Case Title: Smith v. Wakefield, LP

Citation: 

Docket Number: 28/18

State: maryland

Court: Maryland Supreme Court

Date: 2019-02-27T00:00:00Z

Document:
Gregory Smith v. Wakefield, LP 
No.  28, September Term 2018 
 
 
Landlord-Tenant Law – Residential Leases – Statute of Limitations.  The statute of 
limitations applicable to actions for back rent under residential leases is three years 
pursuant to Maryland Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article, §5-101, regardless of 
whether the lease includes a seal or language that purports to convert it into a contract under 
seal subject to a 12-year period of limitations under Maryland Code, Courts & Judicial 
Proceedings Article, §5-102. 
 
 
Limitations – Modifying Statutes of Limitation by Agreement.  The three-year period 
of limitations applicable to actions for back rent under residential leases is not subject to 
modification by agreement, in light of Maryland Code, Real Property Article, §8-208(d). 
 
 
 
Circuit Court for Baltimore City 
Case No. 24-C-18-000566 
Argument:  November 5, 2018 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 28 
 
September Term, 2018 
 
 
 
GREGORY SMITH 
 
V. 
 
WAKEFIELD, LP 
 
_____________________________________ 
 
Barbera, C.J., 
Greene 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Getty 
Adkins, Sally D.  
 
 
       (Senior Judge,  
Specially Assigned), 
  
 
 
 
 
JJ. 
 
 
Opinion by McDonald, J. 
Getty and Adkins, JJ., dissent. 
______________________________________ 
 
Filed:  February 27, 2019 
 
Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act  
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document 
is authentic.
Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk  
2019-02-27 
08:36-05:00
 
For three centuries, Maryland law has provided that an action seeking payment of 
back rent for a residential lease is to be brought before the expiration of a three-year period 
of limitations.  That period of limitations is currently reflected in Maryland Code, Courts 
& Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJ”), §5-101.  In recent decades, the question has arisen 
whether the period of limitations for such an action may be extended to 12 years by 
converting a residential lease into a “contract under seal” so that it might be regarded as a 
“specialty” – a type of action for which another statute, CJ §5-102, provides the longer 
period of limitations.  In Tipton v. Partner’s Management Co., 364 Md. 419 (2001), this 
Court said “no,” but that answer was a partial one, as it was based on the characteristics of 
the particular lease in that case.  This is the sequel. 
In 2007, Petitioner Gregory Smith entered into a month-to-month lease for an 
apartment in Baltimore City.  It is undisputed that he remained in the apartment only a few 
months before vacating it and ceasing to pay rent.  The circumstances under which he left 
are in dispute.  According to the landlord, Respondent Wakefield, LP (“Wakefield”), Mr. 
Smith was evicted for failure to pay rent in 2008; according to Mr. Smith, he gave 
appropriate notice for terminating the lease and left voluntarily.   
Seven years later, in 2015, Wakefield brought suit against Mr. Smith seeking to 
recover unpaid rent that it claimed Mr. Smith owed from 2008.  When the case finally came 
to trial in 2018, Mr. Smith asserted that Wakefield had not filed suit within the three-year 
period of limitations in CJ §5-101 that applies to actions seeking back rent.  Wakefield 
argued that the lease qualified as a “contract under seal” and that the 12-year statute of 
limitations set forth in CJ §5-102 applied.  If Wakefield is correct, its suit was timely; if 
Mr. Smith is correct, it was not.
2 
 
The District Court sitting in Baltimore City agreed with Wakefield’s argument and 
entered a judgment in its favor.  On appeal, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City reached 
the same conclusion. 
We reverse.  We hold that actions for back rent under residential leases are subject 
to a three-year period of limitations – as they have been for the past three centuries in 
Maryland – regardless of whether the lease includes provisions that purport to convert it 
into a contract under seal.  To the extent that such provisions might be considered an 
agreement to modify the otherwise applicable period of limitations, such an agreement 
would be contrary to the State’s landlord-tenant law and unreasonable under the particular 
circumstances of this case.   
I 
Background 
A. 
Statutes of Limitation for Civil Actions 
1. CJ §5-101 and CJ §5-102 
Two statutes that set forth limitations periods are relevant to this case.  First, the 
general statute of limitations for civil actions prescribes a three-year limitations period.  It 
states: 
A civil action at law shall be filed within three years from the date it 
accrues unless another provision of the Code provides a different period 
of time within which an action shall be commenced. 
 
CJ §5-101.  Another statute provides a longer 12-year period of limitations for bringing 
certain types of actions classified as “specialties.”  It states, in pertinent part: 
3 
 
(a) 
An action on one of the following specialties shall be filed 
within 12 years after the cause of action accrues, or within 12 years 
from the date of the death of the last to die of the principal debtor or 
creditor, whichever is sooner: 
… 
 
(5)   Contract under seal … 
 
CJ §5-102(a)(5).1 
2. The Tipton Case 
This Court considered the possible application of these two statutes of limitations 
to an action seeking to recover back rent nearly two decades ago in Tipton v. Partner’s 
Management Co., 364 Md. 419 (2001).  That case concerned a residential lease.  The 
landlord and tenant entered into a one-year lease beginning in January 1992.  Just above 
the signature lines on the pre-printed lease form appeared the legend:  “IN WITNESS 
WHEREOF the parties hereto have set their hands and seals the day and year first above 
written.”  364 Md. at 423 (emphasis added).  In addition, the word “SEAL” appeared in 
parentheses at the end of the signature line.  Id.  
The tenant was evicted from the property in November 1992 for failure to pay rent.  
The landlord sent the tenant a letter requesting payment, but did not take any legal action 
to collect the back rent for approximately seven years.  In 1999, an agent of the landlord 
filed a complaint in the District Court.  The tenant raised a defense that the suit had been 
                                              
1 Other “specialties” listed in the statute include such things as a promissory note or 
other instrument under seal, a bond, and a judgment.  Certain promissory notes and 
instruments under seal were excluded from that statute in 2014.  Chapter 592, Laws of 
Maryland 2014. 
4 
 
filed well after the three-year period of limitations provided in CJ §5-101.  The landlord 
responded that the lease was a “contract under seal” and that, accordingly, the 12-year 
period of limitations provided in CJ §5-102(a)(5) applied.  The District Court, in a decision 
affirmed by the Circuit Court on appeal, agreed with the landlord and denied the tenant’s 
motion to dismiss the complaint. 
This Court granted a writ of certiorari to consider whether the lease in question was 
a contract under seal – i.e., a specialty – and, if so, whether application of the period of 
limitations under CJ §5-102(a)(5) would be “repugnant” to certain provisions of the State 
landlord-tenant law providing protections to tenants in residential leases.  364 Md. at 422.  
The Court ultimately concluded that the lease in question was not a “contract under seal” 
and, therefore, the 12-year period of limitations for specialty actions did not supersede the 
three-year period of limitations set forth in CJ §5-101 in that case.  The Court was careful 
to say that it was not resolving whether application of the 12-year period of limitations 
would conflict with provisions of the State landlord-tenant law.  Id. 
In reaching its disposition of the case, the Court observed that documents and 
instruments concerning the conveyancing of real property, such as leases, had long been 
executed “under seal” without any intention of creating a specialty action.  364 Md. at 425-
34.  The Court also recounted, in elaborate detail, the legislative history of CJ §5-101 and 
observed that historically Maryland law had applied a three-year period of limitations to 
actions for back rent since colonial times.   It noted that the enactment of CJ §5-101 was a 
product of code revision and that there was no evidence that the General Assembly 
intended to change the longstanding period of limitations applicable to actions for back 
5 
 
rent.  Id. at 434-45.  The Court stated that “[w]ithout evidence of [legislative] intent, we 
will not … hold that the statute of limitations was changed in respect to leases during a 
general recodification.”  Id. at 446. 
The Court reiterated the results of its analysis in three separate sentences beginning 
“We hold ....”  A difference in the language of one of those sentences may have significance 
for this case.  First, at the outset of the opinion, the Court previewed what was to come: 
We hold that a residential lease agreement, even if the lease agreement 
has the word seal affixed, is subject to the three-year limitation period 
enunciated in [CJ §5-101]. 
 
364 Md. at 422.  In a footnote appended to that sentence, the Court observed that parties 
could agree to waive an otherwise applicable statute of limitations, but that a seal alone 
would not effect such a waiver.  Id. at 422 n.3. 
 
Second, at the beginning of the “Discussion” section of the opinion, the Court again 
summarized its holding in similar language: 
We hold that actions for rent arrears under any kind of residential lease 
must be filed in compliance with [CJ §5-101]. 
 
364 Md. at 425.  A footnote appended to that sentence cross-referenced the footnote 
concerning waiver that appeared with the prior statement of the holding.  Id. at 425 n.9.2 
                                              
2 We note a discrepancy among the various published versions of the Tipton opinion 
with respect to the cross-reference in its footnote 9.  In the hard copy of volume 364 of the 
Maryland Reports, footnote 9 of the Tipton opinion cross-references footnote 3, which 
concerns waiver.  In the electronic version of the opinion originally posted on the Court’s 
website in 2001, as well as the electronic versions of the opinion available on Westlaw and 
Lexis and the hard copy of the Atlantic Reporter (773 A.2d at 492), the cross-reference in 
footnote 9 is to footnote 2 of the opinion.  Footnote 2 of the Tipton opinion simply states 
that references to “section 5-101” are to CJ §5-101 – which would be an unnecessary and 
perhaps even puzzling cross-reference in this context.  It appears that a typographical error 
6 
 
 
Thus, the first two iterations of the holding in Tipton simply state that actions for 
back rent are subject to the three-year period of limitations in CJ §5-101, that limitations 
periods may be waived, and that a seal does not suffice to effect such a waiver. 
Finally, in the concluding paragraph of the Tipton opinion, the Court reprised its 
holding in a passage that sets the stage for this case.  The Court stated:   
We hold that claims for arrearages of rent under a residential lease, 
even a lease to which a seal is affixed, must be filed within the three-
year limitation period unless the parties to the lease agree, in the body 
of the lease, that the lease is subject to the twelve-year limitation 
period of section 5-102.  
 
364 Md. at 445.  As is evident, the first clause of that sentence restated the Court’s 
conclusion concerning the lease that was before it.  Unlike the previous two instances, 
however, the Court did not qualify its holding with a reference to the possibility of waiver 
of limitations.  Instead, the second clause of the sentence following the word “unless” 
addressed a somewhat distinct question:  whether a lease could be converted into a contract 
under seal and thus be made subject to the 12-year period of limitations in CJ §5-102.  This 
seemed to predict the Court’s opinion about a hypothetical lease that might appear in a 
future case – the kind of prediction that is often referred to as dicta, as it was unnecessary 
to the decision in Tipton.   
The dicta in Tipton generates several questions.  It is not clear how that dicta related 
to the Court’s reasoning in the case before it.  The dicta seems at odds with the Court’s 
                                              
in the original posted decision was corrected for publication in the Maryland Reports, but 
has persisted in other published versions of the opinion. 
7 
 
indication that it would require evidence of legislative intent to extend the statute of 
limitations applicable to actions for back rent.  It may be that the Court intended the dicta 
to illustrate a situation in which the parties waived the otherwise applicable period of 
limitations of CJ §5-101, although it is not clear why such a waiver would need to involve 
CJ §5-102.  In addition, there also remained the question that the Court in Tipton said that 
it was not answering – whether such an extension of the period of limitations would be 
“repugnant” to the State landlord-tenant law.     
This case presents the hypothetical future lease imagined in the Tipton dicta.  We 
are now called upon to answer those questions.   
B. 
Wakefield’s Action Against Mr. Smith for Back Rent 
 
The Lease 
 
On March 6, 2007, Mr. Smith entered into a lease agreement with Wakefield3 to 
rent an apartment in Baltimore City.4  A one-page cover sheet identified the address of the 
property and the tenant, specified the term (month-to-month) and the monthly rent, and set 
forth the basic lease agreement, incorporating an attached preprinted form entitled “Lease 
Covenants.”  The cover page included signature lines for the tenant and landlord’s agent 
                                              
3 The lease formally specified Maryland Management Company, an agent of 
Wakefield, as landlord.  This action was originally filed in the District Court in the name 
of Maryland Management Company.  Pursuant to Maryland Rule 3-201, Wakefield was 
later substituted as the real party in interest.  For simplicity, we will refer to Wakefield 
throughout this opinion when referring to the plaintiff in the trial courts and the Respondent 
in this Court.  
4 According to testimony in the Circuit Court, Mr. Smith had lived in the same 
apartment under prior leases since March 2004.  
8 
 
followed by “(Seal).”  The attached Lease Covenants form consisted of seven pages of 90 
numbered sections of varying lengths that stated various conditions of the lease and 
obligations of the tenant.  Among those provisions was a paragraph, which stated (in a font 
considerably smaller than what appears below):  
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS:  This lease is under seal and is 
subject to the twelve-year limitation period of Section 5-102 of the 
Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article of the Annotated Code of 
Maryland.   
 
This provision of the lease appeared to echo the dicta in the Tipton decision quoted earlier.5 
 
Complaint, Motion to Dismiss, and Trial in District Court 
 
On September 22, 2015, Wakefield filed a complaint in the District Court sitting in 
Baltimore City.  In an attachment to the complaint, Wakefield alleged that Mr. Smith had 
failed to pay rent on December 1, 2007, and had been evicted as of the end of January 2008 
– more than seven and a half years before the filing of the complaint.  Wakefield sought to 
recover $4,035.42 (for unpaid rent and related costs) from Mr. Smith plus interest, 
attorney’s fees, and court costs.   
Nearly two more years passed before Wakefield served Mr. Smith with the 
complaint on August 14, 2017.  Mr. Smith filed a notice of intent to defend (later amended), 
in which he stated, among other things, that he had given the landlord 90 days advance 
notice of his intent to vacate the property and that he owed no rent as of that time.  In a 
                                              
5 We are advised by Wakefield that Maryland Management Company, the agent that 
entered into the lease on Wakefield’s behalf, was a successor of Partner’s Management 
Company, one of the litigants in the Tipton case.  See footnote 3 above.  
9 
 
written submission to the District Court, Mr. Smith also argued that Wakefield had failed 
to file its action within the three-year period of limitations applicable to an action for back 
rent.  In response, Wakefield asserted that the lease was a contract under seal and that the 
applicable period of limitations was therefore 12 years pursuant to CJ §5-102.  At the trial 
on December 18, 2017, the District Court rejected Mr. Smith’s limitations defense and 
entered judgment for Wakefield in the amount it had requested. 
 
De Novo Appeal in Circuit Court 
Mr. Smith pursued a de novo appeal in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.  In that 
court, he moved to dismiss the complaint on the basis of the statute of limitations.  On April 
20, 2018, the Circuit Court heard argument on the motion and denied it.  After conducting 
a de novo trial that same day, the Circuit Court entered judgment in favor of Wakefield.6  
Mr. Smith then filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which we granted on July 12, 
2018. 
II 
Discussion 
A. 
Standard of Review 
 
In this appeal, Mr. Smith challenges only the Circuit Court’s denial of his motion to 
dismiss the complaint on limitations grounds.  The relevant facts are undisputed and the 
Circuit Court based that ruling on its understanding of the limitations period applicable to 
                                              
6 Mr. Smith appeared through counsel in the Circuit Court and did not present any 
evidence on the merits of the action. 
10 
 
an action for back rent under Mr. Smith’s lease with Wakefield.  Thus, the issue before us 
is a question of law.  We review a circuit court’s ruling on a question of law applied to 
undisputed facts without deference under what is sometimes called a “de novo standard of 
review.”  See, e.g., Walter v. Gunter, 367 Md. 386, 392 (2002).   
B. 
The Period of Limitations Applicable to Actions for Back Rent 
Before us and before the Circuit Court, Wakefield has relied on the dicta in Tipton 
that an action for back rent must be filed within three years “unless the parties to the lease 
agree, in the body of the lease, that the lease is subject to the twelve-year limitation period 
of section 5-102.”  364 Md. at 445.  Wakefield argues that this statement provided a “road 
map” for extending the period of limitations for a back rent action to 12 years.  In denying 
Mr. Smith’s motion to dismiss on the basis of the three-year period of limitations, the 
Circuit Court accepted that argument.  We begin by analyzing whether such a “road map” 
would be consistent with the reasoning and actual holding in Tipton. 
1. 
The Landscape Before 1970  
The legislative policy judgment inherent in the designation of an appropriate period 
of limitations for a particular cause of action has long been recognized by this Court.  See, 
e.g., Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. Benjamin, 394 Md. 59, 84-85 (2006); Pennwalt Corp. v. 
Nasios, 314 Md. 433, 437-38 (1988); Pierce v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 296 Md. 656, 
665 (1983).  In particular, “[a] statutory period of limitations represents a policy judgment 
by the Legislature that serves the interest of a plaintiff in having adequate time to 
investigate a cause of action and file suit, the interest of a defendant in having certainty 
that there will not be a need to respond to a potential claim that has been unreasonably 
11 
 
delayed, and the general interest of society in judicial economy.”  Ceccone v. Carroll Home 
Services, LLC, 454 Md. 680, 691 (2017). 
 
In 1715, the Maryland colonial government passed a law stating that “all Actions of 
Debt for Arrearages of Rent” were subject to a three-year limitations period.  Chapter 23, 
§2, Laws of Maryland 1715.  The specification that an action for back rent be subject to a 
three-year period of limitations remained an explicit part of Maryland statutory law through 
numerous recodifications during the following centuries.  The Court’s opinion in Tipton 
documented those recodifications in detail and there is no need to repeat that history here.  
See 364 Md. at 436-41.  It suffices to say that, at the dawn of the most recent code revision 
project in the early 1970s, former Article 57, §1 of the Maryland Code (1968 Repl. Vol.) 
provided that “All actions … brought to recover rent in arrear, reserved under any form of 
lease … and all distraints issued to recover such rent shall be commenced, sued, or issued 
within three years of the time the cause of action accrued….”7 
 
During that same time period, it was customary, if not required, that leases of real 
property were executed “under seal.”  See, e.g., Maryland Code, former Article 21 (1966 
Repl. Vol.), §6 (providing that “[e]very deed conveying real estate” – which, by definition, 
included many leases – “shall be signed and sealed…”), §79 (statutory lease form with the 
                                              
7 Consistent with the legislative judgment that a landlord should have a three-year 
period in which to recover back rent is another provision that appeared in the same 
enactments and that allowed landlords to condition a tenant’s exercise of a renewal option 
on the payment of up to three years unpaid back rent.  See Chapter 502, Laws of Maryland 
1884.  That provision, which is not technically a period of limitations for bringing suit, was 
later recodified separately from the limitations provision as Maryland Code, Real Property 
Article, §8-111.  
12 
 
word “SEAL” alongside spaces for signatures).  One can spend a pleasant afternoon in an 
obscure corner of a law library with some dusty treatises that recount the history of the use 
of seals in conveyances, leases, and contracts.  See, e.g., 1 American Law of Property 
(1952) §3.11; 3 American Law of Property, §12.58; 1 Farnsworth on Contracts (4th ed. 
2019), §2.19; 1 Williston on Contracts (4th ed. 2007), §§2:2, 2:5.  Again, this Court’s 
opinion in Tipton provides some useful references as to the historical use of seals under 
Maryland law and we need not repeat that discussion in its entirety here.  See 364 Md. at 
425-34.   
 
Thus, historically, a residential lease typically was made under seal.  Yet an action 
to collect back rent under that lease was subject to a three-year period of limitations.  That 
remained true if the lease was entered into and the action was brought when the State 
adopted its first constitution in 1776, when Abraham Lincoln was president in the mid-
1800s, when Babe Ruth was born in Baltimore at the turn of the next century, or when 
humankind first stepped onto the moon 50 years ago.  In 1972, this Court observed that 
“[t]here is … authority for the proposition that since recovery of arrearages of rent is 
specifically mentioned in [the predecessor of CJ §5-101] and not in [the predecessor of CJ 
§5-102], a lease cannot be regarded as a specialty to which [CJ §5-102] applies.”  Henry’s 
Drive-In, Inc. v. Pappas, 264 Md. 422, 430 (1972);8 see also Tipton, 364 Md. at 438 (“prior 
                                              
8 The Dissenting Opinion characterizes this observation in Henry’s Drive-In as 
dicta.  Dissenting Opinion at 1, 9-10.  The statement in Henry’s Drive-In is neither a 
holding nor dicta, but rather a summary of the understanding of the limitations period 
relating to back rent actions as of the early 1970s – a summary that, as noted in the text, 
was repeated in Tipton and that is not seriously disputed by Wakefield. 
13 
 
to 1973, the Legislature treated the recovery of accrued rent under all lease agreements as 
being within the confines of [the predecessor of CJ §5-101]”) (emphasis in original). 
 
Wakefield essentially argues that the landscape is different now.  Has anything 
changed during the last 50 years that would override the longstanding legislative policy 
decision and allow the period of limitations applicable to an action for back rent to 
quadruple from three years to 12 years?  To consider the answer to that question requires 
a brief excursion into the early days of the latest round of code revision, which began nearly 
50 years ago.   
2. 
The Landscape After Code Revision  
Code revision is a periodic process by which statutory law is re-organized and 
restated with the goal of making it more accessible and understandable to those who must 
abide by it.  See generally Alan M. Wilner, Blame it all on Nero:  Code Creation and 
Revision in Maryland (1994) (recounting the history of code revision in Maryland).  
Changes made in code revision are presumed to make clear the existing meaning of the 
statutory law rather than to change its meaning.  This Court has long emphasized that “a 
change in a statute as part of a general recodification will ordinarily not be deemed to 
modify the law unless the change is such that the intention of the Legislature to modify the 
law is unmistakable.”  Blevins v. Baltimore County, 352 Md. 620, 642 (1999) (citations, 
internal quotation marks, and emphasis omitted).   
The most recent code revision project began in the early 1970s.  Two concurrent 
parts of that project are relevant to this case:  (1) the consolidation of many laws relating 
to periods of limitations in Title 5 of a new Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article; and (2) 
14 
 
the revision of statutes relating to real property in Article 21 of the Maryland Code and its 
recodification in the new Real Property Article. 
The Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article   
In 1973, the General Assembly enacted the new Courts & Judicial Proceedings 
Article, which became effective on January 1, 1974.  Chapter 2, §§18, 21, First Special 
Session, Laws of Maryland 1973.  As with code revision generally, the revisors who drafted 
the new article had “[t]he onerous task of clarifying the logical relationship among code 
provisions related to the judicial system, while avoiding any substantive change in these 
provisions….”  William H. Adkins II, Code Revision in Maryland:  The Courts and 
Judicial Proceedings Article, 34 Md. L. Rev. 7, 9 (1974). 
Title 5 of the new article, entitled “Limitations and Prohibited Actions,” 
consolidated various statutes of limitations.  CJ §5-101 stated a general three-year period 
of limitations.9  CJ §5-102 provided a 12-year period of limitations for “specialties.”   
The Revisor’s Note to CJ §5-101 stated that it was new language derived from 
Article 57, §1, which had specified a three-year period of limitations for, among other 
things, actions for rent arrearages.  The Revisor’s Note explained the simplified format of 
the new section:  “Rather than listing the various forms of action, it is decided that a blanket 
three year provision, with exceptions for other limitations, be substituted.”  Chapter 2, First 
Special Session, Laws of Maryland 1973 at 204.  The Revisors further explained:  
                                              
9 The original language of CJ §5-101 has not been amended since its enactment 45 
years ago. 
15 
 
“Apparently the legislature intended to cover all causes of action existing in 1729 when 
this section was enacted, subject to certain exceptions.  It is believed that this section 
effectuates this intention in an updated fashion.”  Id. at 205-6.   
The Revisor’s Note to CJ §5-102 stated that it was derived from former Article 57, 
§3, which had formerly listed specialty actions subject to a 12-year period of limitations.  
Id. at 206-7.  That Note indicated that the recodification had deleted mention of two 
specialties listed in the former statute, apparently on the theory that such actions no longer 
existed, but if they did, would be captured by a catch-all category in the definition of 
“specialty.”  Id.   
In a law review article about the new code article, the director of the code revision 
commission highlighted that Subtitle 1, covering both §§5-101 and 5-102, “contain[ed] a 
few minor substantive changes.”  William H. Adkins II, Code Revision in Maryland:  The 
Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, 34 Md. L. Rev. 7, 33 (1974).10  But these minor 
substantive changes had nothing to do with arrearages for rent.11  Thus, code revision left 
the statute of limitations for that cause of action unchanged. 
 
 
                                              
10 Director Adkins would later be appointed a judge of the Court of Special Appeals 
in 1982 and a judge of this Court in 1986. 
11 Director Adkins explained these changes:  “all officers’ bonds rather than only 
those of sheriffs and constables have been excluded from the twelve-year limitation 
provision of section 5-102,” and the “one-month period of limitations for instituting a 
prosecution for blasphemy, has been dropped, since the statute establishing the crime of 
blasphemy was held unconstitutional in State v. West.”  34 Md. L. Rev. at 33.   
16 
 
Article 21 and the Real Property Article 
Contemporaneously with the recodification of limitations statutes in the new Courts 
& Judicial Proceedings Article, a project was also afoot to revise the statutes relating to 
real property, including those concerning leases.  In 1972, the General Assembly enacted 
a comprehensive revision of Article 21 of the Maryland Code, entitled “Conveyancing,” in 
the same format adopted for code revision and with a new title – “Real Property.”  Chapter 
349, Laws of Maryland 1972.  Two years later, the revised Article 21 was adopted with 
minor changes (together with a few provisions transferred from other articles) as the new 
Real Property Article (“RP”).  Chapter 12, Laws of Maryland 1974.  As part of the 1972 
revision, the Legislature eliminated the requirement of a seal for conveyances of real 
property and leases.  See Maryland Code, Article 21, §4-101 (1972).  Consistent with that 
decision, the statutory form for a lease no longer indicated that it was under seal.  See 
Maryland Code, Article 21, §4-202 (1972).  The commentary provided by the drafters of 
the 1972 revision of Article 21 confirmed that the revision intended to eliminate the custom 
of executing leases and other instruments under seal.  See Maryland Code, Article 21, Title 
IV (1973 Repl. Vol.) at pp. 225-26.12 
 
 
                                              
12 The members of the Code Revision Committee of the Section of Real Property, 
Planning and Zoning Law of the Maryland State Bar Association were the principal drafters 
of the 1972 revision.  Although the committee’s commentary to that enactment does not 
appear in the session laws, it was reprinted in the 1973 Replacement Volume for Volume 
2A of the Annotated Code of Maryland. 
17 
 
3. 
Revision of the Landlord-Tenant Law 
Coincident with the early years of code revision that produced the Courts and 
Judicial Proceedings Article and the Real Property Article, the General Assembly also 
revised the landlord-tenant law applicable to residential leases.  In particular, it enacted RP 
§8-208, which enumerates certain protections for tenants.  See Chapter 375, Laws of 
Maryland 1974.  Among those protections was an anti-waiver provision now codified, with 
minor amendments, in RP §8-208(d)(2): 
(d) A landlord may not use a lease or form of lease containing 
any provision that: 
 
* * * 
 
 
(2) 
Has the tenant agree to waive or to forego any right 
or remedy provided by applicable law; 
 
Any provision in a lease prohibited by this section is unenforceable.  RP §8-208(g). 
 
Like similar statutes in other states, RP §8-208 and related provisions were part of 
what some have referred to as a “revolution” in landlord-tenant law during the 1960s and 
1970s that resulted in greater statutory protections for tenants.  See Mary Ann Glendon, 
The Transformation of American Landlord-Tenant Law, 23 B. C. L. Rev. 503 (1982); Tom 
G. Guerts, The Historical Development of the Lease in Residential Real Estate, 32 Real 
Est. L. J. 356 (2004).  Landlord-tenant law originally derived from a feudal relationship in 
an agrarian setting under which a tenant was a relatively powerless employee who 
depended on the landlord for living quarters as well as livelihood.  Guerts, 32 Real Est. L. 
J. at 357-58.  Over the centuries, the law re-defined that relationship, melding principles of 
real property and contract law through court decision and more recently defining certain 
18 
 
rights by statute, especially in the context of residential leases.  See generally Glendon, 
supra; Guerts, supra; see also Douglas M. Bregman, Maryland Landlord-Tenant Law:  
Practice and Procedure (4th ed. 2009) at 1-13.  In modernizing landlord-tenant law, 
developments like the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (1972) (“1972 
URLTA”), 7B Uniform Laws Annotated (2018) at 275, and similar legislative reforms in 
Maryland attempted to, if not equalize the relationship, at least put it on a new legal footing.   
 
An anti-waiver provision like RP §8-208(d)(2) is common to many landlord-tenant 
laws.  See, e.g., 1972 URLTA, §1.403, 7B Uniform Laws Annotated (2018) at 305.13  While 
many such provisions preclude a waiver of rights specifically conferred by a landlord-
tenant act, the Maryland provision is broader, as it bars lease provisions under which a 
tenant would waive or forgo rights or remedies under any “applicable law.”  An anti-waiver 
provision like RP §8-208(d)(2) to some extent neutralizes the superior bargaining power 
that a landlord might have by precluding lease provisions that reverse tenant protections 
enacted by the Legislature.  Glendon, 23 B. C. L. Rev. at 548-49.   
4. 
The Tipton Dicta 
As indicated above, the third iteration of the holding in Tipton suggested that a 12-
year period of limitations could apply to an action for back rent under a residential lease if 
“the parties to the lease agree, in the body of the lease, that the lease is subject to the twelve-
                                              
13 The commentary to the 1972 URLTA provision states:  “Rental Agreements are 
often executed on forms provided by landlords, and some contain adhesion clauses the use 
of which is prohibited by this section.”  7B Uniform Laws Annotated (2018) at 306. 
19 
 
year limitation period of section 5-102.”14  Of course, that statement did not apply to the 
case before the Court and therefore was dicta.  Although the purpose of this dicta is not 
clear, it is evident that the Court could not have been conclusively deciding the question of 
whether CJ §5-102 could apply to an action for back rent arising from a residential lease, 
as the Court explicitly declined to decide, and left for another day, the question of whether 
a 12-year period of limitations would be contrary to RP §8-208(d)(2).   
The reasoning that underlies the actual holding in Tipton points to a conclusion 
contrary to that which Wakefield wishes us to draw – at least in the absence of legislative 
action.  The Tipton Court reviewed the case law and legislative history and determined that 
CJ §5-101, rather than CJ §5-102, was applicable in that case.  It noted that “since 1715 … 
all claims for rent arrears have been subject to a three-year statute of limitations,” and 
concluded the analysis section by highlighting that a “clear intent of the legislature to 
substantively modify the law is missing from the legislative history of the relevant statutes 
at issue in the case sub judice.”  In other words, the law had always applied a three-year 
statute of limitations to back rent claims, and there is no legislative history suggesting that 
the Legislature had intended to change that longstanding period of limitations.  Contrary 
                                              
14 Wakefield states that it relied on the Tipton dicta when it included the paragraph 
concerning the period of limitations in the preprinted standard lease conditions 
incorporated in its lease with Mr. Smith.  We certainly have no reason to doubt that 
assertion.  The extent to which other landlords have relied on Tipton to devise a lease 
condition to modify the period of limitations for back rent actions is less clear.  A relatively 
recent publication containing several model residential leases does not include such a 
provision in any of its model lease forms.  See Douglas M. Bregman, Landlord and Tenant, 
Maryland State Bar Association, 1 Practice Manual for the Maryland Lawyer (4th ed. 
2012), Chapter 10. 
20 
 
to the notion that Tipton created a road map for quadrupling the statute of limitations for 
residential leases, the analysis in that opinion all but closed the door to the possibility that 
residential leases could ever become a specialty without further legislative action.  
5. 
Summary 
Prior to the early 1970s, residential leases were commonly executed under seal, and 
an action for back rent owed under such a lease had to be filed within a three-year statute 
of limitations.  The largely non-substantive revision of the statutes governing limitations 
periods retained that three-year period of limitations for such actions.  The concurrent 
revision of the statutes governing real property eliminated the need for a seal in residential 
leases.  As the Court noted in Tipton, there is no indication in the code revision of the early 
1970s that the Legislature intended to provide for an extension of the longstanding three-
year period of limitations for back rent actions.  Indeed, it would seem odd to conclude that 
a landlord’s decision to add an unnecessary seal to a residential lease form – or an 
additional sentence that invoked the concept of a “contract under seal” – would quadruple 
that period of limitations when the previous use of the seal in such leases did not signify a 
longer period of limitations.  Moreover, such a conclusion is at odds with legislative 
enactments contemporaneous with the code revision of the early 1970s that expanded 
protections for residential tenants and precluded waiver of those protections in a lease.  In 
the absence of legislative action, the reasoning of the Court in Tipton does not counsel 
otherwise.15 
                                              
15 Wakefield argues (and the Dissenting Opinion adopts the argument) that 
legislative inaction inures in Wakefield’s favor.  It points to recent proposed legislation 
21 
 
So the “road map” does not get Wakefield to where it wants to go.  There may be 
an alternative route to the result that Wakefield seeks – a more generous period of 
limitations for a landlord seeking to collect back rent from a residential tenant.  Like a 
contemporary navigational device, Tipton may offer a way to re-route.  We consider that 
alternative path in the next section of this opinion. 
C. 
Whether There Was an Enforceable Agreement to Alter the Statute of Limitations 
As noted earlier, the Court in Tipton observed, in the first two statements of its 
holding, that parties to a contract may agree to waive a statute of limitations.  364 Md. at 
422 n.3, 425 n.9.  Other than stating that “[g]enerally, affixation of a seal, alone, will not 
constitute such a waiver,” the Court did not explicitly discuss the concept of waiver with 
respect to the facts of the case before it.  However, the dicta at the conclusion of the opinion 
                                              
that, in several different ways, would have made clear that the 12-year period of limitations 
for specialties in CJ §5-102 does not apply to a residential lease or, in some bills, to 
anything defined as a “consumer contract.”  See Senate Bill 837 (2018), House Bill 635 
(2018); Senate Bill 1077 (2017), House Bill 994 (2017); House Bill 971 (2016).  None of 
those bills passed the General Assembly and Wakefield infers that the General Assembly 
therefore intended to allow an extension of the longstanding period of limitations 
governing actions for back rent from three years to 12 years.  
However, the General Assembly’s recent decision not to pass a particular bill does 
not alter the intent of past sessions of the Legislature when it initially adopted the three-
year period of limitations for rent arrearage actions in 1715, and repeatedly retained that 
period of limitations in subsequent recodifications.  Nor does it alter the understanding of 
the Legislature that retained that period of limitations in the recodification in the 1970s.  
No action by the General Assembly since that recodification has evidenced any intent to 
enlarge the period of limitations for actions for back rent.  In that context, reliance on the 
General Assembly’s inaction on bills that, in many respects, confirm existing law seems a 
“weak reed” on which to rely.  E.g., Automobile Trade Ass’n of Maryland, Inc. v. Insurance 
Commissioner, 292 Md. 15, 24 (1981).    
22 
 
might be understood as the Court’s speculation as to how parties might waive the three-
year period of limitations in CJ §5-101 and extend the period of limitations by doing 
something other than simply affixing a seal.  At the time it decided Tipton, the Court did 
not have the benefit of our subsequent decision in Ceccone v. Carroll Home Services, LLC, 
454 Md. 680 (2017), concerning modification of an otherwise applicable limitations period 
by agreement.  
The Ceccone case concerned an action brought with respect to a service contract for 
a residential heating system.  Although the question in that case was whether the relevant 
period of limitations could be shortened from three years (as provided in statute) to one 
year (as provided in the contract), the Court discussed the criteria for recognizing any 
private agreement to alter a statutory period of limitations.  Endorsing a formula offered in 
a prior opinion of the Court of Special Appeals, this Court held that parties may agree to a 
provision that modifies the period of limitations that would otherwise apply to a cause of 
action, provided (1) there is no controlling statute to the contrary, (2) the modification is 
reasonable, and (3) the modification is not subject to other defenses such as fraud, duress, 
or misrepresentation.  454 Md. at 693-94.    
With respect to the first issue – whether there is a controlling statute that precludes 
waiver of the three-year statute of limitations – Mr. Smith points to RP §8-208(d)(2).  As 
noted earlier, that statute provides, in pertinent part, that a lease may not provide that “the 
tenant agree to waive or to forego any right or remedy provided by applicable law.”  
Whether an extension of the three-year period of limitations for a back rent action is 
precluded by RP §8-208(d) was one of the questions raised, but not answered, in Tipton.   
23 
 
 
The longstanding three-year period of limitations for a back rent action based on a 
residential lease is clearly “provided by applicable law” – CJ §5-101 and its predecessors.16  
The question is whether it is a “right or remedy.”  It does not appear to fit the ordinary 
definition of “remedy.”17  The statute of limitations may be considered a “right,” however, 
in the sense that it confers on a potential defendant the right to be free of litigation based 
on the particular cause of action. 
Even if RP §8-208(d) did not preclude an agreement to extend the statute of 
limitations pertinent to such actions, there remains the question of whether such an 
extension is reasonable in circumstances such as these.  In Ceccone, the Court suggested 
that the following factors bear on that question:  the length of the modified period of 
limitations, its relation to the statutory period, the relative bargaining power of the parties, 
the subject matter of the contract, and whether the modification is one-sided in effect, 
among other things.  454 Md. at 697-98.   
Here the modification would quadruple the period of time within which an action 
for back rent could be brought – from three years to 12 years.  Notably, in this case, the 
matter did not come to trial until nearly a decade after the termination of the lease.  Many 
businesses or government agencies would not have retained records relating to a 
                                              
16 Wakefield argues that the “applicable law” for purposes of limitations is not CJ 
§5-101, but rather CJ §5-102 – an argument that seems to lift itself by its own bootstraps.  
For the reasons set forth in the previous section of this opinion, we disagree. 
17 A popular legal dictionary defines “remedy” generally as “[t]he means of 
enforcing a right or preventing or redressing a wrong; legal or equitable relief.”  Black’s 
Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). 
24 
 
contractual relationship that ended so long ago.  It seems even more unlikely that an 
individual tenant like Mr. Smith would have retained the necessary records to defend 
against such a claim.   
With respect to the relative bargaining power of the parties, this Court has 
acknowledged that residential leases are less likely to be the product of arms-length 
negotiation than commercial leases.  See Lockett v. Blue Ocean Bristol, LLC, 446 Md. 397, 
419 (2016).  In this case, the lease provision lengthening the period of limitations appears 
in a preprinted form addendum to the lease.  There is no apparent option for the tenant to 
opt out of it when entering into the lease.  While the modification is not one-sided on its 
face, we have not been pointed to any potential action that a tenant would likely bring under 
the lease a decade after its termination.  In our view, the effect of this provision is to 
quadruple the period of time for the landlord to pursue a collection action for back rent, 
without providing any similar benefit to the other party to the contract.   
Finally, the subject matter of the contract – rental of a housing unit – is unlikely to 
generate causes of action for which an extended period of limitations would be necessary.  
For example, the basis for an action for back rent – failure to pay rent – will be known 
immediately to the injured party and is unlikely to require extensive investigation.  In our 
view, a nine-year extension of the period for bringing a back rent action is not a reasonable 
modification of the applicable period of limitations chosen by the Legislature.18   
                                              
18 In light of this conclusion, we need not consider the third condition for an 
enforceable agreement modifying a statute of limitations.  In any event, we note that there 
is no allegation of fraud, duress, or misrepresentation by Wakefield.  
25 
 
In sum, even if the preprinted paragraph of the lease addendum in this case were 
considered an agreement to modify the period of limitations, it is not enforceable. 
III 
Conclusion 
 
Sometimes, when a court says more than is necessary to decide a case, what is 
unnecessary is also unexamined and not always a good predictor of future decisions.  
Perhaps that is why courts tend to discount dicta and eschew advisory opinions.  The Court 
in Tipton thoroughly analyzed the issue before it and we adhere to its holding in that case; 
however, we do not adopt its suggestion as to how to decide a future case like this one. 
 
For the reasons explained above, we hold: 
(1) 
The three-year period of limitations set forth in CJ §5-101 governs actions 
for back rent under residential leases, regardless of whether the lease includes provisions 
that purport to convert it into a contract under seal. 
(2) 
The three-year period of limitations that applies to a back rent action under a 
residential lease is not subject to waiver, in light of RP §8-208(d)(2). 
 
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR 
BALTIMORE CITY REVERSED 
AND CASE 
REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH DIRECTION 
TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINT.  COSTS TO BE 
PAID BY RESPONDENT.  
 
Circuit Court for Baltimore City 
Case No. 24-C-18-000566  
Argued: November 5, 2018 
 
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 28 
 
September Term, 2018 
 
  
GREGORY SMITH 
 
 
 
v. 
 
WAKEFIELD, LP 
 
 
Barbera, C.J. 
Greene, 
McDonald, 
Watts, 
Hotten, 
Getty, 
Adkins, Sally D. 
(Senior Judge, Specially Assigned) 
 
JJ. 
 
 
Dissenting Opinion by Getty, J., which Adkins, 
J., joins 
 
 
Filed: February 27, 2019 
 
 
 
 
I respectfully dissent from the Majority’s conclusion that the lease entered into 
between Gregory Smith and Wakefield, LP is not a contract under seal and therefore not a 
specialty contract subject to a twelve-year statute of limitations pursuant to § 5-102 of the 
Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJ”).   
Under the facts of this case, I agree with the decisions reached by the District Court 
of Maryland for Baltimore City and the Circuit Court for Baltimore City that squarely 
applied the precedent that this Court set forth in Tipton.  Moreover, the policy decision to 
except residential leases from specialty status is properly within the authority of the 
General Assembly and not this Court.  I also find unpersuasive the Majority’s conclusion 
that, although CJ § 5-101 no longer specifically references residential leases as did its 
statutory predecessor, residential leases have been subject to a three-year statute of 
limitations based on this Court’s decision in Henry’s Drive-In, Inc. v. Pappas, 264 Md. 
422, 430-31 (1972).  In my view, the Majority relies upon dicta from Henry’s Drive-In, 
that is inclusive because it can be interpreted to support both positions, i.e. either treating 
residential leases as specialties subject to the twelve-year statute of limitations or applying 
the blanket three-year statute of limitations. 
To explain my dissent, I begin with the precedent on specialty contracts that has 
been clearly articulated by this Court. 
A. 
What is a Contract Under Seal? 
 
The term “specialty” is not defined within the controlling statute, CJ § 5-102, nor 
elsewhere within the Maryland Code.  See Gildenhorn v. Columbia Real Estate Title Ins. 
Co., 271 Md. 387, 398 (1974).  
 
2 
 
Previously, this Court has held that including the word “seal” within a preprinted 
form that acted as a guaranty to a public utility company was sufficient to transform the 
agreement into a contract under seal.  Warfield v. Baltimore Gas and Electric Company, 
307 Md. 142, 147-48 (1986).  Although the body of the instrument did not demonstrate an 
intent to form a contract under seal, the Warfield Court indicated that there was no contrary 
intention manifested within the instrument.  Warfield, 307 Md. at 1.  The Court commented, 
[i]f the contract is signed by an individual opposite and in obvious relation to a 
legally sufficient seal, the instrument will be taken as a sealed document, where 
there is nothing on the face of the paper to indicate the contrary even though there 
be no reference to the seal in the wording of the paper. 
 
Warfield, 307 Md. at 143. 
Consistently, this Court (and others interpreting Maryland law) has concluded that 
the word “seal” impressed or printed adjacent to the parties’ signatures on an agreement 
was sufficient to render an ordinary contract into a contract under seal and therefore a 
specialty.  General Petroleum Corp. v. Seaboard Terminals Corp., 23 F. Supp. 137, 139 
(D. Md. 1938) (holding that an instrument including a seal, coupled with sufficient 
extrinsic evidence to establish an intent to enter into a contract under seal, was sufficient 
to transform a guaranty into a contract under seal.); Trasher v. Everhart, 3 G.&J. 234, 246 
(1831) (“for whether an instrument be a specialty, must always be determined by the fact, 
whether the party affixed a seal; not upon the assertion of the obligor, in the body of the 
instrument, or by the form of the attestation.”) 
 
However, this Court has recognized a distinction for corporations that simply 
affixing a corporate seal is not enough to render an agreement into a contract under seal 
 
3 
 
and therefore a specialty contract.  Mayor of Federalsburg v. Allied Contractors, 275 Md. 
151, cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1017 (1975).  In that case, this Court indicated that for 
corporations the presence of a corporate seal within an instrument is not dispositive as to 
whether that instrument is a contract under seal and thereby a specialty contract.  Id. at 154-
56. 
The Allied Contractors Court held that a contract under seal may be established by: 
(1) an instrument with a seal impressed or printed onto it; and either (2) language in its 
body that evinces the parties’ intent to form a contract under seal; or (3) the parties submit 
sufficient extrinsic evidence from which a court can establish that they intended the 
instrument to be a contract under seal.  Id. at 155-56.  This interpretation follows the 
precedent established by earlier decisions of this Court.  See Gildenhorn, 271 Md. at 399-
404; Smith v. Woman’s Med. Coll. of Balt. City, 110 Md. 441, 445-446 (1909).  Thus, for 
over one hundred years, this Court has held that instruments which contain a seal and 
demonstrate an intent to form a contract under seal by text within the body of the instrument 
or by extrinsic evidence are contracts under seal and therefore specialties subject to the 
twelve-year limitations period.   
More recently, in Tipton v. Partner’s Mgmt. Co., we reiterated that a residential 
lease containing seals adjacent to the parties’ signatures, combined with a demonstrable 
intention to create a contract under seal indicated within the body of the instrument, 
establishes an instrument as a contract under seal and therefore a specialty.  364 Md. 419, 
445 (2001).  Mr. Smith argued and the Majority found persuasive the proposition that this 
language in Tipton is merely dicta and should not influence the legal analysis of this case.   
 
4 
 
However, the Tipton Court clearly stated the following:  
We hold that claims for arrearages of rent under a residential lease, even a lease to 
which a seal is affixed, must be filed within the three-year limitation period unless 
the parties agree, in the body of the lease, that the lease is subject to the twelve-year 
limitation period of section 5-102. 
 
Id.  While the status of this language as dicta is ultimately debatable, it is undisputable that 
this language clearly set forth guidance from this Court for those that wished to establish a 
residential lease under seal.  Now, in their opinion, the Majority concludes that any reliance 
upon this language is ultimately unjustified.  Majority Slip Op. at 19-20.  The Majority 
relies on Tipton for the proposition that the statutory framework surrounding leases and the 
associated statutes of limitation did not change throughout recodification.  Majority Slip 
Op. at 6 n. 3.  However, if this was the case, it is inconsistent that the Tipton Court then 
offered guidance that residential leases may be transformed into specialties and therefore 
subject to the associated twelve-year statute of limitations.   
In consideration of the common-law definition of a contract under seal, it becomes 
evident that all the hallmarks of a contract under seal are present within the lease at issue 
in the instant appeal.  First, the lease contained the word “Seal” adjacent to the signatures 
of the parties.  Second, the body of the lease indicated that “[t]his [l]ease is under seal and 
is subject to the twelve-year limitations period of Section 5-102 of the Courts & Judicial 
proceedings Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland.”   
Therefore, Wakefield in crafting their residential leases abided by the construct 
established by this Court as set forth in Tipton.  Specifically, the lease’s direct references 
to CJ § 5-102 and the twelve-year limitations period mirror the procedure announced in 
 
5 
 
Tipton identically.  It is obvious that counsel involved in drafting this lease was aware of 
the precedent established by this Court and relied on it to fashion this residential lease into 
a legitimate contract under seal and therefore a specialty contract.1   
  In addition, the clause contained within the lease aligns directly with this Court’s 
earlier holdings that a contract under seal requires the affixation or impression of a seal to 
an instrument and language within the body of an instrument which evinces an intent to 
create a contract under seal.  Allied Contractors, 275 Md. at 155-56; Levin v. Friedman, 
271 Md. 438, 443 (1974); Gildenhorn, 271 Md. at 399-404; Woman’s Medical Coll. of 
Balt. City, 110 Md. at 445-46.  Clearly, the lease in question contained seals and a provision 
that referenced CJ § 5-102.  Together, these features adequately demonstrate the parties’ 
intent to enter into a contract under seal.  Furthermore, the Majority’s conclusion that the 
lease in question was not a contract under seal and thereby a specialty is inapposite.   
B. 
While the General Assembly Has Enacted Exceptions to the Specialty Contract 
Statute of Limitations, It Has Failed to Include Residential Leases Within Those 
Exceptions. 
 
While this Court has the authority to interpret statutes enacted by the state 
legislature, the ultimate power to enact and amend such statutes rests with the General 
Assembly.  Consolidated Eng’g Co., Inc. v. Cooper, 246 Md. 610, 615 (1967); Lickel v. 
Boone, 187 Md. 579, 585 (1947) (“This Court cannot enact legislation, but can only 
                                                 
1 As noted by the Majority, the organization that entered into the lease on Wakefield’s 
behalf was a successor to the management company involved in Tipton.  See Majority Slip 
Op at 8 n. 6.   
 
 
6 
 
administer justice according to existing law.”).  In contrast to statutory interpretation, the 
Majority’s opinion attempts to modify a statutory provision (e.g. CJ § 5-102) by inserting 
an exception for residential leases whereby the twelve-year statute of limitations for 
specialty contracts is now inapplicable, even if the lease is appropriately formed as a 
contract under seal.  Majority Slip Op. at 21-25.   
 
Previously, this Court has considered the policy underlying statutes of limitations 
generally and commented: 
Statutes of limitations are designed to balance the competing interest of plaintiffs, 
defendants, and the public.  A statutory period of limitations represents a policy 
judgment by the Legislature that serves the interest of a plaintiff in having adequate 
time to investigate a cause of action and file suit, the interest of a defendant in having 
certainty that there will not be a need to respond to a potential claim that has been 
unreasonably delayed, and the general interest of society in judicial economy.  
 
Ceccone v. Carroll Home Servs., LLC, 454 Md. 680, 691 (2017) (emphasis added).  
Accordingly, this Court has found that a determination of the applicable statute of 
limitations as to a particular cause of action is one which is rightfully left to the General 
Assembly and is not within the purview of this Court to determine.  Moreover, courts do 
not have the authority to fashion exceptions to statute of limitations as this is also within 
the purview of the General Assembly.  Swam v. Upper Chesapeake Med. Ctr., Inc., 397 
Md. 528, 555 (2007).   
On this issue, this Court has consistently stated “[w]here the legislature has not 
made an exception in express words in the Statute of Limitations, the Court cannot allow 
any implied and equitable exception to be engrafted upon the statute merely on the ground 
that such exception would be within the spirit or reason of the statute.”  McMahan v. 
 
7 
 
Dorchester Fertilizer Co., 184 Md. 155, 160 (1944).  See also Hecht v. Resolution Trust 
Corp., 333 Md. 324, 333 (1994); Booth Glass Co. v. Huntingfield Corp., 304 Md. 615, 623 
(1985); Walko Corp. v. Burger Chef Sys., Inc., 281 Md. 207, 215 (1977).  Clearly, 
excepting residential leases from specialty status is an appropriate task for the General 
Assembly and not this Court.   
It is true that the General Assembly has wrestled with this very issue.  In 2014, it 
passed legislation to except certain agreements from the twelve-year limitations period of 
CJ § 5-102(a).  Specifically, the new statute excepted “[a] deed of trust, mortgage, or 
promissory note that has been signed under seal and secures or is secured by owner-
occupied residential property. . .”  2014 Md. Laws ch. 592; CJ § 5-102(c)(2).  Essentially, 
the General Assembly determined that parties should not be able to transform these three 
instruments, in situations where they are secured by residences, into contracts under seal.  
Thus, the twelve-year limitations period of CJ § 5-102(a) shall not apply to these specific 
items.  Yet, the General Assembly did not include a residential lease exception in the 2014 
legislation even though this Court’s opinion in Tipton, which indicated that a residential 
lease properly formulated as a contract under seal would be subject to the twelve-year 
limitations period of CJ § 5-101, had been decided thirteen years earlier. 
Essentially, the Majority’s opinion engrafts upon CJ § 5-102(c) a new residential 
lease exception absent any indication of the General Assembly’s intent to enact such an 
exception.  In fact, bills to craft a residential lease carve-out have been introduced during 
the 2016 and 2017 sessions of the legislature but have failed.  See H.B. 971, 2016 Leg., 
436th Sess. (Md. 2016); S.B. 1077 and H.B. 994, 2017 Leg., 437th Sess. (Md. 2017).  This 
 
8 
 
Court has previously explained a bill’s failure within the General Assembly is “a rather 
weak reed upon which to lean in ascertaining [the General Assembly’s] intent” because 
there may be a host of reasons for the failure of a particular bill.   NVR Mortg. Finance, 
Inc. v. Carlsen, 439 Md. 427, 438 (2014) (quoting City of Balt. Dev. Corp. v. Carmel Realty 
Assocs., 395 Md. 299, 329 (2006)).  However, the fiscal note for these bills specifically 
cited this Court’s ruling in Tipton as the impetus to introduce the bill that would provide 
the new exception for residential leases: 
In Tipton v. Partner’s Management Co., 364 Md. 419 (2001), the Maryland Court 
of Appeals held that even though a residential lease agreement had the word “seal” 
printed on it, the agreement was subject to the three-year statute of limitations for 
simple contracts under § 5-101 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, not 
the 12-year statute of limitations for specialty instruments under § 5-102 of the 
Courts and Judicial Proceedings [sic].  However, the court also noted that the 12-
year statute of limitations under § 5-102 would apply if the parties agreed to that 
statute of limitations in the body of the lease. 
 
Dep’t Fiscal Servs., Fiscal and Policy Note, House Bill 971, at 2 (2016 Session).     
Clearly the fiscal note indicates that the twelve-year statute of limitations applies 
for the specialty of a residential lease under seal with language in its body that evinces an 
intent to create a contract under seal.  Further, this legislation’s failure, as a direct response 
to this Court’s decision in Tipton, strengthens the generally “weak reed” of statutory 
interpretation.  NVR Mortg. Finance, Inc., 439 Md. at 438.  Only by passing such 
legislation would the General Assembly be demonstrating its intent that the three-year 
statute of limitations applies to any kind of residential lease. 
The Majority takes the position that since residential leases were specifically 
included under Art. 27 § 1, any change through recodification in the language of its 
 
9 
 
statutory successor, CJ § 5-101, did not change the applicability of a three-year statute of 
limitations to residential leases.  However, on this point, the Majority finds clarity where 
things are murky at best.  To support its position, the Majority relies on Henry's Drive-In, 
Inc., but neglects portions of that opinion which demonstrate context and indicate the cited 
language is clearly dicta.  264 Md. 422 (1972); Majority Slip Op. at 13.  The context of 
this language is as follows:   
The resolution of the problems posed by this case would have been infinitely more 
difficult were it not for a concessum made by the Lessor's counsel at oral argument. 
The 1959 lease was under seal, and it could be argued that the Lessor’s right to 
demand excess rent from Maryland Henry’s, and Maryland Henry’s right to claim 
a credit for interest on the security deposit, might be governed by the 12 year 
period of limitations made applicable to specialties by Code, Art. 57, s 3 and not 
by the three year period provided for by Art. 57, s 1. There is, however, authority 
for the proposition that since recovery of arrearages of rent is specifically mentioned 
in s 1 and not in s 3, a lease cannot be regarded as a specialty to which s 3 applies, 
Towson Gardens, Inc. v. Small et ux., Law No. 6984-11-16 (Cir.Ct. Harford County, 
decided 18 March 1968) (Daily Record, Baltimore, 25 May 1968); see also 1 Wood, 
Limitation of Actions s 32, at 126 (4th ed. 1916). However, as we have noted, no 
appeal was taken by Maryland Henry’s. 
Id. at 430-31 (emphasis added).   
As evident, the Court’s comment about whether the 12-year statute of limitations 
applied was not before the Court because this language did not concern arguments brought 
by either party but instead were speculative and referenced a party not even involved in 
that appeal.  Accordingly, the Majority ultimately relies on dicta far more removed from 
the underlying action than the dicta in Tipton.  Overall, the Majority’s rejection of the dicta 
in Tipton, while relying on dicta from Henry’s Drive-In, Inc. for the proposition that 
undergirds much of their argument is inconsistent.   Next, I turn to the question of whether 
 
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statutes of limitations constitute a right or remedy under § 8-208 of the Real Property 
Article (“RP”).   
C. 
RP § 8-208 Does Not Prohibit Lengthening the Limitations Period in a 
Residential Lease. 
 
 
As noted by the Majority, RP § 8-208(d) limits the types of permissible provisions 
a landlord may insert into a lease.  More specifically, the statute provides that landlords 
may not include provisions in leases that “ha[ve] the tenant agree to waive or forego any 
right or remedy provided by applicable law[.]”  RP § 8-208(d)(2).  Thus, the question of 
whether the statute of limitations for a particular claim constitutes a “right or remedy” 
within the meaning of RP § 8-208(d)(2) remains.  Despite the Majority’s conclusion on 
this point, Maryland courts have repeatedly indicated that statutes of limitations are 
procedural in nature, rather than rights or remedies.  State v. Smith, 443 Md. 572, 594 
(2015) (“this Court has held that such procedural statutes (e.g. statutes that change a statute 
of limitations) operate retrospectively.”); Doughty v. Prettyman, 219 Md. 83, 88 (1959) 
(“Included in the procedural matters governed by the law of this state is the statute of 
limitations.”); Roe v. Doe, 193 Md. App. 558, 577-78 (2010), aff’d, 419 Md. 687 (2011) 
(“a lengthened statute of limitations is ‘procedural’ – that is, it does not alter substantive 
rights. . . .”); Hariq v. Johns—Manville Products Corp., 284 Md. 70, 75 (1978) (“Statutes 
of limitations are . . . a simple procedural mechanism to dispose of stale claims.”).  
Therefore, the statute of limitations associated with a particular claim are not a right or 
remedy as contemplated by RP § 8-208(d)(2); rather, they are procedural mechanisms.   
 
11 
 
 
In certain other situations, it is quite evident that a contractual modification of the 
statute of limitations may limit an individual’s potential remedies.  To that end, this Court 
has noted that “[a] statute of limitations is a procedural device that operates as a defense to 
limit the remedy available from an existing cause of action.”  SVF Riva Annapolis LLC v. 
Gilroy, 459 Md. 632, 637 n.1 (2018) (quoting First United Methodist Church of Hyattsville 
v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 882 F.2d 862, 865 (4th Cir. 1989)).  Furthermore, the Majority’s 
conclusion that “[t]he statute of limitations may be considered a ‘right,’ however, in the 
sense that it confers on a potential defendant the right to be free of litigation based on the 
particular cause of action[,]” is inapposite given the uncontroverted precedent above.  
Majority Slip Op. at 23.  In sum, statutes of limitations are procedural mechanisms that 
may limit an individual’s rights, but statutes of limitations do not constitute rights in and 
of themselves as the majority concludes.  Id.  Furthermore, the case sub judice is distinct 
in that it involves a clause which attempts to lengthen the statute of limitations.   
It is simply untenable to conclude that the provision extending the statute of 
limitations to twelve years found within the lease in the present case is tantamount to an 
impermissible provision that waives a right or remedy pursuant to RP § 8-208(d)(2).  The 
lease does not indicate that the extended limitations period only applies to Mr. Smith or 
Wakefield.  Therefore, rather than limiting potential rights or remedies, the provision at 
issue has the potential to expand a tenant’s rights or remedies, as a tenant would have 
twelve years (instead of three years) to bring any claims arising out of the lease against a 
landlord.  Although the Majority indicates that it is unable to ascertain any situations in 
which a tenant would bring suit against a landlord “under the lease a decade after its 
 
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termination[,]” it does not follow that no such situations exist.  Majority Slip Op. at 24.  In 
sum, there is no conflict between the lease provision at issue and RP § 8-208(d)(2) because 
statutes of limitations are procedural devices and not rights.  Therefore, RP § 8-208(d)(2) 
should not limit a landlord’s ability to insert a provision within a lease that lengthens the 
statute of limitations for claims arising out of that lease.     
 
In conclusion, the Majority’s decision represents a departure from the precedent 
established by this Court in interpreting the statutes governing specialty contracts.  The 
residential lease in this case fell squarely within the requirements of the statute as 
interpreted by this Court in Tipton.  Any exception for the specialty of a residential lease 
under seal and with language within the body that evinces an intent to create a contract 
under seal from the twelve-year statute of limitations is a policy decision within the 
authority of the General Assembly and not this Court.  For these reasons, I respectfully 
dissent from the Majority’s decision.   
Judge Adkins has authorized me to state that she joins in this opinion.