Daniel M. Mensah v. MCT Federal Credit Union, No. 54, Sept. Term, 2015 Opinion by
Battaglia, J.
JUDGMENT – GARNISHMENT – MD. RULE 3-646
Garnishment of wages under Sections 15-601 through 15-606 of the Commercial Law
Article is valid when the Maryland court has original, continuing and ancillary
jurisdiction over the judgment debtor and the judgment debtor’s employer/garnishee has
sufficient contact with the State.
Circuit Court for Montgomery County,
Maryland
Case No. 8976DCA
Argued: January 12, 2016
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 54
September Term, 2015
DANIEL M. MENSAH
v.
MCT FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
Barbera, C.J.
Battaglia
Greene
Adkins
McDonald
Watts
Hotten,
JJ.
Opinion by Battaglia, J.
Filed: February 24, 2016
Daniel M. Mensah, Petitioner, while living in Maryland, in 2006, opened a
personal line of credit as well as a credit card account with MCT Federal Credit Union
(“MCT”), Respondent. Mr. Mensah, over the next several years, accumulated $19,657.66
in credit card debt and amassed $14,951.55 on the line of credit. MCT filed two
complaints in 2010 against Mr. Mensah in the District Court of Maryland for
Montgomery County, one for the outstanding balance on the credit card account and
another for the money owed on the line of credit. Mr. Mensah, by the time of the filings,
had moved to Texas. After several failed attempts at service of Mr. Mensah, substitute
service was achieved. Mr. Mensah failed to answer either complaint, and MCT was
awarded default judgments in the amount of $21,270.12 on the credit card claim and
$15,848.64 on the line of credit. Mr. Mensah failed to note any appeal.
MCT, in 2013, secured two writs of garnishment in the same actions from the
District Court pursuant to Sections 15-601 through 15-606 of the Commercial Law
Article, Maryland Code (1978, 2013 Repl. Vol.), as implemented by Rule 3-646.1 The
1
In 2013 Rule 3-646 provided, as it does now, in relevant part:
(a) Applicability. This Rule governs garnishment of wages under Code,
Commercial Law Article, §§ 15-601 through 15-606.
(b) Issuance of Writ. The judgment creditor may obtain issuance of a writ
of garnishment by filing in the same action in which the judgment was
obtained a request that contains (1) the caption of the action, (2) the amount
owed under the judgment, (3) the name and last known address of the
judgment debtor, and (4) the name and address of the garnishee. Upon
filing of the request, the clerk shall issue a writ of garnishment directed to
the garnishee together with a blank answer form provided by the clerk.
(continued …)
writs were served on the resident agent2 of Mr. Mensah’s employer, BASF,3 as well as on
its payroll department in New Jersey. Although BASF answered and did not contest the
garnishment, Mr. Mensah filed motions to quash the writs, arguing that his wages, earned
solely for work he performed in Texas, were not subject to garnishment in Maryland. The
District Court denied both motions to quash, and Mr. Mensah appealed to the Circuit
Court for Montgomery County, which affirmed.
Mr. Mensah petitioned this Court for certiorari, which was granted in Mensah v.
MCT Federal Credit Union, 444 Md. 638, 120 A.3d 766 (2015), to answer the following
questions:
I. Does Maryland law allow a judgment creditor (MCT) to garnish wages
earned by a judgment-debtor employee (Mensah) exclusively for
services/work performed in Texas pursuant to a Writ issued by a Maryland
Court?
(… continued)
***
(d) Service. The writ and answer form shall be served on the garnishee in
the manner provided by Chapter 100 of this Title for service of process to
obtain personal jurisdiction and may be served in or outside the county.
Upon issuance of the writ, a copy of the writ shall be mailed to the debtor's
last known address. Subsequent pleadings and papers shall be served on the
creditor, debtor, and garnishee in the manner provided by Rule 1-321.
Rule 3-646.
2
BASF was required to designate a resident agent under Section 7-203 of the
Corporations and Associations Article. Md. Code Ann., § 7-203 of the Corporations and
Associations Article.
3
BASF is a multi-national company producing and marketing chemicals with operations
throughout the world and the United States. https://www.basf.com/us/en.html
(https://perma.cc/TQR8-JH8H). BASF maintains a training center located in Maryland.
http://www.refinish.basf.us/facilities (https://perma.cc/YAT3-QQUB).
2
II. Does Maryland law allow a judgment creditor (MCT) to garnish wages
earned by a judgment-debtor employee (Mensah) exclusively for
services/work performed in Texas pursuant to a Writ issued by a Maryland
Court and served on an employer in New Jersey?[4]
The underlying judgments for $21,270.12 and $15,848.64 secured by MCT against
Mr. Mensah are not in issue, because no appeal was taken by Mr. Mensah to challenge
them. The sole issue before us involves judgment enforcement, i.e. whether the District
Court in its continuing and ancillary jurisdiction could order wages earned outside of
Maryland by a non-resident judgment debtor to be subject to garnishment served upon an
employer with continuous and systematic business in Maryland. 5 We shall answer yes to
this question.
One opportunity to garnish wages outside of the jurisdiction in which a money
judgment has been entered is to enroll the judgment in the “foreign” jurisdiction, pursuant
to the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act (“UEFJA”), which was approved
by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1948 and
revised in 1964. See Unif. Enforcement of Foreign Judgment Act (revised 1964) 13
U.L.A. 156 (2002). The UEFJA enables a party awarded a judgment in one state to
enforce that judgment in another state by recording or “enrolling” the judgment in the
4
Because the Writ of Garnishment also was served on BASF’s resident agent in
Maryland, we need not reach this issue. Md. Code Ann. (1975, 2013 Repl. Vol.), § 1-
401(a) of the Corporations and Associations Article (service on a resident agent
“constitutes effective service of process” on the corporation).
5
Mr. Mensah had moved to vacate the judgments entered in the District Court based
upon improper service of process, but his motions were denied. The Circuit Court
affirmed the denial; Mensah did not include this issue in his Petition for Certiorari.
Accordingly, there is no issue before us as to whether the District Court had personal
jurisdiction over Mr. Mensah when it entered the judgments.
3
latter state.6 The enrolled “foreign” judgment is then treated as though it were a judgment
of the receiving state.7
Maryland adopted the 1964 revision of the UEFJA with modification in Chapter
497 of the Maryland Laws of 1987. Codified in Sections 11-801 through 11-807 of the
Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, Maryland Code (1987, 2013 Repl. Vol.), the
UEFJA offers a judgment creditor holding a valid judgment from another state or
6
Section 2 of the UEFJA provides:
Section 2. [Filing and Status of Foreign Judgments.] A copy of any foreign
judgment authenticated in accordance with the act of Congress or the
statutes of this state may be filed in the office of the Clerk of any [District
Court of any city or county] of this state. The Clerk shall treat the foreign
judgment in the same manner as a judgment of the [District Court of any
city or county] of this state. A judgment so filed has the same effect and is
subject to the same procedures, defenses and proceedings for reopening,
vacating, or staying as a judgment of a [District Court of any city or
county] of this state and may be enforced or satisfied in like manner.
Unif. Enforcement of Foreign Judgment Act (revised 1964) 13 U.L.A. 163 (2002).
7
The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws summarized the
effect of the UEFJA as follows:
A state that enacts the Revised Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments
Act permits enforcement of a judgment of another state upon the mere act
of filing it in the office of a Clerk of Court. The act of filing the foreign
judgment gives it the effect of being a judgment of the court in the state in
which it is filed. The process of enforcement then goes forward as if the
judgment is a domestic one.
http://www.uniformlaws.org/ActSummary.aspx?title=Enforcement%20of%20Foreign%2
0Judgments%20Act (https://perma.cc/5FWR-AA8S).
4
jurisdiction a way to enforce that judgment in Maryland.8 The judgment creditor may file,
or enroll, the judgment in a court in Maryland, where the judgment will then be treated as
though it were a judgment of the Maryland court and may, among other things, seek its
enforcement.9 Notice of the enrollment of the judgment must be provided to the judgment
debtor.10
8
A “foreign” judgment is “a judgment, decree, or order of a court of the United States or
of any other court that is entitled to full faith and credit in this state.” Md. Code Ann.
(1987, 2013 Repl. Vol.), § 11-801 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article.
9
Section 11-802 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, Maryland Code (1987,
2013 Repl. Vol.), provides:
In general
(a)(1)(i) Except as provided in subparagraphs (ii) and (iii) of this paragraph,
a copy of any foreign judgment authenticated in accordance with an act of
Congress or statutes of this State may be filed in the office of the clerk of a
circuit court.
(ii) If the face amount of the judgment is $2,500 or less, the copy
shall be filed with the clerk of the District Court.
(iii) If the face amount of the judgment is not more than a
jurisdictional amount described in § 4-401 of this article, but
more than $2,500, the copy may be filed either with the clerk of
the District Court or in the office of the clerk of a circuit court.
(2) The clerk shall treat the foreign judgment in the same manner as a
judgment of the court in which the foreign judgment is filed.
Effect of foreign judgment
(b) A filed foreign judgment has the same effect and is subject to the same
procedures, defenses, and proceedings for reopening, vacating, staying,
enforcing, or satisfying as a judgment of the court in which it is filed.
10
Section 11-803 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, Maryland Code (1987,
2013 Repl. Vol.), provides, in relevant part:
***
(continued …)
5
The State of Texas also has adopted the 1964 revision of the UEFJA, codified in
1985 in Sections 35.001 through 35.008 of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code.
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 35.001–35.008. Despite the ability to enroll the
Maryland judgment in Texas, however, MCT did not do so. Apparently, Section 28 of
Article 16 of the Texas Constitution prohibits a wage garnishment for any purpose other
than the enforcement of child support or spousal maintenance.11 Tex. Const. Art. 16 § 28.
To that end, Section 42.001 of the Texas Property Code exempts “current wages for
personal services, except for the enforcement of court-ordered child support
payments[.]”12 Tex. Prop. Code § 42.001(b)(1).
(… continued)
Notice of filing foreign judgment
(b)(1) The clerk promptly shall mail notice of the filing of the foreign
judgment to the judgment debtor at the address given and shall note the
mailing in the docket.
***
11
Section 28 of Article 16 of the Texas Constitution provides:
No current wages for personal service shall ever be subject to garnishment,
except for the enforcement of court-ordered:
(1) child support payments; or
(2) spousal maintenance.
12
Section 42.001 of the Texas Property Code provides, in relevant part:
(a) Personal property, as described in Section 42.002, is exempt from
garnishment, attachment, execution, or other seizure if:
(1) the property is provided for a family and has an aggregate fair
market value of not more than $100,000 , exclusive of the amount of
any liens, security interests, or other charges encumbering the
property; or
(continued …)
6
An alternative garnishment method that MCT sought to utilize involved the
satisfaction of the money judgment through wage attachment served on the employer’s,
BASF, Maryland resident agent, pursuant to Sections 15-601 et seq. of the Commercial
Law Article, Maryland Code (1978, 2013 Repl. Vol.). “Wages,” for the purpose of
attachment, is defined as “all monetary remuneration paid to any employee for his
employment” in Section 15-601(c) of the Commercial Law Article, without any
indication as to where the remuneration must be earned. The term “employee”,
referenced in Section 15-601(c), “includes an employee whether he is a resident or
nonresident of the State.” (emphasis added). All wages of an employee that are and
become payable are subject to a lien to satisfy the judgment:
(a) When an attachment is levied against the wages of a judgment debtor, it
shall constitute a lien on all attachable wages that are payable at the time
the attachment is served or which become payable until the judgment,
interest, and costs, as specified in the attachment, are satisfied.
(b) Any waiver of the limitations contained in § 15-601.1(b)(1) and (2) of
this subtitle is void.
Section 15-602 of the Commercial Law Article.
(… continued)
(2) the property is owned by a single adult, who is not a member of a
family, and has an aggregate fair market value of not more than
$50,000, exclusive of the amount of any liens, security interests, or
other charges encumbering the property.
(b) The following personal property is exempt from seizure and is not
included in the aggregate limitations prescribed by Subsection (a):
(1) current wages for personal services, except for the enforcement of
court-ordered child support payments[.]
7
Maryland Rule 3-646 “governs garnishment of wages under Code, Commercial
Law Article, §§ 15-601 through 15-606.” Rule 3-646(a). The Rule, under subsection (b),
permits a judgment creditor, by “filing in the same action in which the judgment was
obtained” a request, including the caption of the action, the money owed under the
judgment, the name and address of the judgment debtor and the name and address of the
garnishee—a third party who possesses property of the debtor, generally the debtor’s
employer in a situation involving wage garnishment—to obtain a writ of garnishment.
The writ, when issued, must contain the information from the judgment creditor’s request
and inform the garnishee regarding its need to answer, as well as inform the judgment
debtor of his right to contest the garnishment. Rule 3-646(c).
Upon issuance, the writ of garnishment and an answer form are served upon the
garnishee, and a copy is mailed to the judgment debtor. Rule 3-646(d). Subsection (e) of
3-646 pertains to the response by the garnishee, and requires an answer within 30 days
indicating whether the debtor is an employee, and, if so, the current pay rate and any
existing wage liens. The garnishee is also permitted, under subsection (e), to assert any
defenses it may have or any that might be available to the debtor, and the judgment
debtor may, at any time, assert a defense or an objection to the garnishment.
In the event that the garnishee does not timely answer, the judgment creditor may
move for a contempt order under subsection (f). The garnishee may deny that the debtor
is an employee. If either the garnishee or the debtor asserts a defense or objection, a
hearing is required. Rule 3-646(g). Subsection (i) sets forth the procedure for the
garnishee’s withholding and remittance of the wages to the judgment creditor, who must
8
account for the payments received in accordance with subsection (j). Should the debtor’s
employment cease, the garnishment terminates 90 days thereafter. Rule 3-646(k).
A wage garnishment obviously, thus, continues from, and is ancillary to, the
original judgment entered by a court and is not itself an original action. See Medical Mut.
Liability Ins. Soc. of Maryland v. Davis, 389 Md. 95, 883 A.2d 158 (2005) (discussing
garnishment of property, other than wages, in the Circuit Court under Rule 2-645).13 In
Davis, we stated:
Although once the issue is joined between the judgment creditor and the
garnishee, the garnishment proceeding proceeds as any original action, with
the judgment creditor as plaintiff and the garnishee as defendant and is
governed by the rules applicable to civil actions, such actions are not
original actions, independent of the actions out of which the judgments
sought to be enforced emanate. Garnishment proceedings, rather, are
certainly related to, and, indeed are ancillary to such actions. Thus, the
amount of the judgments obtained in the underlying action, to which the
garnishment action relates and, indeed, depends, is information necessary
for the issuance of a writ of garnishment. Also, the judgment itself
conclusively establishes the judgment debtor's obligation to the judgment
creditor. Indeed, the purpose of a garnishment proceeding is to satisfy
money judgments with property of the judgment debtor that is in the hands
of third persons. Pursuant to that purpose, garnishment proceedings
necessarily must determine whether the garnishee has any funds, property
or credits which belong to the judgment debtor.
Id. at 117, 883 A.2d at 171 (emphasis added). See also Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v.
Ruby, 312 Md. 413, 418, 540 A.2d 482, 484 (1988); Livingston v. Naylor, 173 Md. App.
488, 510, 920 A.2d 34, 47 (2007).
13
Rule 2-645 governs the garnishment of property in the Circuit Court, and is
procedurally similar to Rule 3-646, which governs wage garnishment in the District
Court.
9
Mr. Mensah and MCT differ as to the extent of the reach of the wage garnishments
ordered by the District Court of Maryland in this case because of Mr. Mensah’s Texas
residency, both relying on two cases involving wage garnishment, one decided by this
Court, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 312 Md. at 413, 540 A.2d at 482, and the other by
the Court of Special Appeals, Livingston, 173 Md. App. at 488, 920 A.2d at 34. In
Goodyear, Patricia Ruby was awarded an absolute divorce from Robert Ruby, as well as
custody of their children and child support. Mr. Ruby, who was a resident of Texas, was
served in Maryland with the original complaint, but failed to appear for any of the
proceedings. He subsequently failed to pay child support, and Mrs. Ruby requested a
wage garnishment of her former husband’s earnings, pursuant to Sections 10-120 through
10-126 of the Family Law Article, Maryland Code (1984), in the Circuit Court for Prince
George’s County, from which she had obtained the divorce and award of child support.
The Circuit Court issued the writ, and Mr. Ruby’s employer’s, Goodyear, resident agent
was served with the wage garnishment.
Goodyear, however, sought to quash the wage garnishment in the Circuit Court,
arguing that the request for the garnishment was a new claim for relief that would have
required personal jurisdiction over both Mr. Ruby and Goodyear.14 The Circuit Court
14
We identified two issues in the case:
The first is whether the use of first class mail was sufficient to afford
adequate notice of the proceedings to the alleged debtor, a resident of
Texas. The second is whether the non-resident employer, The Goodyear
Tire and Rubber Company (Goodyear), has sufficient contacts with this
(continued …)
10
disagreed, as did we. We concluded that the wage garnishment did not constitute a new
cause of action but was within the exercise of the continuing, ancillary jurisdiction of the
circuit court:
The right to exercise personal jurisdiction over Mr. Ruby arose when he
was served with the original complaint, and extended to all the relief sought
by that complaint. Moreover, the enforcement and modification of relief
granted pursuant to that complaint remains within the continuing
jurisdiction of the circuit court, subject to any due process requirement that
the party against whom the modification or enforcement is sought be given
reasonable notice and an opportunity to be heard.
Id. at 418, 540 A.2d at 484. As a result, we determined that the relief entered in the case
against Mr. Ruby remained within the continuing jurisdiction of the circuit court and that
“service of the notice [of garnishment] by ordinary mail was sufficient” to meet the
requirements of due process. Id. at 420, 540 A.2d at 485.
We also addressed whether there were sufficient contacts between Goodyear and
Maryland to warrant the exercise of personal jurisdiction over it. Although the record was
inadequate to establish Goodyear’s Maryland contacts, we recognized “there may be
contacts reflecting continuous and systematic general business conduct that will be
sufficient to support the exercise of jurisdiction over a claim that neither arises out of nor
is directly related to the conduct of the [garnishee] within the forum.” Id. at 422, 540
(… continued)
State to justify the exercise of judicial jurisdiction over it in a matter wholly
unrelated to those contacts.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Ruby, 312 Md. 413, 415, 540 A.2d 482, 482-83 (1988).
11
A.2d at 486. We remanded the case to explore whether Goodyear’s contacts in Maryland
reflected continuous and systematic general business conduct.
In the second case, Livingston, 173 Md. App. at 488, 920 A.2d at 34, a money
judgment obtained by Mr. Naylor from a North Carolina court for $50,000, resulting
from injuries sustained when Livingston assaulted Mr. Naylor and robbed him, was
enrolled in Maryland under the UEFJA. Id. at 490-91, 920 A.2d at 35-36. Although Mr.
Naylor had begun garnishment proceedings in North Carolina, wages were exempt from
garnishment in that state, which led him to enroll the judgment in Maryland. Id. at 491-
92, 920 A.2d at 36.
Livingston, a resident of North Carolina, had worked several years for Marriott at
its various locations in North Carolina, Virginia and, briefly, Maryland. Livingston had
served as an interim manager at several Marriott hotels in Maryland in 2004, for a short
time, prompting Mr. Naylor to seek enforcement of his judgment in this state. Id. at 492,
920 A.2d at 36. Livingston and Marriott challenged Maryland’s exercise of jurisdiction
regarding the enrolled judgment and moved to quash the writ. Id. at 492, 920 A.2d at 36-
37. The primary issue before the Court of Special Appeals was whether, pursuant to the
enrolled foreign judgment, Maryland could affect garnishment of wages of a non-resident
extraterritorially in North Carolina.
Our intermediate appellate court eventually determined that the Maryland courts,
when enforcing an enrolled judgment, could not order the garnishment of wages earned
in North Carolina. An enrolled judgment, though valid, was subject to defenses in
enforcement:
12
The Court of Appeals recognized in Smith Pontiac that there is a
“distinction between recognition and enforcement” of a foreign judgment.
“While this Court must recognize this judgment [domesticated in Maryland
pursuant to the UEFJA] as a valid Maryland judgment, this Court also may
inquire into post-judgment defenses in order to determine the extent to
which it is enforceable.”
Id. at 500-01, 920 A.2d at 42 (internal citation omitted) (alteration original), quoting
Mike Smith Pontiac, GMC, Inc. v. Mercedes-Benz of North America, Inc., 356 Md. 542,
562, 741 A.2d 462, 472-73 (1999).
The Court of Special Appeals, however, recognized a distinction between a
Maryland court’s jurisdiction when enforcing a judgment entered in a case originating in
Maryland and a judgment enrolled in Maryland, taking into account two Supreme Court
cases which had not been discussed in Goodyear, those being Shaffer v. Heitner, 433
U.S. 186, 97 S. Ct. 2569, 53 L. Ed. 2d 683 (1977), and Rush v. Savchuk, 444 U.S. 320,
100 S. Ct. 571, 62 L. Ed. 2d 516 (1980), both cases involving pre-judgment garnishment.
In Shaffer, Heitner, a non-resident shareholder had brought a derivative action in
Delaware against Greyhound Corporation, its wholly owned subsidiary and several
officers and directors, none of whom was a resident of Delaware. Id. at 189-90, 97 S. Ct.
at 2572, 53 L. Ed. 2d at 688-89. Heitner alleged that, as a result of violating their duties
to Greyhound, the officers and directors caused Greyhound to engage in activities that
lead to its liability for damages in a private antitrust suit and a fine in a criminal contempt
13
action. Id. In addition, Heitner moved for, and was granted, a sequestration order15 on the
defendant’s property located in Delaware, which consisted of Greyhound’s stock
certificates which, under Delaware law, were deemed to be located in Delaware
regardless of their actual physical location. Id. at 190-92, 97 S. Ct. at 2572-73, 53 L. Ed.
2d at 689-90. The defendants asserted that they lacked sufficient contacts with Delaware
and, therefore, the court lacked jurisdiction over them and that the ex parte sequestration
violated due process. Id. at 193, 97 S. Ct. at 2573-74, 53 L. Ed. 2d at 691. The Supreme
Court concluded that, where the personal jurisdiction asserted by the state is in rem,
based upon the presence of property owned by the defendant within the state, the mere
presence of the property alone is not sufficient to confer jurisdiction. Id. at 209, 97 S. Ct.
at 2582, 53 L. Ed. 2d at 701 (“Thus although the presence of the defendant’s property in a
State might suggest the existence of other ties among the defendant, the State, and the
litigation, the presence of the property alone would not support the State’s jurisdiction.”).
Due process, therefore, according to the Court, required an inquiry into “the relationship
among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation”. Id. at 204, 97 S. Ct. at 2580, L. Ed.
2d at 698. The primary issue in that case involved pre-judgment attachment, but the Court
left open the question of whether an inquiry into personal jurisdiction is required for post-
judgment enforcement, stating in footnote 36:
Once it has been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the
defendant is a debtor of the plaintiff, there would seem to be no unfairness
15
A sequestration order, provided for under Delaware Law, permitted the court to compel
the appearance of non-resident defendants by seizing their property. Shaffer v. Heitner,
443 U.S. 186, 190 n.4, 97 S. Ct. 2569, 2572 n.4, 53 L. Ed. 2d 683, 689 n.4 (1977).
14
in allowing an action to realize on that debt in a State where the defendant
has property, whether or not that State would have jurisdiction to determine
the existence of the debt as an original matter.
Id. at 210 n.36, 97 S. Ct. at 2583 n.36, L. Ed. 2d at 702 n.36.
In the second case, Rush, 444 U.S. at 322, 100 S. Ct. at 574, 62 L. Ed. 2d at 521,
the Supreme Court revisited the issue of a state’s exercise of jurisdiction over a non-
resident defendant in a pre-judgment attachment context. In the case, Savchuk, as a
passenger in a car driven by Rush, was injured when they were involved in an automobile
accident. Id. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company insured the car driven
by Rush under a policy issued in Indiana, which had a guest statute. Id. Any claim
brought by Savchuk would have been barred. Id. Savchuk, however, had moved with his
parents to Minnesota the year after the accident and sued Rush, in Minnesota, by
“attempt[ing] to obtain quasi in rem jurisdiction by garnishing State Farm’s obligation
under the insurance policy to defend and indemnify Rush[,]” as State Farm also did
business in Minnesota. Id. at 322, 100 S. Ct. at 574-75, 62 L. Ed. 2d at 521.
The Supreme Court referred to its decision in Shaffer requiring sufficient contacts
between the forum and the non-resident defendant in addition to the presence of the
defendant’s property in the forum and inquired into Rush’s contacts with Minnesota. Id.
at 328, 100 S. Ct. at 577, 62 L. Ed. 2d at 524. Although State Farm was present in
Minnesota, Rush had no control over that decision. Id. at 329, 100 S. Ct. at 577, 62 L. Ed.
2d at 525. In addition, no significant contacts existed between the litigation and
Minnesota (as the accident had occurred in Indiana), nor did the presence of State Farm’s
15
obligation provide a viable basis for any contact between Rush and the State. Id. As such,
the Supreme Court concluded that:
Here, however, the defendant has no contacts with the forum, and the Due
Process Clause does not contemplate that a state may make binding a
judgment . . . against an individual or corporate defendant with which the
state has no contacts, ties, or relations.
Id. at 332-33, 100 S. Ct. at 579, 62 L. Ed. 2d at 528 (emphasis original) (internal
quotation omitted). The presence, therefore, of a garnishee in the forum state was not
alone sufficient for the court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a non-resident
defendant absent any other contacts with the forum state.
In addressing the implications in Livingston of Shaffer and Rush, the Court of
Special Appeals noted that, “The Maryland appellate courts have not, to date, addressed
note 36 of Shaffer and the extent to which Shaffer imposes any jurisdictional limits upon
post-judgment collection proceedings[,]” and pointed to several cases that distinguished
Shaffer and Rush when post-judgment garnishment was sought under an original
judgment in the recovery state. Livingston, 173 Md. App. at 510, 920 A.2d at 47. The
cases cited included Smith v. Lorillard, Inc., 945 F.2d 745 (4th Cir. 1991), Levi Strauss &
Company v. Crockett Motor Sales, Inc., 739 S.W.2d 157 (Ark. 1987), State Department
of Revenue v. Control Data Corporation, 713 P.2d 30 (Or. 1986). The Livingston opinion
also referred to our opinion in Goodyear, which the Court of Special Appeals noted had
not explicitly addressed Shaffer. Id. at 511, 920 A.2d at 48.
The Court of Special Appeals, then, determined that there was “a lack of fair play
and substantial justice” in allowing the garnishment of wages, pursuant to a judgment
16
only enrolled in Maryland, earned by a non-resident working at a location wholly outside
the State of Maryland, “in the absence of some other connection between Maryland and
either the [non-resident] wage-earner or the underlying controversy that resulted in the
original [out of state] judgment[.]” Id. at 517, 920 A.2d at 51 (emphasis added). The court
then distinguished the facts in Livingston from a garnishment resulting from an original
judgment entered in a Maryland court:
In this case, we are not dealing with a situation in which Maryland had any
prior contact with the underlying litigation, in contrast to the employees
whose wages were garnished pursuant to a court’s ancillary or continuing
jurisdiction[.]
Id. at 520, 920 A.2d at 53. As a result, the Court of Special Appeals concluded that, “the
only res owned by Livingston within the borders of this State and properly garnishable in
this State would be the wage obligation owed to Livingston for services rendered while
Livingston was physically present in this State.” Id. at 521, 920 A.2d at 54. Thus,
although the intermediate appellate court determined that the North Carolina judgment
was valid and properly enrolled, our brethren only enforced the wage garnishment on
wages earned in Maryland, because the wages earned in North Carolina were beyond the
reach of a judgment only enrolled in Maryland.
Juxtaposing these two cases, it becomes apparent that the two are complementary,
and both guide and inform the present case:
Goodyear Livingston v. Naylor
Brief facts: A resident plaintiff was A non-resident plaintiff
awarded a default judgment enrolled a North Carolina
in the Circuit Court for default judgment in
Prince George’s County Maryland seeking to garnish
17
against a non-resident wages owed to the non-
defendant. The plaintiff resident judgment debtor by
sought to enforce her his employer. The non-
judgment through garnishment resident judgment debtor
of the defendant’s wages, briefly worked in Maryland
earned in Texas, from his for the employer, but
employer in Maryland. currently resides in and
earns wages for work
performed in North
Carolina.
1. Sufficiency of contacts The Court of Appeals The Court of Special
between the State and the focused on the sufficiency Appeals focused on the
garnishee or judgment of the contact between sufficiency of the contact
debtor. Maryland and the garnishee between Maryland and the
in order to determine the judgment debtor to ensure
fairness of exercising that fair play and substantial
jurisdiction over the justice were not lacking.
garnishee. Due to the The court determined
inadequacy of the record Livingston’s contact with
regarding Marriott’s Maryland supported the
contacts with Maryland, the exercise of jurisdiction over
case was remanded for him and his wages, but only
further proceedings. to the extent of wages
earned in Maryland.
2. The connection, if any, The request for child The judgment was an
between Maryland and support arose from, and was enrolled judgment from a
the underlying controversy. ancillary to, the original North Carolina court;
judgment of divorce entered Maryland had no
by the Circuit Court for connection with the
Prince George’s County. underlying controversy that
gave rise to the judgment.
3. Jurisdiction over the non- The Court of Appeals did The Court of Special
resident defendant in light not address jurisdiction in Appeals considered the
of Shaffer and Rush. light of Shaffer and Rush. application of the principles
in Shaffer to post-judgment
jurisdiction over a non-
resident defendant in the
context of a foreign enrolled
judgment.
18
Mr. Mensah argues, of course, that the result in Livingston bars MCT from
garnishing any wages earned by him outside of Maryland, while MCT suggests that
Goodyear is dispositive. We determine that consideration of the tenets of Goodyear and
Livingston, guided by what the Supreme Court held in Shaffer and Rush, leads to a
conclusion that MCT’s post-judgment garnishment of Mr. Mensah’s wages earned in
Texas was an appropriate exercise of the original and ancillary jurisdiction of the district
court that had entered judgment against Mr. Mensah, which also had jurisdiction over the
garnishee, BASF, as a result of the garnishee’s continuous and systematic business
conduct in Maryland.
Goodyear is “on all fours” with the present case and gilded with BASF’s business
presence in Maryland as well as its assent to the wage garnishments.
Livingston’s complementary analysis supports a post-judgment garnishment of
wages earned in a different state which arose from the continuing and ancillary
jurisdiction of the district court.16
16
The cases cited by the Court of Special Appeals in Livingston regarding post-judgment
garnishment of a non-resident’s wages earned outside of the state, when the state has a
connection to the underlying litigation, support our conclusion. Smith v. Lorillard, Inc.,
945 F.2d 745 (4th Cir. 1991); Levi Strauss & Company v. Crockett Motor Sales, Inc., 739
S.W.2d 157 (1987); State Department of Revenue v. Control Data Corporation, 713 P.2d
30 (Or. 1986). In Smith, the Fourth Circuit affirmed the post-judgment garnishment of a
non-resident judgment debtor’s wages ordered by a Kentucky court pursuant to two
judgments entered in Kentucky and served upon the garnishee in Kentucky. 945 F.2d at
746 (“Shaffer sets limits only on the original assertion of in rem and quasi in rem
jurisdiction over non-resident defendants, not on the imposition of an ancillary order of
garnishment flowing from a judgment for which the court originally had in personum
(continued …)
19
In conclusion, MCT could enforce the money judgments against Mr. Mensah
through garnishments of Mr. Mensah’s wages earned in Texas through the exercise of the
original and ancillary jurisdiction of the district court that entered the judgments and
because of BASF’s business contacts in the State.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT FOR MONTGOMERY
COUNTY AFFIRMED; COSTS IN
THIS COURT AND THE CIRCUIT
COURT TO BE PAID BY THE
PETITIONER.
(… continued)
jurisdiction over the creditor of the garnishee (i.e., the defendant in the underlying action
against whom the judgment was obtained).”). The Supreme Court of Arkansas, in Levi
Strauss, affirmed the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction when it ordered the post-
judgment garnishment of a non-resident’s out of state wages pursuant to an Arkansas
judgment. 739 S.W.2d at 159 (“We would first note that [the judgment creditor] did not
initiate the garnishment action as a means by which to adjudicate a claim against [the
debtor]; it had already obtained a judgment against [the debtor] at the time she lived and
worked in Arkansas. . . . Suffice it to say, [the debtor’s] contacts, past and present, with
this state are sufficient for us to sustain the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction in the
garnishment proceeding below.”). In Control Data Corp., the Supreme Court of Oregon
affirmed the tax court’s garnishment of a non-resident’s wages earned in Minnesota
pursuant to a judgment obtained in Oregon by the Department of Revenue. 713 P.2d at 32
(“Here the creditor, the Department of Revenue, did not attach assets in the forum state as
a way of getting jurisdiction to adjudicate a claim against an absent debtor. This creditor
already has a judgment against the debtor, a judgment for unpaid taxes on income earned
in Oregon while the debtor lived in Oregon. The Department seeks only to collect this
judgment by reaching an asset belonging to the debtor in the hands of Control Data, a
third party that unquestionably is present in Oregon.”).
20