October 13, 2022. In the

intervening time between the sale and ratification, Walter Dixon, 2 acting as an authorized 1F

and where the former owner is a commercial landlord designated as a Maryland limited liability company?

2. Even if the as-is and risk of loss terms in a foreclosure sale contract can be relied on by a foreclosed property owner that wrongfully damaged a property post-sale, then did the Circuit Court abuse its discretion solely relying on terms of the sale and disregarding precedential case law and Maryland Rule 14-216 that allows it to excise or modify terms of foreclosure sales due to principles of equity and public policy?

3. Did the Circuit Court err by not exercising its discretion at all and never reaching the merits and specific evidence of the foreclosure purchaser’s surplus claim? 2 Mr. Dixon is the General Manager of Building Service Associates, LLC, where he carries out a range of services including “property repair requests, bankruptcy, estate and 2 agent of Wonder City, conducted ten site visits to the property between June 17 and

October 11. 3 Mr. Dixon observed several instances of what he believed to be deliberate 2F

destruction of the property, to which he attested in an affidavit submitted to the court.

First, Mr. Dixon observed an accumulation of a “sheer amount of waste and debris”

including “heaps of trash, including rotten food, bulk construction debris, discarded

appliances and mattresses” at his July 27 visit, which had not been present during his first

inspection on June 17. These conditions fostered a “repugnant odor and flies” that were

“noticeable from afar,” as well as a “full-blown rat infestation” throughout the building.

Mr. Dixon observed significant damage to the building as a result of the rat

infestation. He observed that rats had chewed through electrical wiring in the attic and

through various water pipes in the basement, which caused small leaks throughout the

building and, in one of the six units, visible mold. He noted that, in response to tenant

complaints, the former owner had spread rat poison throughout the building, which resulted

in an amassment of rat carcasses that created a biohazard on the property. The property

required fumigation to address these issues. In August, Mr. Dixon learned that the

Baltimore City Department of Housing and Community Development was concerned that

foreclosure property cleanouts, water remediation services, . . . commercial property inspections, . . . and all aspects of building and facility repairs, maintenance, and management, including heating, cooling, mechanicals, and electrical components.” 3 Mr. Dixon inspected the property on the following dates in 2022: June 17; June 27; July 8; July 30; August 8; August 18; September 1; September 18; October 1; and October 11.

3 the property’s condition was “ripe for rat infestation” and that such an infestation would

spread to the neighboring properties.

On September 1, Mr. Dixon observed signs of power surges in the common areas

of the building that left black burn marks on the walls. These marks had not been present

on previous occasions. A tenant advised Mr. Dixon that there had been a blackout in the

common areas a few days prior. Upon inspection, Mr. Dixon expected to find seven

electrical meters, one for each of the six units and one for the property owner. 4 Instead, he 3F

found that the seventh had been removed completely and the electrical wiring rigged to

bypass electrical metering, and thus avoid paying for electrical usage. Mr. Dixon posited

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Bluebook (online)
Wonder City v. Dipietro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wonder-city-v-dipietro-mdctspecapp-2025.