Court Opinion

ID: 2803899
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-05-27 20:09:14.434004+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:52:08.665367
License: Public Domain

REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
         OF MARYLAND

                No. 02416

         September Term, 2013

     _________________________

SUSAN BUCKINGHAM, CO-PERSONAL
   REPRESENTATIVE OF JOHN D.
       BUCKINGHAM, et al.,

                   v.

JEFFREY B. FISHER, et al., SUBSTITUTE
             TRUSTEES.

     _________________________

    Woodward,
    Berger,
    Friedman,

                   JJ.

     _________________________

        Opinion by Friedman, J.

     _________________________

    Filed: May 27, 2015
       Maryland Rule 14-211 sets out the process for determining whether to grant or deny

a motion to stay and dismiss a foreclosure sale. First, the trial court will review the motion

and the record and, if it sees fit, may elect to hold an initial hearing where the trial court

considers the motion and hears arguments from parties to the foreclosure proceedings.1 If

the court determines that the motion on its face states a valid defense to the foreclosure, a

temporary stay of foreclosure is entered and the second step, an evidentiary hearing on the

merits of the defense, is scheduled. On the other hand, if the trial court determines that the

motion does not raise a facially valid defense, it may deny the motion without holding an

evidentiary hearing on the merits, thereby allowing the foreclosure sale to proceed. We

are asked to consider what the pleading standard is for stating a facially valid defense that

will require a trial court to move to that second step of holding a hearing on the merits.

                              FACTUAL BACKGROUND

       John and Elizabeth Buckingham were husband and wife who resided at 17 Darby

Court, in Bethesda, Maryland. They owned the property as tenants by the entireties. On

       1
         We note that Rule 14-211(b)(1) gives a trial court the discretion to deny a motion
based on the record, without first holding an initial hearing. The trial court in this case
opted to first hold an initial hearing before denying the Buckinghams’ motion. Although
the trial court did not explicitly state its reason for holding an initial hearing, which it
referred to in its Order denying the motion as an “emergency hearing,” it was likely because
the Buckinghams’ motion was filed one day before the foreclosure sale was scheduled to
take place. In a situation where the trial court has more time to review the motion and the
record, however, the court may decide to grant or deny the motion, or to hold an evidentiary
hearing on the merits, without holding an initial hearing.
September 11, 1997, the Buckinghams purportedly executed a refinance deed of trust

(“1997 deed of trust”) for the benefit of Virginia Commerce Bank. The 1997 deed of trust

secured a $600,000 debt owed under a prime equity line agreement and disclosure with

Virginia Commerce Bank, and was recorded in the Montgomery County land records on

October 9, 1997. The 1997 deed of trust was modified on several occasions during the

subsequent years: on June 15, 1999; on November 25, 2005; on March 26, 2006; and on

June 30, 2006. Each modification acknowledged the original 1997 loan and deed of trust.

       The Buckinghams defaulted on November 16, 2010, by failing to make the

payments due under the modified loan agreement. Virginia Commerce Bank sought to

foreclose the deed of trust and appointed the appellees in this case as Substitute Trustees

(“Trustees”). On December 7, 2011, before the Trustees initiated the foreclosure action,

Elizabeth died, leaving John as the surviving tenant by the entireties. The Trustees filed

an Order to Docket Suit in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County on September 6,

2012, seeking to foreclose the deed of trust based on the November 2010 default. John

Buckingham was the sole named defendant as the surviving tenant by the entireties and

sole owner of the property at 17 Darby Court. But due to John Buckingham’s poor health,

he was no longer capable of acting for himself in legal proceedings. Therefore, the Order

to Docket Suit was served on John’s son, David Buckingham, who had been appointed as

the guardian of his father’s property.

       John died on October 17, 2012, shortly after the foreclosure action was filed against

him. After John’s death, two of his other children, Richard and Susan Buckingham (“the

                                            -2-
Buckinghams”) were appointed as the co-personal representatives of John’s estate. The

Trustees amended the Order to Docket Suit on July 11, 2013, to reflect the fact that John

Buckingham had died and that the subject property was no longer owner-occupied, as well

as to join Richard and Susan Buckingham as the personal representatives of John’s estate.2

      A foreclosure sale was scheduled for December 19, 2013. Richard Buckingham

received notice of the foreclosure sale on December 5, 2013. On December 18, 2013,

Richard and Susan Buckingham filed a Motion to Stay Sale of Property and Dismiss

Foreclosure Action, pursuant to Rule 14-211. They sought a temporary stay of the sale and

dismissal of the foreclosure action, challenging the validity of the 1997 deed of trust and

the Trustees’ right to foreclose. The Buckinghams alleged that their mother, Elizabeth’s

signature on the 1997 deed of trust was a forgery.

             Elizabeth’s signatures on the lien instruments attached to the
             Order to Docket are not hers and are forgeries, thereby
             rendering the lien instruments void ab initio and
             unenforceable. The Affidavit of John W. Hargett, III, a forensic
             document examiner, expressing his expert opinion that there is
             a strong possibility that Elizabeth S. Buckingham did not sign
             these lien instruments, is attached hereto.3

      2
         John Buckingham’s illness and death, his personal financial and corporate
business dealings, and relationships with and among his heirs and survivors, have
generated a substantial amount of litigation in the courts of Maryland. Nothing in the
factual recitation contained in this Opinion is intended as anything more than helpful
background and will not bind courts that may have to make specific determinations on
these issues.
      3
        The Buckinghams also supported this allegation with the affidavit from David
Buckingham, who alleged that he was familiar with his mother’s handwriting and that the
signatures on the instruments were not hers.

                                            -3-
       In addition to this forgery defense, the Buckinghams also alleged that the notice of

sale was insufficient to inform interested parties of the details of the foreclosure sale

because it conflicted with the Order to Docket Suit in terms of the lien instrument upon

which the foreclosure sale was based. The Buckinghams argued that (1) the notice of sale

listed the 1999 modification to the 1997 deed of trust, rather than the 2006 modification

referenced in the Order to Docket Suit, as the instrument being foreclosed upon, and (2) the

notice of sale stated that the foreclosure sale was proceeding pursuant to an instrument

executed by “John D. Buckingham, c/o David T. Buckingham, as Guardian for Person and

Property,” but that John was not under guardianship at the time the instrument was

obtained. Additionally, the Buckinghams claimed that notice was not served on counsel,

Christopher Fogelman, despite the fact that Fogelman had been their counsel of record for

over a year. The Buckinghams claimed that they had not been aware of the scheduled sale

until Richard received the notice by mail on December 5, 2013.

       An initial hearing on the Buckinghams’ motion was held in the Circuit Court for

Montgomery County on the day it was filed. The circuit court heard arguments from the

Buckinghams and the Trustees and, at the conclusion of the arguments, denied the

Buckinghams’ motion without scheduling a hearing on the merits. The circuit court

ordered the Trustees to reschedule the sale and to provide Fogelman with all filings to cure

the lack of service. The sale was rescheduled for January 30, 2014 and the property was

sold on that date for $1.4 million.

                                            -4-
                                        DISCUSSION

       We are asked to determine whether the trial court properly denied the Buckinghams’

motion to stay and dismiss the sale, or whether Maryland Rule 14-211 required the circuit

court to first hold an evidentiary hearing on the merits of the asserted defenses. We will

begin by analyzing Rule 14-211 and considering what the proper pleading standard for

stating a facially valid defense is under the rule. Next, we will look at the forgery defense

asserted in the Buckinghams’ motion and determine whether their motion stated a facially

valid defense that required the trial court to hold a hearing on the merits. Finally, we will

consider whether the defense related to defective notice asserted in the Buckinghams’

motion required a hearing on the merits.

I.     Maryland Rule 14-211

       This case centers on the application of Rule 14-211, which allows an interested party

to a scheduled foreclosure sale the right to file a motion to stay the sale and dismiss a

foreclosure action. Rule 14-211 went into effect in May of 2009. This Court has explained

the purpose of the rule, quoting a letter from the Rules Committee to the Court of Appeals,

which stated:

                A number of significant changes are recommended to the Rule
                governing a stay of the sale (proposed Rule 14–211). The Rules
                Committee proposes to detach that procedure from the Rules
                governing injunctions and to deal with it in a Rule specific to
                foreclosure sales. The Rule attempts to strike a fair balance by
                providing borrowers and others with sufficient standing, who
                have a legitimate defense to the foreclosure, a reasonable and
                practical opportunity to raise the defense, but not allowing for
                frivolous motions intended solely to delay the proceeding.

                                              -5-
Bechamps v. 1190 Augustine Herman, LC, 202 Md. App. 455, 461-62 (2011).

       The Buckinghams filed a motion under Rule 14-211, raising two defenses: a

challenge to the validity of the lien based on forgery and a challenge to the right of the

Trustees to foreclose based on defects in the notice of sale. They claim that Rule

14-211 (b)(2) entitled them to an evidentiary hearing on the merits of both defenses

because both claims “state[d] on [their] face a defense to the validity of the lien or the lien

instrument or to the right of the plaintiff to foreclose in the pending action.” The Trustees

argue that although the Buckinghams’ motion nominally raised defenses, it failed to

adequately allege all necessary elements of the defenses as required by Rule 14-211(a)(3).

These arguments present the question of what pleading standard must be met before a

Rule 14-211 motion cannot be denied without an evidentiary hearing on the merits.

       Rule 14-211(a)(3) sets out the required contents of a motion to stay sale and dismiss

the foreclosure action. It provides in relevant part:

              (3)    Contents. A motion to stay and dismiss shall:

                     (A)      be under oath or supported by affidavit;

                     (B)      state with particularity the factual and legal
                              basis of each defense that the moving party has
                              to the validity of the lien or the lien instrument
                              or to the right of the plaintiff to foreclose in the
                              pending action;

                     (C)      be accompanied by any supporting documents
                              or other material in the possession or control of
                              the moving party

                                              -6-
(Emphasis added). It is clear from this provision that the factual and legal bases of a

defense must be stated “with particularity” and that any available supporting documents or

material must be provided.

       Rule 14-211(b)(1) sets out the procedures for the initial determination by the circuit

court and, that if it finds one or more of the grounds for denial, that the court has the

discretion to deny the motion before holding a hearing on the merits. This section provides

in part:

              (1)    Denial of Motion. The court shall deny the motion, with
                     or without a hearing, if the court concludes from the
                     record before it that the motion:

                     (A)     was not timely filed and does not show good
                             cause for excusing non-compliance with
                             subsection (a)(2) of this Rule;

                     (B)     does not substantially comply            with    the
                             requirements of this Rule; or

                     (C)     does not on its face state a valid defense to the
                             validity of the lien or the lien instrument or to the
                             right of the plaintiff to foreclose in the pending
                             action.

Failure to state a facially valid defense is one of the three grounds for denial at the initial

determination phase and appears to have been the basis for the trial court’s denying the

Buckinghams’ motion.4 Section 14-211(b)(2), however, requires that the court hold an

       4
        The other two grounds for denying a motion without holding a hearing on the
merits are (A) untimely filing without good cause; and (B) failure to comply with the

                                              -7-
evidentiary hearing on the merits if none of the three grounds for denial provided in

subsection (b)(1) are present.

              (2)     Hearing on the Merits. If the court concludes from the
                      record before it that the motion:

                      (A)   was timely filed or there is good cause for
                            excusing non-compliance with subsection (a)(2)
                            of this Rule,

                      (B)   substantially complies with the requirements of
                            this Rule, and

                      (C)   states on its face a defense to the validity of the
                            lien or the lien instrument or to the right of the
                            plaintiff to foreclose in the pending action, the
                            court shall set the matter for a hearing on the
                            merits of the alleged defense. The hearing shall
                            be scheduled for a time prior to the date of sale,
                            if practicable, otherwise within 60 days after the
                            originally scheduled date of sale.

(Emphasis added). If the court finds that the motion was timely, complies with the

requirements of the Rule, and states a valid defense, then an evidentiary hearing on the

merits is required before the circuit court makes a final determination on whether to grant

or deny the motion.

requirements of the Rule. The trial court in this case did not specify its basis for denying
the Buckinghams’ motion. Based on the record, however, we agree with the Buckinghams
that the trial court appeared to conclude that there was good cause for the untimely filing
and that the motion complied with the requirements of the Rule. Therefore, it seems plain
that the trial court denied the motion for failure to state a valid defense to validity of the
deed or the right to foreclose and we will proceed to analyze that decision.

                                             -8-
       The text of the Rule does not make explicit what level of “particularity” is required

for a defense to be deemed valid on its face and trigger an evidentiary hearing on the merits.

But the fact that an asserted defense must be “accompanied by any supporting documents

or other material in the possession or control of the moving party,” Rule 14-211(a)(3)(C),

leads us to believe that bare assertions of a broad defense to the validity of a lien instrument

will not be sufficient. The requirements of stating a defense with particularity and

supporting those assertions with any available evidence leads us to conclude that, under

Rule 14-211, the pleading standard is more exacting than the pleading standard for an

initial complaint.

       We hold that under Rule 14-211, a party must plead all elements of a valid defense

with particularity. To give content to this phrase, we find instructive the particularity

requirement for pleading fraud-based claims in Maryland. Maryland courts have long

found that fraud must be alleged with particularity. See, e.g., McCormick v. Medtronic,

Inc., 219 Md. App. 485, 527 (2014). This Court has described the meaning of the

particularity requirement:

              The requirement of particularity ordinarily means that a
              plaintiff must identify who made what false statement, when,
              and in what manner (i.e., orally, in writing, etc.); why the
              statement is false; and why a finder of fact would have reason
              to conclude that the defendant acted with scienter (i.e., that the
              defendant either knew that the statement was false or acted
              with reckless disregard for its truth) and with the intention to
              persuade others to rely on the false statement.

                                              -9-
Id. at 528.    We further held that “vague allegations fail to meet the standard of

particularity.” Id. In the context of Rule 14-211, we hold that particularity means that each

element of a defense must be accompanied by some level of factual and legal support.

General allegations will not be sufficient to raise a valid defense requiring an evidentiary

hearing on the merits. We will apply this understanding of the pleading standard under

Rule 14-211 to the two defenses raised in the Buckinghams’ motion.

II.    Forgery

       We turn first to question of whether the Buckinghams’ motion to stay the sale and

dismiss the foreclosure due to the alleged forgery of the 1997 deed of trust states a valid

defense under Rule 14-211(b). The Buckinghams argue that their allegation that the

signature on the deed of trust was not Elizabeth Buckinghams’ was sufficient to compel

the circuit court to hold an evidentiary hearing on the merits of their forgery defense. The

Trustees argue that the Buckinghams’ motion did not state a facially valid defense because

they did not allege or provide support to show that the purportedly non-authentic signature

was not ratified or authorized by Elizabeth.

       A.     Standard of Review

       Before addressing this, however, we note that there is a disagreement between the

parties as to what standard of review we must apply in reviewing the decision of the circuit

court. Because we are asked to answer a question of law—whether Buckinghams’ motion

stated a forgery defense with sufficient particularity—we review the trial court’s denial of

the motion for whether it is legally correct. Cf. RRC Northeast., LLC v. BAA Maryland,

                                            -10-
Inc., 413 Md. 638, 644 (2010) (“Upon appellate review, the trial court’s decision to grant

[a motion to dismiss] is analyzed to determine whether the court was legally correct.”).

       In making this determination, we reject the Trustees’ contention that this case should

be reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. While the denial of an injunction is

typically reviewed under that standard, Anderson v. Burson, 424 Md. 232, 243 (2011), the

Buckinghams are not asking us to review the substance of the trial court’s ultimate decision

to deny injunctive relief. Rather, they are asking us to determine whether Rule 14-211

required a hearing on the merits before the decision was made. This is a legal question of

whether the Buckinghams satisfied the pleading standard under Rule 14-211. If we

determine that the Buckinghams pleaded their forgery defense with sufficient particularity,

then the circuit court had no discretion to decline to hold the hearing under Rule 14-211

and there is no discretion to which we can properly defer. Therefore, we review the circuit

court’s decision to decline to hold an evidentiary hearing on the merits to determine

whether or not it was legally correct.

       B.     Sufficiency of the Forgery Defense

       Returning to the Buckinghams’ forgery assertion, it should be remembered that we

are not addressing the question of whether there actually was a forgery of the deed of trust.

Rather, we are considering whether the Buckinghams’ motion sufficiently stated a valid

defense to the foreclosure action such that the circuit court was required to hold an

evidentiary hearing on the merits before denying it. We have no doubt that a well-

articulated forgery defense could be found under Rule 14-211 to state “on its face a defense

                                            -11-
to the validity of the lien or the lien instrument.” We hold, however, that the Buckinghams

failed to “state with particularity the factual and legal basis” of their forgery defense, as

required by Rule 14-211(a)(3). We explain.

       Forgery is one of the two principal bases for finding a deed to be void. Scotch

Bonnett Realty Corp. v. Matthews, 417 Md. 570, 583 (2011). This Court has defined

forgery as “[1] a false making or material alteration, [2] with intent to defraud, [3] of any

writing which, if genuine, might apparently be of legal efficacy or the foundation of a legal

liability.” Harding v. Ja Laur Corp., 20 Md. App. 209, 212 (1974). This definition is the

general definition of the crime of forgery, but it has also applied to define forgery when

claimed as a defense to a lien’s validity. Id. at 212.

       The Buckinghams’ motion alleged the first and third elements of a forgery claim, in

that they have claimed that Elizabeth’s signature on the deed was false. The Buckinghams,

however, have failed to assert—with particularity or without—the intent to defraud

element of forgery. In the absence of any allegation and some evidentiary support for the

existence of an intent to defraud, they have failed to sufficiently allege the grounds for their

motion, and, as a result, it was properly denied without an evidentiary hearing.

III.   Notice

       The Buckinghams’ second argument is that certain defects in the notice of sale

constituted a facially valid defense that required an evidentiary hearing on the merits. In

their motion, the Buckinghams challenged the notice of a sale on two grounds: (1) that the

notice of sale and the Order to Docket Suit identified different modifications to the original

                                             -12-
1997 deed of trust in describing the lien that was the subject of the foreclosure ; and (2) that

the notice of sale incorrectly stated that the lien being foreclosed on included David

Buckingham as a party to the lien as the guardian of John Buckingham, despite the fact

that David was not John’s guardian at the time of the original execution or later

modifications. The Trustees, on the other hand, argue that the notice complied with the

requirements for pre-sale notice under Rule 14-210(a) because the notice adequately

informed the interested parties of the time, place, and terms of the sale, such that they were

able to protect their interests in the property.

       Maryland Rule 14-210(a) requires a foreclosing party prior to sale to publish notice

of the time, place, and terms of the sale. Rule 14-210 provides in relevant part that:

              Before selling property in an action to foreclose a lien, the
              individual authorized to make the sale shall publish notice of
              the time, place, and terms of the sale in a newspaper of general
              circulation in the county in which the action is pending.

The notice must contain a description of the property that is sufficient to enable an ordinary

person to identify the property and seek further information. Preske v. Carroll, 178 Md.

543, 547 (1940).

       Although the parties do not dispute that inadequate notice could be a valid defense

to the right to foreclose, we hold that the Buckinghams failed to sufficiently state that the

inconsistencies in the Trustees’ notice could be the basis for stay or dismissal of the

foreclosure action. Rule 14-211 requires that both the “factual and legal” bases of a

defense be stated with particularity.              Although the Buckinghams pointed out

                                              -13-
inconsistencies in the notice, they failed to allege with particularity the legal grounds

pursuant to which the trial court could determine that the notice would prohibit the Trustees

from proceeding with the foreclosure sale.5

       Importantly, the circuit court also delayed the December 19, 2013 sale until copies

of all filings were sent to Mr. Fogelman. As a result, the sale did not take place until

January 30, 2014. This presented an opportunity for any confusion regarding the terms of

the sale to be cleared up. We hold that the circuit court did not err in declining to hold an

evidentiary hearing on the merits based on the arguments presented and the circumstances

of the case.

                                      CONCLUSION

       We affirm the circuit court’s decision to deny the Buckinghams’ motion to stay and

dismiss the foreclosure sale without a hearing on the merits. The Buckinghams failed to

plead with particularity the necessary elements of forgery. They also failed to sufficiently

allege that any defects in the pre-sale notice constituted a defense to the Trustees’ right to

carry out the foreclosure sale. No evidentiary hearing on the merits was required prior to

denial under Rule 14-211.

       5
          Moreover, we are aware of none. It appears to us that despite minor
inconsistencies, the notice complied with Rule 14-210(a). The notice did, in fact, inform
the parties of the time, place, and terms of the sale sufficiently to allow them to protect
their interests in the property, as evidenced by the fact that they filed a motion to stay and
dismiss the sale before the sale occurred. The rule does not require that the notice perfectly
identify the lien instrument upon which the sale is proceeding.

                                            -14-
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR    MONTGOMERY      COUNTY
AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY
APPELLANTS.

-15-