Scott Shader, et ux. v. Hampton Improvement Ass’n, Inc., No. 75, Sept. Term 2014,
Opinion by Battaglia, J.
CIVIL PROCEDURE – OFFENSIVE NON-MUTUAL COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL
The Court of Appeals again declined to adopt the doctrine of offensive non-mutual
collateral estoppel, which may be invoked when a plaintiff attempts to foreclose a
defendant from relitigating an issue that was decided in a prior case in which the defendant,
but not the plaintiff, was a party.
REAL PROPERTY – COVENANTS – ABANDONMENT
Covenant restricting the construction of a second dwelling on a lot subject to the original
1930 Plat was not abandoned by the construction of additional buildings that were not
dwellings on properties subject to covenant.
REAL PROPERTY – COVENANTS – ABANDONMENT – SEVERANCE
A single clause in a series of restrictive covenants, which is the subject of a waiver by
abandonment, may be severed from the remainder of the covenants and does not make the
remaining covenants unenforceable.
Circuit Court for Baltimore County,
Maryland
Case No. 03-C-12-011284
Argued: April 8, 2015
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 75
September Term, 2014
SCOTT SHADER, ET UX.
v.
HAMPTON IMPROVEMENT
ASSOCIATION, INC.
Barbera, C.J.
Harrell
Battaglia
Greene
Adkins
McDonald
Watts,
JJ.
Opinion by Battaglia, J.
Filed: May 27, 2015
The attempt to enforce restrictive covenants in a community of 635 single family
homes in Hampton, a residential neighborhood in Baltimore County, is at issue before us.1
The restrictive covenants attempt to prohibit the development of more than one single
family dwelling per lot.
In 2002, Anna and Scott Shader, Petitioners, purchased real property at 606 East
Seminary Avenue in Hampton.2 The property is composed of Lot 59, a 2.246-acre parcel,
and a portion of Lot 75, a 1.457-acre parcel to the north of Lot 59 as depicted on the original
1
We granted certiorari to consider the following questions, which we have renumbered as
follows:
[1]. Whether the lower courts properly held that the Hampton Improvement
Association, Inc. was not estopped from claiming that the covenant in
question was still valid in light of a prior ruling by Judge Cahill that the
covenant had been waived by abandonment, which ruling was not appealed.
[2]. Whether the Circuit Court abused its discretion in not granting pre-trial
summary judgment, where collateral estoppel should have prevented the
Defendant from re-litigating facts which had been found against it in an
unappealed prior action?
[3]. Whether the lower courts properly held that the covenant at issue had not
been waived or abandoned.
[4]. Whether beneficiaries of covenants can permit multiple violations of one
part of the covenants and still seek enforcement of other parts of the same
covenants.
440 Md. 225, 101 A.3d 1063 (2014).
2
The Hampton Mansion and estate comprise a National Historic Site in Baltimore County,
Maryland. In 1745, Colonel Charles Ridgely, a plantation owner, planter and merchant,
purchased a 1500 acre tract of land known as “Northampton” for 600 pounds sterling, in
addition to other acquisitions such as “Oakhampton and “Hampton Court”. Lynne Dakin
Hastings, A Guidebook to Hampton National Historic Site 19 (Margaret Worrall ed., 1986).
Colonel Ridgley’s younger son, Captain Ridgely, built the Hampton Mansion on the
property in the late 1700s. Id. In 1929, John Ridgely, Jr., a descendant of Colonel Charles
Ridgely, established the Hampton Development Company (hereinafter “Hampton
Company”) and began developing residences on the Hampton property. Id.
1930 Plat recorded by the Hampton Company. In 2004, the Shaders purported to subdivide
their property to create an additional undeveloped parcel with a new address: 606A East
Seminary Avenue. Within five years, the Shaders offered 606A for sale through real estate
agents, who listed the “new” acreage as separate and buildable.
The Hampton Improvement Association (hereinafter “HIA”), Respondent,
thereafter, contacted the Shaders’s real estate agents by letter and noted that Paragraph C,
in the Schedule of Restrictive Covenants and Easements recorded by the Hampton
Company in 1931, “specifically prohibited” property owners from the “[e]rection of more
than one house per deeded lot, as shown on the original [1930] Plat Map at the time the
property was recorded”. (emphasis in original). Paragraph C provides:
The land included in said tract except as hereinafter provided shall be used
for private residence purposes only and no building of any kind whatsoever
shall be erected or maintained thereon except private dwelling houses each
dwelling being designed for occupation by a single family and private
garages for the sole use of the respective owners or occupants of the plots
upon which such garages are erected there shall not be erected or maintained
on said tract of land an apartment house or house designed or altered for
occupation by more than one family and no more than one dwelling may be
erected on a lot.
In late 2012, the Shaders filed a complaint for declaratory relief in the Circuit Court
for Baltimore County against the HIA seeking a declaration that their property consisted
of two separate buildable lots and that the restrictive covenants did not prohibit the building
of a home on the second lot.3 In their complaint, the Shaders recited both the history of the
restrictive covenants in the Hampton community and of their specific property:
3
The second lot is referred to as 606A East Seminary Avenue.
2
3. Hampton was originally formed in 1930 via the recordation of a
Plat by the Hampton Company, dated July 16, 1930, [(hereinafter “1930
Plat”)] which plat is recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore County
in Plat Book 9 folio 109 . . . .
4. On April 6, 1931, The Hampton Company recorded a Schedule of
Restrictive Covenants and Easements (“Covenants”) which Covenants were
recorded among the Land Records of Baltimore County in Liber 866, folio
475-478 . . . .
5. Among the restrictions in the Covenants, was Paragraph C, found
at Liber 866, folio 476. That covenant read as follows:
The land included in said tract except as hereinafter provided
shall be used for private residence purposes only and no building of any
kind whatsoever shall be erected or maintained thereon except private
dwelling houses each dwelling being designed for occupation by a
single family and private garages for the sole use of the respective
owners or occupants of the plots upon which such garages are erected
there shall not be erected or maintained on said tract of land an
apartment house or house designed or altered for occupation by more
than one family and no more than one dwelling may be erected on a
lot.[4]
6. The word “Lot” was defined at Liber 866, folio 475 as “one unit of
said tract as at present shown by the recorded map of said tract. (“Tract” or
“Tract of Land” was defined on the same page as the Plat No. 1 of Hampton.)
7. On February 10, 1939, a Revised Plat of Lots 40, 42 and 44 to 54,
inclusive was filed among the Land Records of Baltimore County in Plat
Book 12, folio 38 . . . .
***
10. When the Shaders purchased the Property, it consisted of two
parcels, to wit; Lot 59 and the easterly portion of Lot 75, as shown on Plat
No. 1 of Hampton . . . .
11. On September 10, 2004, the Shaders reconfigured the two parcels
and recorded deeds to that effect . . . .
4
The duration of Paragraph C, among the other provisions within the Schedule of
Restrictive Covenants and Easements, was laid out in Paragraph H, which stated that:
All of the restrictions conditions covenants easements and agreements
contained here in shall be in perpetuity provided however that at any time
after December 31 1960 any of the provisions contained in Paragraphs C D
and K hereof may be cancelled or abrogated in whole or in part by the
recording in the proper public Land Records of an appropriate instrument or
instruments in writing executed by the then owners (not including
mortgagees) of a majority in area of the land included in said tract exclusive
of streets and other land then devoted to public use . . . .
3
12. The Shaders have a home on the lot known as 606 E. Seminary
Avenue and wish to either build a house on Lot 606A East Seminary Avenue
or sell 606A East Seminary Avenue as a buildable lot.
13. The HIA has communicated to the Shaders that the Covenants
prevent them or their successors in title from building 606A East Seminary
Avenue . . . .
The Shaders alleged, specifically, that Paragraph C had been abandoned by the HIA due to
numerous violations of Paragraph C that occurred in the other lots in Hampton:
14. Over the years, numerous homes have been built in Hampton
which violate the Covenants in numerous ways. For example:
a) There are several instances where due to lot re-
configurations (similar to the Shader lot re-configuration) homes have
been built such that there are more than one home on a given Lot as
Lot was defined in the 1930 Plat.
b) There are numerous Lots on which buildings other than
single family dwellings and private garages have been constructed and
maintained.
The HIA timely filed an answer, not only denying the Shaders’s allegations, but also
affirmatively defending that the Shaders’s claims were barred by laches and the statute of
limitations.
The Shaders, thereafter, moved for summary judgment, arguing that they were
entitled to judgment as a matter of law as a result of a prior judgment entered against the
HIA in Cortezi, et al. v. Duval Four-A, LLC, No. C-07-002587 (Cir. Ct. Balt. Cnty. 2008)
(“Duval”), in which, they alleged, Paragraph C was not enforced:
2. The issue in this case (whether the covenants found at Liber 866,
folio 475-478 are still enforceable or whether they have been abandoned) has
already been decided as a matter of fact by this Court in a prior case (Cortezi,
et al. v. Duval-Four, LLC, Case No. C-07-002587).
3. Hampton Improvement Association, Inc. was a party plaintiff in
Cortezi.
4. The findings of this Court in the Cortezi case were not appealed.
4
The HIA filed its own motion for summary judgment5 and opposed the Shaders’s
summary judgment motion, alleging that they could not avail themselves of the Duval
judgment because offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel6 had not been recognized in
Maryland, as well as that genuine issues of material fact existed regarding whether the HIA
had actually waived Paragraph C. Judge John F. Fader II, retired from the Circuit Court of
Baltimore County, sitting as a motions judge, denied both motions for summary judgment:
First, I do not feel that “collateral estoppel” is able to be applied here. . . .
[This doctrine] require[s] the placing of one face plate over another to see if
the issues are the same and if the parties are fundamentally the same so as to
be bound by a prior decision. There is nothing in the Shader motion that
would allow me to see the face plate of the actual controversy before [the
Duval court] and the decision by [the Duval court] as to the structures or
buildings to which it refers as a violation of what covenant or issue presented.
Second, the Response . . . makes an important distinction between the
erection of houses as opposed to other sheds or buildings, the fact that there
is argued not to have been an abandonment of covenants for Plat # 1,
differences that may exist between the covenants, and application of the
covenants as to different plats. That all means that a significant amount of
additional facts needs to be gone through by the court before summary
judgment or any judgment would be able to be entered.
A non-jury trial was held before Judge Kathleen G. Cox of the Circuit Court for
Baltimore County, at which time the parties renewed their motions for summary judgment.7
5
The HIA moved for summary judgment arguing that the Shaders had failed to file their
complaint within the applicable three year statute of limitations after becoming aware of
the dispute.
6
The doctrine of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel may be applied “when a plaintiff
seeks to foreclose a defendant from relitigating an issue the defendant has previously
litigated unsuccessfully in another action against a different party.” Welsh v. Gerber
Products, Inc., 315 Md. 510, 517 n.6, 555 A.2d 486, 489 n.6 (1989).
7
The court reserved its ruling until after the close of evidence, and ultimately the court
held the matter sub curiae.
5
In a memorandum opinion, Judge Cox also denied both motions for summary judgment
and ultimately denied the Shaders’s request for declaratory relief. The court, first, denied
the HIA’s motion for summary judgment:
The Court does not believe that the claim is barred by limitations
simply because the Shaders received a letter that placed them on notice of
[the] Covenants. The Shaders’ claim did not ripen until they intended or
sought to take action that was arguably barred by the Covenants. The
Covenants arguably constitute a continuing restriction on the use of the
property. In the context of the present dispute, one basis for the Shaders’
claim for relief is that the HIA has abandoned the right to enforce the
Covenants, based upon other neighborhood development. Thus the status of
enforceability, to some extent, remains in a state of flux. The Shaders filed
for declaratory relief concerning the continued viability of the Covenant
governing construction of a second residence. Given this declaratory posture,
the claim is not time barred. Accordingly, the HIA’s Motion for Summary
Judgment is denied.
(citation omitted).
Judge Cox then turned to the Shaders’s collateral estoppel argument in their motion
for summary judgment and recognized that it required an application of offensive non-
mutual collateral estoppel, but determined that the Duval case dealt with different and
distinct issues than the instant case:
The Shaders’ argument requires application of the doctrine of non-mutual
offensive collateral estoppel to the Duval ruling. Non-mutual offensive
collateral estoppel requires four determinations:
1. Was the issue decided in the prior adjudication identical with the one
presented in the action in question?
2. Was there a final judgment on the merits?
3. Was the party against whom the plea is asserted a party or in privity
with a party to the prior adjudication?
4. Was the party against whom the plea is asserted given a fair
opportunity to be heard on the issue?
Leeds Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Metcalf, 332 Md. 107, 117-18, 630 A.2d
245, 250 (1993).
6
In the present case, the issues decided in the prior Duval matter are
not identical to the issue presented in this case. While the issues are clearly
related, the Shaders’ property consists of one “original” lot and a portion of
another lot that were joined in one parcel. The Shaders then sought to re-
configure the lot line between these two parcels . . . .
After denying the Shaders’s summary judgment, Judge Cox acknowledged the
separation of clauses in Paragraph C, and distinguished between the restriction of “no
building of any kind whatsoever shall be erected or maintained thereon except private
dwelling houses” and the clause that requires “no more than one dwelling may be erected
on a Lot”. Judge Cox rejected the Shaders’s argument that the HIA had failed to enforce
the clause restricting “no more than one dwelling may be erected on a Lot” due to the
construction of separate structures, such as pool houses, gazebos, guest houses and sheds,
on the other lots, noting:
Although the Shaders were able to show numerous instances of violations
based upon construction of separate structures on properties throughout the
community, they were unable to demonstrate construction of a second
residence on a single lot. Rather, the evidence demonstrates that the HIA has
consistently taken action to enforce the restriction in the Covenants that
requires ‘no more than one dwelling may be erected on a Lot.’
Judge Cox opined that “restrictive Covenants may be abandoned in part without resulting
in a wholesale abandonment of all restrictive Covenants”, and although there were
additional non-residential buildings constructed on single lots in violation of one clause in
Paragraph C, such construction did not invalidate the restriction on the construction of
separate dwellings on a single lot.
Judge Cox also addressed the Shaders’s argument that they owned two separate lots
and, therefore, would not be in violation of the restriction prohibiting the construction of a
7
second dwelling on a single lot were they to construct a dwelling on 606A East Seminary.
She rejected this argument, and concluded that the term “lot” in Paragraph C was intended
by the grantors to refer to the “Lots as displayed on the initial plat from 1930”:
The deed in the chain of title to Lot 75 states clearly that it is not a
buildable lot. Lot 75, as indicated on the 1930 plat, already contains a
residential dwelling. The proposal to build another residence on lots that have
been reconfigured, but nevertheless already each support a residence, would
violate the Covenants.
The Shaders noted an appeal.
In a reported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed. Shader v. Hampton
Imp. Ass’n, Inc., 217 Md. App. 581, 94 A.3d 224 (2014). Our intermediate appellate court
determined that the Circuit Court correctly denied the Shaders’s attempted use of offensive
non-mutual collateral estoppel, because the issues in Duval were not identical to the issues
in the instant case. The Court of Special Appeals noted that the issues were distinct, because
“the Duval case involved a lot—Lot 4–A—that was created more than 50 years prior by
the Hampton Company as shown on the 1949 Plat”, whereas the Shaders’s lot consists of
one lot from the original 1930 Plat and a portion of another lot that was joined in a single
parcel. Id. at 606, 94 A.3d at 238. With respect to the issue of waiver by abandonment, the
Court of Special Appeals determined that the Circuit Court was not clearly erroneous in
finding that the restriction prohibiting the construction of more than one dwelling on a
single lot was not abandoned. The Court of Special Appeals also agreed with Judge Cox
that “restrictions in a set of covenants may be severable” and thus, although the clause
restricting the erection of additional non-residential buildings had been waived by the
construction of additional buildings, such as pool houses, gazebos, guest houses and sheds,
8
the balance of Paragraph C, including the restriction on the construction of more than one
dwelling, was not abandoned by the HIA and was, therefore, enforceable. Id. at 624, 94
A.3d at 249.
We granted certiorari. 440 Md. 225, 101 A.3d 1063 (2014). Before us, the Shaders
rely on substantially the same arguments as were presented before the Court of Special
Appeals, as does the HIA.
We shall hold that the Circuit Court did not err in denying the Shaders’s motion for
summary judgment because we have not adopted the doctrine of offensive non-mutual
collateral estoppel and decline to do so in the present case, because the instant issues are
not identical to those in Duval. We shall hold that the Circuit Court did not err in
determining that the HIA did not waive by abandonment the clause restricting the
construction of more than one residential dwelling per lot in Paragraph C of the recorded
Schedule of Restrictive Covenants and Easements. We shall also hold that the HIA’s
waiver of the clause restricting the construction of a building aside from a residential
dwelling on a single lot may be severed from the remainder of the covenants and does not
make the remaining covenants in Paragraph C unenforceable.
DISCUSSION
I. Collateral Estoppel
We initially address the Shaders’s claim that the HIA is barred from relitigating the
enforcement of Paragraph C because the issue was decided in the Duval ruling.
When the doctrine of collateral estoppel is applied, “factual issues resolved in the
adjudication of one claim are binding for purposes of subsequent adjudication of another
9
claim.”8 John A. Lynch, Jr. & Richard W. Bourne, Modern Maryland Civil Procedure 12-
42-43 (2d ed. 2004, 2014 Supp.). “The determination of ultimate fact underlying the
judgment in a previous proceeding is the gravamen of the doctrine.” Standard Fire Ins. Co.
v. Berrett, 395 Md. 439, 457, 910 A.2d 1072, 1083 (2006). The purpose of the doctrine,
like res judicata, is “to avoid the expense and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve
judicial resources, and foster reliance on judicial action by minimizing the possibilities of
inconsistent decisions.” Rourke v. Amchem Products, Inc., 384 Md. 329, 359, 863 A.2d
926, 944 (2004), quoting Murray Int’l Freight Corp. v. Graham, 315 Md. 543, 547, 555
A.2d 502, 504 (1989).
In its traditional form, collateral estoppel may be invoked when “in a second suit
between the same parties, even if the cause of action is different, any determination of fact
that was actually litigated and was essential to a valid and final judgment is conclusive.”
Id. at 340-41, 863 A.2d at 933 (emphasis in original). A four-part test is used, generally, to
determine whether the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies:
1. Was the issue decided in the prior adjudication identical with the one
presented in the action in question?
2. Was there a final judgment on the merits?
3. Was the party against whom the plea is asserted a party or in privity with
a party to the prior adjudication?
4. Was the party against whom the plea is asserted given a fair opportunity
to be heard on the issue?
8
“Collateral estoppel is concerned with the issue implications of the earlier litigation of a
different case”. Colandrea v. Wilde Lake Cmty. Ass’n, Inc., 361 Md. 371, 390-91, 761 A.2d
899, 909 (2000).
10
Burruss v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs of Frederick Cnty., 427 Md. 231, 249-50, 46 A.3d 1182,
1193 (2012), quoting Wash. Suburban Sanitary Comm’n v. TKU Assocs., 281 Md. 1, 18–
19, 376 A.2d 505, 514 (1977). “[F]or the doctrine of collateral estoppel to apply, the
probable fact-finding that undergirds the judgment used to estop must be scrutinized to
determine if the issues raised in that proceeding were actually litigated, or facts necessary
to resolve the pertinent issues were adjudicated in that action.” Colandrea v. Wilde Lake
Cmty. Ass’n, Inc., 361 Md. 371, 391-92, 761 A.2d 899, 910 (2000), citing Burkett v. State,
98 Md. App. 459, 466, 633 A.2d 902, 906 (1993).
The traditional principle of mutuality of parties as an element of collateral estoppel
has not always been required “if one of the parties in the original case is involved in
relitigating one of the issues determined against a different party in a successive suit.”
Berrett, 395 Md. at 457, 910 A.2d at 1083. Considered “non-mutual” collateral estoppel,
it has been used both defensively, as well as offensively. See Burruss, 427 Md. at 249-50,
46 A.3d at 1193; Berrett, 395 Md. at 458, 910 A.2d at 1083; Rourke, 384 Md. at 341, 863
A.2d at 933. Defensive non-mutual collateral estoppel has been invoked in Maryland,
“when a defendant seeks to prevent a plaintiff from relitigating an issue the plaintiff has
previously litigated unsuccessfully in another action against a different party.” Welsh v.
Gerber Products, Inc., 315 Md. 510, 517 n.6, 555 A.2d 486, 489 n.6 (1989).
The doctrine of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel has not been embraced and
applied by this Court, but has been invoked by other courts “when a plaintiff seeks to
foreclose a defendant from relitigating an issue the defendant has previously litigated
unsuccessfully in another action against a different party”. Id. In Burruss v. Board of
11
County Commissioners of Frederick County, 427 Md. 231, 46 A.3d 1182 (2012), we
declined to adopt the doctrine of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel in a situation in
which the Board of County Commissioners of Frederick County appointed a nine-member
charter board to draft and present a charter to Frederick voters pursuant to Section 1A of
Article XI–A of the Maryland Constitution.9 Ellis C. Burruss and other individuals who
9
Section 1A of Article XI–A of the Maryland Constitution provides:
The procedure provided in this section for adoption of a charter may be used
in any county in lieu of the procedures provided in Section 1 of this Article,
and a charter adopted pursuant to this section has the effect of a charter
adopted in accordance with the provisions of Section 1. The board of county
commissioners of any county at any time may appoint a charter board. Said
charter board shall be registered voters and shall consist of an uneven number
of members, not fewer than five or more than nine. The board of county
commissioners shall appoint a charter board within thirty days after receiving
a petition signed by five percent of the registered voters of the county or by
ten thousand voters of the county, whichever is the lesser number. If
additional charter board members are nominated by petitions signed by three
percent of the registered voters of the county or by two thousand registered
voters, whichever is the lesser number, delivered to the board of county
commissioners within sixty days after the charter board is appointed, the
board of county commissioners shall call a special election not less than
thirty or more than ninety days after receiving petitions, unless a regular
election falls within the designated period. The appointees of the board of
county commissioners and those nominated by petitions shall be placed on
the ballot in alphabetical order without party designation. The voters may
cast votes for, and elect a number of nominees equal to the number of charter
board members originally selected by the board of county commissioners,
and those so elected are the charter board. The charter board, within 18
months from the date of its appointment, or if there was an election for some
of its members, within 18 months from the date of the election, shall present
a proposed charter for the county to the board of county commissioners,
which shall publish it at least twice in one or more newspapers of general
circulation in the county within thirty days after it is presented. The charter
shall be submitted to the voters of the county at a special or regular election
held not earlier than thirty days or later than ninety days after publication of
the charter. If a majority of the votes cast for and against the adoption of the
(continued . . . )
12
sought membership on the charter board submitted a petition, (collectively, “the
Petitioners”), purportedly signed by 2,915 registered voters, requesting a special election
to nominate additional charter board members. The Board denied the request, determining
that the petition did not satisfy the requirements to hold a special election because many of
the petition signatures were invalid under Section 6–203 of the Election Law Article of the
Maryland Code.10 Prior to the action at the heart of Burruss, in Maryland State Board of
Elections v. Libertarian Party, 426 Md. 488, 492, 44 A.3d 1002, 1004 (2012), plaintiffs in
Anne Arundel County filed an action challenging the legal standard the Maryland State
Board of Elections applied in evaluating petition signatures, and the Circuit Court issued a
declaratory judgment adopting the “sufficient cumulative information standard”. The
Burruss Petitioners filed for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Frederick County and
(. . . continued)
charter are in favor of its adoption, the charter shall become effective as the
charter of the county on the thirtieth day after the election or such later date
as shall be specified in the charter.
10
The relevant portion Section 6-203 of the Election Law Article provides:
(b) Validation and counting of signatures — The signature of an individual
shall be validated and counted if:
(1) the requirements of subsection (a) of this section have been satisfied;
(2) the individual is a registered voter assigned to the county specified on the
signature page and, if applicable, in a particular geographic area of the
county;
(3) the individual has not previously signed the same petition;
(4) the signature is attested by an affidavit appearing on the page on which
the signature appears;
(5) the date accompanying the signature is not later than the date of the
affidavit on the page; and
(6) if applicable, the signature was affixed within the requisite period of time,
as specified by law.
13
attempted to invoke offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel to prevent the Board from
relitigating the proper legal standard, based on the ruling in the Libertarian Party case. The
Circuit Court Judge affirmed the Board’s denial of the special election and declined to
apply offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel because he found that the Board was not a
party in the Libertarian Party case and that the issues in Burruss were different.
We granted certiorari and affirmed the decision of the Circuit Court Judge. We
declined to apply the doctrine of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel and noted that
even “assuming that all the elements of non-mutual collateral estoppel are satisfied”, its
application was not appropriate. Burruss, 427 Md. at 252, 46 A.3d at 1194. We surveyed
the Supreme Court’s analysis of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel in Parklane
Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 439 U.S. 322, 99 S. Ct. 645, 58 L.Ed.2d 552 (1979), in which the
Supreme Court discussed the dual policy concerns underlying the application of offensive
non-mutual collateral estoppel, those being judicial economy and fairness:
First, offensive use of collateral estoppel does not promote judicial
economy in the same manner as defensive use does. Defensive use of
collateral estoppel precludes a plaintiff from relitigating identical issues by
merely “switching adversaries.” Bernhard v. Bank of America Nat. Trust &
Savings Assn., 19 Cal. 2d, at 813, 122 P.2d, at 895.12 Thus defensive
collateral estoppel gives a plaintiff a strong incentive to join all potential
defendants in the first action if possible. Offensive use of collateral estoppel,
on the other hand, creates precisely the opposite incentive. Since a plaintiff
will be able to rely on a previous judgment against a defendant but will not
be bound by that judgment if the defendant wins, the plaintiff has every
incentive to adopt a “wait and see” attitude, in the hope that the first action
by another plaintiff will result in a favorable judgment. E. g., Nevarov v.
Caldwell, 161 Cal. App. 2d 762, 767–768, 327 P.2d 111, 115; Reardon v.
Allen, 88 N.J. Super. 560, 571–572, 213 A.2d 26, 32. Thus offensive use of
collateral estoppel will likely increase rather than decrease the total amount
of litigation, since potential plaintiffs will have everything to gain and
nothing to lose by not intervening in the first action.
14
A second argument against offensive use of collateral estoppel is that
it may be unfair to a defendant. If a defendant in the first action is sued for
small or nominal damages, he may have little incentive to defend vigorously,
particularly if future suits are not foreseeable. The Evergreens v. Nunan, 141
F.2d 927, 929 (CA2); cf. Berner v. British Commonwealth Pac. Airlines, 346
F.2d 532 (CA2) (application of offensive collateral estoppel denied where
defendant did not appeal an adverse judgment awarding damages of $35,000
and defendant was later sued for over $7 million). Allowing offensive
collateral estoppel may also be unfair to a defendant if the judgment relied
upon as a basis for the estoppel is itself inconsistent with one or more
previous judgments in favor of the defendant. Still another situation where it
might be unfair to apply offensive estoppel is where the second action affords
the defendant procedural opportunities unavailable in the first action that
could readily cause a different result.
Id. at 329-31, 99 S. Ct. at 650-51, 58 L.Ed.2d at 561-62. Considering the dual policy
concerns and our review and subsequent vacation of the Anne Arundel County Circuit
Court’s ruling in Libertarian Party, 426 Md. at 522, 44 A.3d at 1022, we determined the
application of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel was not appropriate. We concluded
its application would be inappropriate because the circuit court ruling in the Libertarian
Party case was an incorrect interpretation of the law, and our holding in Libertarian Party,
which vacated the circuit court ruling, “reaffirmed that the petition signature requirements
in § 6–203(a) are mandatory”, and thus, “it would be unfair to bind [the Board] to an
interpretation of the law inconsistent with our holding in that case.” Burruss, 429 Md. at
252, 46 A.3d at 1194.
The Shaders urge us to adopt and apply in their favor the doctrine of offensive non-
mutual collateral estoppel11 in the present case and argue that the Duval ruling, that the
11
The Shaders, additionally, argue that they stand in the place of the defendant in this case
(continued . . . )
15
HIA “ha[s] waived the right to seek to enforce the provisions of Paragraph C of the
Covenants by abandonment”, collaterally estops the HIA from relitigating the enforcement
of Paragraph C.
In Duval, the HIA had filed a declaratory and injunctive relief action against Duval
Four-A, LLC, a Maryland limited liability company (“Duval”), that owned Lot 4A in
Hampton. The Hampton Company, the original developer of the lots, had revised the
original 1930 Plat in 1949 and reconfigured Lot 4 to create two additional lots: Lot 4A and
Lot 4B. The HIA filed suit against Duval to prevent the construction of a dwelling on Lot
4A, and sought relief “based on the theory that the prohibition against the construction of
more than one dwelling on a ‘lot’ refers to the ‘lots’ depicted in the 1930 Plat.” After
hearing testimony and argument of the parties, Judge Robert E. Cahill, Jr. of the Circuit
Court for Baltimore County, denied relief to the HIA based on the 1949 revision of the
1930 Plat:
2. In 1949, a Revised Plat was filed by the Hampton Company which
reconfigured the lot lines for several lots, and in fact, created Lot 4A, the lot
owned by [Duval], and Lot 4B. Thereafter, on a least three of the lots
depicted in the original 1930 Plat (Lots 18, 24 and 25) more than one
dwelling was built per lot as those lots were originally configured on the 1930
Plat. Indeed, the evidence was undisputed that the dwelling which straddles
what were depicted on the 1930 Plat as Lots 22 and 24 was built as recently
as 2005 . . . .
3. There is no evidence that any of the lot owners in Hampton ever
objected to the construction of more than one house per lot as the lots were
depicted on the 1930 Plat in these three other cases (Lots 18, 24 and 25).
( . . . continued)
and, thus, are actually invoking the doctrine of defensive non-mutual collateral estoppel
because they brought the action against the HIA to proactively determine their rights. We
find no succor in this argument.
16
There is no evidence that the Hampton Improvement Association, Inc. ever
objected. Neither the Plaintiffs, nor any of the other property owners in the
subdivision sued or otherwise sought to enforce this interpretation of the
covenant in these three situations, each of which involved lots oriented just
adjacent to Lot 4A.
4. In addition, the testimony was undisputed that in some 30 instances
in the subdivision, the Plaintiffs and their predecessors have permitted lot
owners in Hampton to erect and maintain buildings other than single family
dwellings and garages on their lots in violation of the very same covenant
which they seek to enforce in this action.
(footnotes omitted). Judge Cahill concluded, “[b]ased on the fact that the Plat presently in
effect portrays [Duval’s] property as a separate lot, designated as Lot 4A, the construction
of [Duval’s] dwelling, as planned, will not frustrate the original intent or purpose of the
covenants” and that the HIA “ha[s] waived the right to seek to enforce the provisions of
Paragraph C of the Covenants by abandonment.” In footnote four to his opinion, Judge
Cahill attempted to limit the breadth of his decision:
The decision in this matter is limited to the facts of this case. This Court
specifically does not conclude that the covenants are “void”. This Court
specifically does not conclude that the waiver defense would apply in any
other action to enforce the covenants in the future. [12]
Although we may disagree with the ability of a trial court to specifically limit the
application of non-mutual collateral estoppel, we decline to embrace the doctrine of
offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel, under the circumstances in this case, because the
issues in Duval differ from the issues in the Shaders’s case. In the instant case, the
Shaders’s rely upon Judge Cahill’s determination that the HIA “ha[s] waived the right to
12
The Shaders argue that Judge Cahill was not entitled to limit the collateral estoppel effect
of his ruling under Maryland law. We do not see the need to confront this argument as we
do not rely on Judge Cahill’s instruction in declining to apply collateral estoppel in this
case.
17
seek to enforce the provisions of Paragraph C of the Covenants by abandonment.” In her
denial of the Shaders’s motion for summary judgment based upon the application of waiver
through collateral estoppel, Judge Cox specifically found that the issues in Duval were
dissimilar to those in the instant case:
In the present case, the issues decided in the prior Duval matter are not
identical to the issue presented in this case. While the issues are clearly
related, the Shaders’ property consists of one “original” lot and a portion of
another lot that were joined in one parcel. The Shaders then sought to re-
configure the lot line between these two parcels . . . .
We agree with the trial court.
We have not embraced the doctrine of offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel, but
even were we, the doctrine could not be applied in the present case because the issues
addressed in Duval are different from those queued up here. As the trial court found, Duval
dealt specifically with “a revision in the subdivision plat that was filed in 1949 that
reconfigured some of the original lot lines and created at least two new lots”, whereas here,
the Shaders’s property consists of one lot from the original 1930 Plat and a portion of
another lot that was joined in a single parcel.13 The issues, thus, are dissimilar.
13
The findings of the trial judge include:
The evidence demonstrated that Lot 75 in the original 1930 subdivision plan
was subdivided in the late 1940s. The eastern portion of Lot 75 that is
currently owned by the Shaders was originally conveyed to Raymond Moore
and Louise Moore on March 4, 1948. At the time of that conveyance, the
property
deed was encumbered by the following covenant:
It is expressly covenanted and agreed as part of the consideration for
this Deed by the said Raymond and Louise S. Moore, his wife, for
themselves, their heirs and assigns with the Hampton Company for
itself, its successors and assigns, that at no time shall any dwelling be
(continued . . . )
18
II. Waiver
We next address the Shaders’s argument that the HIA waived by abandonment the
restrictions within Paragraph C, by allowing the construction of numerous buildings such
as pool houses, gazebos, guest houses and sheds. Paragraph C provides:
The land included in said tract except as hereinafter provided shall be used
for private residence purposes only and no building of any kind whatsoever
shall be erected or maintained thereon except private dwelling houses each
dwelling being designed for occupation by a single family and private
garages for the sole use of the respective owners or occupants of the plots
upon which such garages are erected there shall not be erected or maintained
on said tract of land an apartment house or house designed or altered for
occupation by more than one family and no more than one dwelling may be
erected on a lot.
Judge Cox, after having heard testimony and reviewed the exhibits, some of which
were photos depicting the structures, determined that the restriction prohibiting the
construction of “no more than one dwelling” on a single lot was not waived by
abandonment:
With the exception of the caveat pertaining to garages, Covenant C clearly
states that “no building of any kind whatsoever shall be erected or maintained
thereon except private dwelling houses.” Although the Shaders were able to
show numerous instances of violations based upon construction of separate
structures on properties throughout the community, they were unable to
demonstrate construction of a second residence on a single lot. Rather, the
evidence demonstrates that the HIA has consistently taken action to enforce
the restriction in the Covenants that requires ‘no more than one dwelling may
be erected on a Lot.’
Maryland law holds that restrictive Covenants may be abandoned in
part without resulting in a wholesale abandonment of all restrictive
Covenants. See King v. Waigand, 208 Md. 308, 313 (1955) ([h]olding, where
a restrictive covenant prohibited the sale of “malt and spirituous liquors,” the
(continued . . . )
erected on the lot hereby conveyed.
The largest portion of the original Lot 75 has a home on it.
19
abandonment of the restriction on the sale of malt liquors, i.e. beer and wine,
did not effect the enforcement of the restrictive covenant regarding the sale
of “spirituous liquors.”). Here, violations of the portion of the covenant
prohibiting the construction of buildings other than residential dwellings
does not necessarily mean that the restriction on building more than one
residence per lot has been abandoned.
The evidence at trial clearly demonstrated that the HIA has
continuously enforced the restriction on building more than one residential
dwelling per lot. This enforcement has allowed Hampton to remain a
neighborhood of large, single family properties, with a low population
density . . . . Here, the Covenant is still serving its purpose in ensuring the
residential character of the neighborhood. The Shaders had constructive
notice of the Covenants at the time they purchased their property. For these
reasons, this Court does not find that the HIA has abandoned enforcement of
the Covenant.
The Court of Special Appeals agreed, holding that “the circuit court did not err in
concluding that the HIA did not waive the restriction prohibiting more than one house per
lot, consistent with the original Plat filed in 1930.” Shader, 217 Md. App. at 626, 94 A.3d
at 250.
We have long recognized the equitable defense of waiver in restrictive covenant
cases. See City of Bowie v. MIE Properties, Inc, 398 Md. 657, 697, 922 A.2d 509, 533
(2007) (citing numerous cases). In the context of restrictive covenants, “waiver deems
unenforceable a covenant because some word or act of the [individual benefitting from the
covenant] communicated to the [individual burdened by the covenant] that the covenant
would not be enforced.” Id. Waiver by abandonment occurs when an individual benefiting
from a restrictive covenant relinquishes his or her right to enforce the covenant, because
he or she has previously allowed a violation of the covenant by other individuals burdened
by the covenant. See id. “[W]here conduct [related to the use of benefitted land] indicates
the actor’s intent to relinquish the benefit of the covenant, the doctrine [of abandonment]
20
prevents that person from gaining any benefit from the further existence of the obligation.”
Richard R. Powell, Powell on Real Property § 60.10[1] (2000). “Abandonment may be
explicit, e.g., through a written statement abandoning claim to benefit of the promise.
Abandonment may also be implied by a court, usually by clear and convincing evidence,
from actions that the court reads to show a definite, specific intent to abandon the
covenant.” 2 David A. Thomas, Thompson on Real Property § 61.07(b)(2)(iii), at 628
(2006). “The question of whether waiver has occurred is a question of fact, which is
reviewed for clear error.” MIE Properties, Inc., 398 Md. at 699, 922 A.2d at 534 (internal
citations omitted).
The Shaders urge that the trial court erred, because, they allege, the evidence
adduced at trial demonstrates that the HIA, in fact, waived the restriction that “no building
of any kind whatsoever shall be erected or maintained thereon except private dwelling
houses” and the restriction prohibiting more than one residential dwelling per single lot, by
permitting other prohibited buildings to be erected. They argue that they produced
numerous exhibits with pictures of “out buildings” on other lots in Hampton, including
photographs of pool houses, gazebos, guest houses and sheds and that, “[i]f the one house
per lot restriction was designed to maintain a certain appearance within Hampton, it is
beyond legitimate argument that allowing dozens and dozens of additional buildings,
including guest houses, pool houses, apartments over garages, and the like, has completely
altered the concept spelled out in the Covenants.”
The HIA conversely alleges that the existence of other non-residential buildings on
lots does not result in an abandonment of the restriction prohibiting the construction of
21
multiple residences on a single lot because the other buildings are not single family
dwellings, and it only enforced the restriction when a property owner sought to increase
the residential density of Hampton by constructing an additional residence on a single lot.14
Judge Cox specifically found that there had not been construction of a second
residence on a single lot in the community, and this factual finding is supported by the
record. As a result, the HIA did not engage in a waiver by abandonment of the clause in
Paragraph C restricting the construction of more than one dwelling per single lot, consistent
with the original 1930 Plat, and we so hold.
The Shaders argue, though, alternatively, that the HIA, by allowing the erection of
pool houses, gazebos, guest houses and sheds in violation of the clause restricting the
erection of “building[s] of any kind . . . except private dwelling houses” triggers a waiver
of the entirety of Paragraph C.
Judge Cox found, with respect to the alleged waiver of the entirety of Paragraph C,
“that restrictive Covenants may be abandoned in part without resulting in a wholesale
abandonment of all restrictive Covenants.” She noted that, “[h]ere, violations of the portion
14
The Shaders and the HIA argue, additionally, that the Covenants are not enforceable or
enforceable based on the standard of “changed relevant circumstances” in the surrounding
neighborhood, which they conflate with the standard for waiver by abandonment. When a
covenant is challenged based on changed relevant circumstances, “[t]he proper legal
standard for this inquiry is to examine whether, after the passage of a reasonable period of
time, the continuing validity of the covenant cannot further the purpose for which it was
formed in light of changed relevant circumstances.” City of Bowie v. MIE Properties, Inc.,
398 Md. 657, 685, 922 A.2d 509, 526 (2007). In contrast, waiver by abandonment focuses
on violations of the covenant in areas of land subject to covenant aside from the property
at issue in the suit. Id. at 698 n.27, 922 A.2d at 534 n.27. As a result, we do not need to
address any issues related to a change in relevant circumstances.
22
of the covenant prohibiting the construction of buildings other than residential dwellings
does not necessarily mean that the restriction on building more than one residence per lot
has been abandoned”. She concluded that the purpose of Paragraph C was to ensure the
residential character of the neighborhood and that the HIA’s enforcement of the provision
restricting the building of more than one residential dwelling per lot “has allowed Hampton
to remain a neighborhood of large, single family properties, with a low population density”.
As a result, she determined that the HIA had not abandoned enforcement of the restriction
on the construction of more than one residence per single lot.
The Court of Special Appeals agreed with Judge Cox “that restrictions in a set of
covenants may be severable.” Shader, 217 Md. App. at 622, 94 A.3d at 248. Our
intermediate appellate court opined:
The second clause, which defines the acceptable appurtenances for each
single family dwelling, is the clause that the circuit court found was violated
due to evidence of additional buildings, such as sheds, gazebos and pool
houses on various lots in Hampton. Permitting the HIA to expand the concept
of garage or building does not destroy the purpose of Paragraph C, so long
as these buildings are appurtenant to and for the use of one single family
dwelling. For this Court to hold that the abandonment of one restriction in
Paragraph C results in the abandonment of all restrictions would be
inequitable. Hampton could lose its aesthetic character and low residential
density, as homeowners would be able to subdivide their lots and construct
multiple dwellings and units to the limits of applicable zoning regulations.
This would defy the clear intent of Paragraph C of the Covenants: to restrict
the use of each lot in Hampton to residential, single-family purposes. As the
Court of Appeals has instructed, we “‘are under a duty to effectuate rather
than defeat an intention which is clear from the context, the objective sought
to be accomplished by the restriction and from the result that would arise
from a different construction.’” MIE Props., Inc., supra, 398 Md. at 680, 922
A.2d 509 (quoting Belleview Construction Co., supra, 321 Md. at 157–58,
582 A.2d 493). Therefore, we hold that the circuit court did not err in
23
concluding that the HIA did not waive the restriction prohibiting more than
one house per lot, consistent with the original Plat filed in 1930.
Id. at 624-26, 94 A.3d at 249-50 (internal footnote omitted).
We agree that the HIA waived the clause in Paragraph C restricting the erection of
“building[s] of any kind . . . except private dwelling houses” by allowing the erection of
pool houses, gazebos, guest houses and sheds in violation of the clause. Nonetheless,
restrictions in a set of covenants may be severable from one another. See Powell, supra, §
60.10[1] (2000) (In the similar doctrine of acquiescence, “[a]cquiescence in the violation
of one restriction does not constitute acquiescence in the violation of a different restriction
unless the violation defeats the object of the entire plan.”).15
Paragraph C can be divided into four separate and independent clauses:
[1.] The land included in said tract except as hereinafter provided shall be
used for private residence purposes only and
[2.] no building of any kind whatsoever shall be erected or maintained
thereon except private dwelling houses each dwelling being designed for
occupation by a single family and private garages for the sole use of the
respective owners or occupants of the plots upon which such garages are
erected
[3.] there shall not be erected or maintained on said tract of land an apartment
house or house designed or altered for occupation by more than one family
and
[4.] no more than one dwelling may be erected on a lot.
15
Various of our sister courts also have held that clauses in restrictive covenants may be
severable. See Dauphin Island Prop. Owners Ass'n v. Kuppersmith, 371 So.2d 31, 34 (Ala.
1979) (“[W]e hold that any failure of the Association to enforce the two-tie pilings
restriction did not constitute estoppel by acquiescence to assert either the height and roof
restrictions or the building permit restriction.”); Swaggerty v. Petersen, 572 P.2d 1309,
1314 (Or. 1977) (“Assuming that plaintiffs were, or should have been, aware of these
violations [in a series of restrictions] and failed to object to them does not preclude them
from suing to enforce the density restrictions. The right to enforce one restrictive covenant
is not lost by acquiescence in the violation of another restriction.” (citations omitted)).
24
Severing of the second clause restricting the construction of any building aside from a
private dwelling house or private garage would not frustrate the purpose of the covenants,
which the Circuit Court found was to “ensur[e] the residential character of the
neighborhood”, as the additional buildings are not dwellings.
We hold, therefore, that the Circuit Court did not err in determining that the HIA
did not waive the clause in Paragraph C restricting the erection of more than one dwelling
house on a single lot by allowing the erection of sheds, pool houses, gazebos and guest
houses in violation of the clause restricting the erection of “building[s] of any kind . . .
except private dwelling houses”, because that clause is severable from the other covenants
in Paragraph C.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED.
COSTS IN THIS COURT AND THE
COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO
BE PAID BY PETITIONERS.
25