Steven Berg v. Susan Berg, No. 0624, September Term, 2015
HEADNOTES:
MARYLAND CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Article IV, section 22 of the Maryland Constitution provides, inter alia, that “[w]hen any
trial is conducted by less than three circuit judges . . .” litigants have a right to an in banc
appeal “upon the decision or determination of any point or questsions by the court . . . .”
The word “trial” as used in section 22 means: “that step in an action by which issues or
questions of fact are decided.”
MARYLAND CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
To have a right to an in banc appeal under Article IV, section 22, the party filing the
appeal need not show that the decision or determination was made at a “merits trial;” it is
sufficient if a final decision or determination was made by less than three circuit court
judges at a hearing at which issues or questions of fact were decided.
REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 0624
SEPTEMBER TERM, 2015
STEVEN BERG
v.
SUSAN BERG
Eyler, Deborah S.,
Woodward,
Salmon, James P.
(Retired, Specially Assigned),
JJ.
Opinion by Salmon, J.
Filed: June 2, 2016
The Maryland Constitution, which was ratified in 1867, included a provision that
granted most litigants in Maryland1 a right to an in banc appeal. That right was set forth in
Article IV, section 22 of the Maryland Constitution.
Article IV, section 22 was amended in 1978 and in 2006. Nevertheless, much of the
original language endures. Presently, section 22 reads:
Where any trial is conducted by less than three Circuit Judges, upon the
decision or determination of any point, or question, by the Court, it shall be
competent to the party, against whom the ruling or decision is made, upon
motion, to have the point, or question reserved for the consideration of three
Judges of the Circuit, who shall constitute a court in banc for such purpose;
and the motion for such reservation shall be entered of record, during the
sitting at which such decision may be made; and the procedure for appeals to
the Circuit Court in banc shall be as provided by the Maryland Rules. The
decision of the said Court in banc shall be the effective decision in the
premises, and conclusive, as against the party at whose motion said points, or
questions were reserved; but such decision in banc shall not preclude the right
of Appeal by an adverse party who did not seek in banc review, in those cases,
civil or criminal, in which appeal to the Court of Special Appeals may be
allowed by Law. The right of having questions reserved shall not, however,
apply to trials of Appeals from judgments of the District Court, nor to criminal
cases below the grade of felony, except when the punishment is confinement
in the Penitentiary; and this Section shall be subject to such provisions as may
hereafter be made by Law.
(Emphasis added.)
In this appeal, appellant, Steven Berg, makes an argument that has never been
addressed by any Maryland appellate court during the (approximately) 150 years that Article
IV, section 22 has been in effect. Mr. Berg maintains that the right to an in banc appeal
1
Before the Baltimore City courts were reorganized and the Supreme Bench
abolished in 1980, Article IV, § 22 did not apply to cases filed in Baltimore City. See Dan
Friedman, The Maryland State Constitution 248 (G. Alan Tarr ed., 2011). See also
Washabaugh v. Washabaugh, 285 Md. 393, 403 (1979).
“spring[s] only from trial verdicts and judgments,” and not from any other final judgment.
Mr. Berg asserts that the issue considered by the three judges in this case was one that the
panel had no jurisdiction to decide because the issue addressed by the panel did “not stem
from a merits trial” but rather stemmed from the consideration by the in banc panel of an
issue that arose long after the merits trial had been held. According to appellant, the word
“trial,” as used in section 22, has a very narrow meaning.
For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the in banc panel did have
jurisdiction in this case and we therefore affirm the order issued by that panel.
I.
This case had its origin in 2005, when Steven Berg filed, in the Circuit Court for
Montgomery County, a complaint for divorce and other relief against appellee, Susan Berg.
Ms. Berg filed a counter-claim for divorce in which she also asked for alimony, child
support, child custody, and a monetary award.
In the early part of June 2007, a merits trial was held to address numerous issues about
which the parties disagreed. After an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court took the matter
under advisement. The court, inter alia, later made a $450,000 monetary award in favor of
Susan Berg, which was reduced to judgment. Mr. Berg thereafter made irregular payments
on that judgment but, to date, the judgment has not been paid in full.
On August 7, 2012, Ms. Berg brought a garnishment action against Mr. Berg in which
she sought to seize some of her ex-husband’s personal property. With that filing, Ms. Berg
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attached an interest worksheet setting forth the method she had used in applying payments
made on the judgment.2 According to her worksheet, Mr. Berg, as of September 27, 2012,
had paid $371,562.51 toward the judgment but still owed $225,575.62. In that worksheet,
she allocated all the payments received to principal and none to interest.
On March 27, 2014, Ms. Berg again brought a garnishment action - this time
attempting to attach Mr. Berg’s wages. She again attached an interest worksheet. That
worksheet showed that she applied the payments first to interest and then to principal. The
worksheet indicated that since September 27, 2012, Mr. Berg had made an additional
payment of $10,000, but he still owed $248,746.65.
Mr. Berg objected to the method his ex-spouse used in applying payments on the
March 27, 2014 worksheet. He contended that Ms. Berg should have applied his payments
first to principal.
On October 1, 2014, the circuit court held an evidentiary hearing concerning Mr.
Berg’s objection to the garnishment worksheet. The purpose of the hearing was to determine
the outstanding balance Mr. Berg owed on the judgment. At the hearing, exhibits were
introduced and the court heard testimony from Ms. Berg. Thereafter, on December 17, 2014,
the court entered a written order stating that all payments made on the judgment prior to
August 7, 2012 should have been exclusively applied to the payment of principal and all
2
Interest was calculated at 10% per year – the legal rate of interest owed on unpaid
judgments.
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payments made thereafter should be applied to the payment of accrued interest first and
principal second.
After Ms. Berg filed a timely motion to alter or amend judgment, which was denied,
she noted an in banc appeal. A hearing before a panel of three Montgomery County Circuit
Court judges was held on May 8, 2015. At the hearing, Mr. Berg argued, as he does here,
that the in banc panel had no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal because the issue the panel
was asked to consider did not “stem from a merits trial.” The in banc panel ruled that it did
have jurisdiction to hear the appeal and entered an order providing that all payments made
on the $450,000 judgment should be credited “first to interest and then to principal.” Mr.
Berg noted an appeal to this Court in which he does not claim that the in banc panel was
incorrect in its ruling concerning the allocation of payments. Instead, the sole issue he
presents is whether the in banc panel had jurisdiction to consider the issue it decided.
According to Mr. Berg, because the panel had no jurisdiction, the order entered by the in
banc panel should be stricken and the circuit court’s order of December 17, 2014 reinstated.
II.
RULES OF INTERPRETATION
“When interpreting constitutional provisions, we generally employ the
same rules of construction . . . of statutory language.” Davis v. Slater, 383 Md.
599, 604, 861 A.2d 78 (2004) . . . . One of the cardinal rules of interpretation
is that a court should not reach a meaning beyond the Constitution unless the
relevant section is ambiguous. Bernstein v. State, 422 Md. 36, 43 (2011) . . . .
“Like construing a statute, to ascertain the meaning of a constitutional
provision . . . we first look to the normal, plain meaning of the language.”
Davis, 383 Md. at 604, 861 A.2d 78 . . . . When that language is clear and
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unambiguous, we need not review more than the words of the constitutional
provision. Id. at 604-05, 861 A.2d 78 . . . . However, we note that our “goal
. . . is always to discern the legislative purpose, the ends to be accomplished,
or the evils to be remedied by a particular provision, be it statutory,
constitutional or part of the Rules.” . . .
Remson v. Krausen, 206 Md. App. 53, 61-62 (2012) (some citations omitted).
III.
HISTORY
Before discussing the precise contentions of the parties in this appeal, it is useful to
review some history. One of the framers of the Constitution of 1867 was Richard H. Alvey,
who subsequently became a judge and later Chief Judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals.
Judge Alvey was one of the judges who later decided Costigin v. Bond, 65 Md. 122 (1886).
In Costigin, the Court said:
The Constitution, Art. 4, sec. 22, gave a new right of appeal. When a
trial is conducted by less than the whole number of the [j]udges of a [c]ircuit
[c]ourt, it is competent for a party against whom a decision is made to have the
point or question reserved for the consideration of the three [j]udges in banc;
and their decision is to be conclusive against him. This proceeding is in
substitution of an appeal to the Court of Appeals, and makes a considerable
alteration in the law on this subject. The change is not to be extended by
construction beyond the terms of the Constitution.
Id. at 123-24. (Emphasis added.)
Up until 2006, the first several lines of Article IV, section 22 read:
Where any Term is held, or trial conducted by less than the whole number of
said [c]ircuit [j]udges, upon the decision, or determination of any point, or
question, by the Court, it shall be competent to the party, against whom the
ruling or decision is made, upon motion, to have the point, or question
reserved . . . .
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(Emphasis added.)
In 2006, Article IV, section 22 was amended, inter alia, by deleting the phrase “Term
is held, or.” As mentioned earlier, section 22 now begins with the words “Where any trial
is conducted by less than three Circuit Judges . . . .” What exactly the framers intended to
convey when they used the words “[w]here any Term is held” is uncertain. But as shown by
the debates held when another section of the Constitution was being discussed, there were,
in 1867, seven judicial circuits that each had three judges.3 Each year the circuit courts had
one or more terms, meaning periods when the courts were in session. For instance, in some
of the circuit courts, there would be two or more terms of court where jury trials were held
and one or more terms when equity matters were considered. See Philip B. Perlman,
Debates of the Maryland Constitutional Conventions of 1867, 334 (1923) (recounting
discussion of an amendment to Article IV, section 20, which was defeated).
In Bienkowski v. Brooks, 386 Md. 516, 533 (2005), the Court explained why the
framers gave litigants the right to an in banc appeal, viz.:
The principal reason for Article IV, § 22, according to Judge Alvey,
although in a case not directly involving § 22, was to create “a court in banc,
where parties can have questions of law deliberately considered by at least
three judges, without the delay and expense of an appeal to the Court of
Appeals . . . .” Roth v. House of Refuge, 31 Md. 329, 333 (1869). This was
the same reason which had been suggested to the 1867 Convention by
Delegate Syester. Another reason appears to have been to reduce the
3
Baltimore City constituted the Eighth Judicial Circuit and in 1867 had a different
system, which included the Supreme Bench and several subsidiary courts. See Harry M.
Sachs, Jr., 1 Poe’s Pleading and Practice, § 21 (6th ed. 1970).
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governmental expense associated with numerous appeals in the Court of
Appeals. See John J. Connolly, Maryland’s Right of In Banc Review, 51 Md.
L.Rev. 434, 446-459 (1992). In addition, one scholar, who has made a
comprehensive study of § 22’s history, has suggested that the provision was
a compromise between those convention delegates who believed that three
judges should preside over circuit court trials and those delegates who favored
a predominantly single-judge system. John J. Connolly, Maryland’s Right of
In Banc Review, supra at 435-459.[4]
Article IV, section 22 was amended in 1978 by substituting the words “District Court”
for “Justices of the Peace.”5 In 2006, section 22 was amended once again. See Chapter 421
of the Acts of 2006. The amendment had its origin in House Bill 84, which was considered
by the House Judiciary Committee on February 2, 2006. Material in the judiciary committee
file indicates that the major purpose of the amendment was to overrule the decision in
Bienkowski v. Brooks, supra. See written testimony by Melvin J. Sykes, Esquire, on behalf
of the Court of Appeals Standing Committee of Rules of Practice and Procedure, submitted
before the committee.
4
The language of section 22, as originally written, began with the words: “Where any
Term is held, or trial conducted by less than the whole number of said Circuit Judges, upon
the decision, or determination of any point, or question, by the Court, it shall be competent
to the party, against whom the ruling, or decision is made, upon motion, to have the point,
or question reserved for the consideration of the three Judges of the Circuit, who shall
constitute a Court in banc . . . .” Up until 1887, when, by statute, some circuits were granted
more judges, this meant that the in banc panel would always include the judge whose ruling
the appellant was seeking to overcome. For appellant’s counsel, this must have been
awkward, and probably accounts for the fact that in banc appeals were seldom filed. See
State Roads Commission v. Smith, 224 Md. 537, 540 (1961) (in banc appeals have been “long
authorized, but rarely used”).
5
Before the change, section 22 read, in material part: “The right of having questions
reserved, shall not, however, apply to trials of Appeals from judgments of Justices of the
Peace . . . .
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After the Court of Special Appeals was formed, an appellee in the court in banc, if he
or she was dissatisfied with the ruling by the in banc panel, routinely filed his or her appeal
to this Court and not to the Court of Appeals. See, e.g., Board of License Commissioners for
Montgomery County v. Haberlin, 320 Md. 399, 405 (1990); Estep v. Estep, 285 Md. 416,
420-21 n.4 (1979). But the Bienkowski Court held that an appellee in the in banc court, who
wished to challenge a decision of the in banc panel, could only have appellate review if that
party filed a petition for a writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals that was granted. 386
Md. at 549.
A secondary purpose of the amendment was to clean up some “archaic” language in
section 22, e.g., deleting the provision in section 22 that allowed an appeal from a “writ of
error.”6 See written testimony of Melvin J. Sykes, supra, to the House Judiciary Committee.
In the legislative history, there is no specific discussion as to why the words “Term is held,
or” were deleted. Nevertheless, the purpose of House Bill 84 was stated to be:
FOR the purpose of proposing an amendment to the Maryland Constitution
relating to the establishment of the right of a party who did not seek review by
a circuit court in banc to the Court of Special Appeals from an adverse
decision by the circuit court in banc; altering the composition of a panel of
judges for an in banc review; repealing the authority of the circuit courts to
regulate by rules the procedure for appeals to the circuit court in banc;
providing that the procedure for appeals to the circuit court in banc be
provided by the Maryland Rules; providing that a decision by the circuit court
in banc does not preclude the right of appeal to the Court of Special Appeals
by an adverse party who did not seek in banc review; repealing an obsolete
6
The writ of error has been abolished in Maryland.
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provision regarding “writs of error”; and submitting this amendment to the
qualified voters of the State of Maryland for their adoption or rejection.
In his opening brief, Mr. Berg contended that the words “[T]erm is held, or” were
deleted, with the intent of narrowing the scope of what could be considered by an in banc
panel. According to appellant’s brief, before the deletion of these words in 2006, the scope
of review by an in banc panel was much broader than it is now and would have encompassed
review of “proceedings of the kind challenged below by Ms. Berg.” But at oral argument,
appellant’s counsel abandoned that argument and admitted that the deletion of the words
“Term is held, or” was not intended to narrow the scope of review and, in fact, did not
constitute a substantive change. That concession is well-founded. The legislative history of
House Bill 84 strongly suggests that the words at issue were considered to be archaic and for
that reason were deleted with no substantive change intended. See Remson, 206 Md. App.
at 64 (characterizing the 2006 changes in section 22, as non-substantive). It is inconceivable
that the General Assembly would have intended to make such an important change in the
right to file an in banc appeal without making any reference to such an intent in the “purpose
clause” or elsewhere in the bill’s legislative history.
IV.
ANALYSIS
A. Post Trial Motions
Mr. Berg argues that one cannot file an in banc appeal from rulings on a post-trial
motion. Mr. Berg reads the language where “any trial is conducted” to mean that in banc
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appeals must concern errors that were made by the judge at the “merits trial.” Mr. Berg cites
no authority to support that argument nor can we find support by analyzing the words used
in the Constitution. Section 22 allows an appeal “upon the decision or determination” of any
point or question decided by less than three circuit court judges. It contains no time
restrictions or other language that would evidence an intent to disallow review by an in banc
panel of post trial “decision[s] or determination[s]” that are decided by a single judge.
Since 1867, there have only been about two dozen reported cases that concern appeals
to the Maryland appellate courts from decisions of an in banc panel.7 On several occasions,
the matter under review concerned issues considered by the in banc panel that dealt with the
propriety, vel non, of post-trial actions by trial judges. In other words, the decisions being
reviewed did not concern an allegation that the judge made any error at trial. See, e.g.,
Bienkowski, 386 Md. at 555 (after an in banc decision, the Court of Appeals considered, and
decided, whether the judge who presided at a tort trial erred in denying a motion for new trial
based on the alleged inadequacy of the verdict); Langston v. Langston, 366 Md. 490, 494
(2001) (issue considered by the in banc panel was whether the trial judge, when considering
a post-trial motion to reduce alimony, erred in reducing alimony retroactive to a date prior
to when the request for reduction was filed); Dabrowski v. Dondalski, 320 Md. 392, 395
(1990) (per curiam) (decision concerned whether the judge’s denial, inter alia, of a motion
7
In Washabaugh, 285 Md. at 397 n.2, the Court lists the first eleven cases that
concerned in banc appeals. Not counting Washabaugh, there have since been about twelve
additional cases of that sort, the latest of which was Remson, 206 Md. App. 53.
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for a new trial was a final appealable order); Bethesda Title & Escrow, LLC v. Gochnour, 197
Md. App. 450, 451 (2011) (appellant’s unsuccessful effort, before an in banc panel, to
reverse a circuit court’s denial of a motion to vacate default judgment, barred a subsequent
appeal to the Court of Special Appeals). In the cases just cited, the issues decided by the in
banc panel, and later by an appellate court, did not “stem from a merits trial.” Instead, the
issues resolved stemmed from either pre-trial or post-trial decisions by the circuit court judge
who initially decided the matter.
In support of her argument, Ms. Berg relies primarily on Langston, supra, which she
claims has an almost identical “procedural posture” as the case at hand, i.e., “an appeal from
a judge’s final ruling from a post-trial hearing in a family law case.” Ms. Berg also relies on
Dean v. State, 302 Md. 493, 497 (1985), where the Court said that there is “no different
standard” of appealability to a court in banc than from an appeal to the Court of Special
Appeals. Ms. Berg also places reliance on language found in Board v. Haberlin, 320 Md.
at 406, where the Court said: “The purpose of . . . [Art. IV, section 22] was to provide a
substitute or alternate for an appeal to the Court of Appeals or, in recent years, to the Court
of Special Appeals.” The Haberlin Court also said:
In a majority of circuit court cases, an appeal from a final judgment to
the Court of Special Appeals is authorized by § 12-301 of the Courts and
Judicial Proceedings Article, and there are no other statutory provisions
limiting or modifying the right of appeal under § 12-301. As to these ordinary
cases, Art. IV, § 22, of the Constitution and Rule 2-551 provide an alternate
avenue of appeal to a court in banc.
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The General Assembly, however, will often enact statutes providing for
a limited or extraordinary appeal in special cases. For example, while appeals
in circuit court criminal cases are taken in the usual manner and go to the
Court of Special Appeals, an appeal in a case where the death sentence has
been imposed is automatic and goes to the Court of Appeals. Code (1957,
1987 Repl Vol.), Art. 27, § 414; Rule 8-306.
Id. at 407 (emphasis added).
The in banc panel in this case agreed with Ms. Berg and held that within the meaning
of Haberlin, this was an “ordinary case,” and therefore, because she could have taken an
appeal (from the circuit court’s final decision regarding the application of interest) to this
Court, she therefore had the option of taking an appeal to an in banc panel.
In his reply brief, Mr. Berg argues that the cases cited by Ms. Berg, although they
discuss decisions from an in banc panel dealing with post trial decisions of the circuit court,
are not binding because none of the cases discussed the jurisdictional issues he now raises.
He words that argument as follows:
In essence, what Ms. Berg contends is that because people have been
making the same legal error for a great many years that error has somehow
effectively become the law of the land through a variety of adverse
constitutional possession [sic]. Yet this is not how the law operates where the
underlying mandate is one of a constitutional - and not common law - variety.
There is a method through which the Maryland Constitution may be amended,
and the presentation of a string citation to misguided case law is not a part of
that method. See, e.g., MD Constitution, Art. 14 (setting forth the mechanisms
through which the Maryland Constitution may be amended).
(Emphasis added, footnote omitted.)
Although the issue is not outcome-determinative in this case, it is plain to us that the
cases cited by Ms. Berg (in which litigants filed in banc appeals objecting to decisions
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relating to rulings concerning post trial motions) were not wrongly decided, at least as far as
in banc jurisdiction was concerned. Because section 22 allows in banc appeals from any
“decision or determination” where a trial has been conducted by less than three judges,8 in
banc appeals from post trial decisions or determinations by less than three judges are
allowed.
B. The Meaning of the Word “Trial” as Used in Article IV, Section 22
What we have said in Part IV-A is dicta because, even if we were to assume,
arguendo, that Mr. Berg is correct when he argues that an in banc appeal is not allowed from
a decision or determination made concerning a post trial motion, Mr. Berg would not benefit.
We say this because the issue here present was decided based on what occurred at a trial.
As mentioned earlier, when construing language used in a Constitution, we first look
“to the normal, plain meaning” of the language. Remson, 206 Md. App. at 61, quoting Davis
v. State, 383 Md. 599, 604 (2004).
Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed. 2009) defines a “trial” as “[a] formal judicial
examination of evidence and determination of legal claims in an adversary proceeding.”
Blackstone gave a similar, but more succinct definition: “the examination of the matter of
fact[.]” See 3 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 330 (1825). See
also Miller v. Tobin, 18 F. 609, 616 (D. Or., 1883) (“‘Trial’ is a common-law term, and is
8
Maryland Rule 2-551(a) states that “a party may have a judgment or determination
of any point or question reviewed by a court in banc,” when such a review “is permitted by
the Maryland Constitution[.]”
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commonly used to denote that step in an action by which issues or questions of fact are
decided.”).
In 42A Words and Phrases 107-146 (Thomson Reuters/West 2008), several hundred
cases are summarized. In those cases, courts have considered the meaning of the word
“trial” as used in various documents, including the U.S. Constitution, state constitutions and
various statutes, rules of procedure and contracts. Many of those cases utilized the common
law definition of “trial” that in substance, is the same as in Black’s and Miller, both supra.
This too is the normal, plain meaning of the word “trial.”
In Smith v. State, 115 Md. App. 614, 619-20 (1997), we were called upon to decide
whether a probation revocation hearing is a separate trial within the meaning of the Maryland
Post Conviction Act, which was then codified in Article 27, § 645(a)(2)(i) of the Md. Code
(1957, 1996 Repl. Vol). Art. 27, § 645A(a)(2)(i) provided: “A person may file only one
petition arising out of each trial, for relief under this [post conviction statute].” After an
extensive review of the legislative history of the Post Conviction Act, we held that a
probation revocation hearing is a “trial” within the meaning of the Act. Id. at 625.
Under Mr. Berg’s interpretation of Art. IV, section 22, “trial” means a “merits trial”
that results in a final appealable judgment; any subsequent proceeding, according to
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appellant, is not a trial even when, as here, a court makes a decision based on evidence
presented in open court.9
In the case sub judice, we know that the framers intended in banc appeals to be a
vehicle by which litigants could save money, which accounts for the nickname “the poor
person’s appeal.” See Remson, 206 Md. App. at 60 (quoting Washabaugh, 285 Md. at 396,
and citing Roth v. The House of Refuge, 31 Md. at 333 (1869)). As any litigator knows, many
important issues are resolved by post trial motions at which the court decides facts based on
evidence. That is what happened here and it is what happened in Smith, supra, where a
probation revocation hearing was deemed to be a trial.
Because the reduction of litigation expenses was one of the primary goals of section
22, we can think of no reason why the framers could possibly have intended to give the word
“trial” a meaning so narrow as to restrict in banc appeals in the manner espoused by Mr.
Berg. Moreover, we can think of no persuasive reason why the framers would have intended
that the word “trial” would not be given its common law meaning.10 Therefore, we interpret
9
Under the Maryland Rules of Procedure, a trial need not dispose of all issues in a
case. The Rules allows a court to order a separate trial “of any separate issue[.]” See Rule
2-503(b).
10
Judge Alvey introduced section 22 at the 1867 Constitutional Convention. He was
one of the judges who decided Costigin, supra. The Costigin Court certainly did not give the
word “trial” a narrow meaning when it stated, less than twenty years after section 22 was
adopted, that in banc appeals were intended as a substitution of the right to file an appeal to
the Court of Appeals. 65 Md. at 124. Certainly Judge Alvey and his judicial colleagues
would have known that so long as a final judgment had been entered, an appeal to the Court
of Appeals was allowed from judgments entered long after the merits trial was held.
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the word “trial” as used in section 22 as meaning “that step in an action by which issues or
questions of fact are decided.” Miller, 18 F. at 616. Applying that definition, a trial was held
on October 1, 2014 by the circuit court when it was called upon to decide, based on evidence
introduced, how Mr. Berg’s payments on the monetary award should be applied. Thus the
in banc court did have jurisdiction to decide the issue presented to it by Ms. Berg.
Mr. Berg asserts that if we adopt the meaning of “trial” discussed above, then various
provisions of the Maryland Declaration of Rights “would be utterly without limitation or
meaning.” In this regard, he directs our attention to Article 5(a) and Article 23 of the
Declaration of Rights, which, insofar as here pertinent, grant inhabitants of Maryland “[t]he
right of trial by Jury of all issues of fact in civil proceedings in the several Courts of Law in
this State, where the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $15,000[.]” There is no merit
in this argument. Our decision concerns what constitutes a trial: it has nothing to do with
whether a litigant is entitled to a jury trial. Such entitlement depends on whether 1) the issue
arises out of a civil proceeding at law; 2) whether the amount in controversy exceeds the sum
of $15,000; and 3) whether a timely request for a jury trial is made.11
11
Mr. Berg also claims that if we give the word “trial” its common law meaning, then
he would have had a right to a jury trial concerning the issue of how interest should be
allocated. He provides no explanation as to why this is true - which it plainly is not because
the issue did not arise in an action at law. See Declaration of Rights Article 5(a) and Article
23. In Maryland, the right to a jury trial exists only in cases that under common law could
be tried by a court of law as opposed to a court of equity.
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V.
OTHER CONTENTIONS
As mentioned earlier, Ms. Berg cites cases that state that under ordinary
circumstances, an in banc court has jurisdiction to hear any matter that could be heard by this
Court. If this is literally true, this would mean that an in banc court could hear cases where
no trial was even conducted.
Mr. Berg contends that when construing section 22, we cannot treat that section as if
the words “[w]here any trial is conducted” did not exist. This is an interesting point, but one
that we shall not address because the resolution of that issue would not affect the outcome
of this case. Nevertheless, we can imagine that such an issue could arise in the future when,
for instance, an in banc panel is asked to decide whether a motion for summary judgment
should have been granted, or whether a circuit court judge erred in granting a motion to
dismiss a complaint for failure to state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted.
Members of the bar should be aware that such an issue lurks.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE
PAID BY APPELLANT.
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