Phlonda Peay v. Reginald Barnett
Case No. 1726, September Term, 2016
HEADNOTES
DEFECTS IN SERVICE OF PROCESS – “MISTAKE” UNDER MARYLAND
RULE 2-535(b)
A “mistake” under Md. Rule 2-535(b) refers only to a “jurisdictional mistake,” which
includes lack of personal jurisdiction arising out of a defect in service of process.
“MISTAKE” UNDER MARYLAND RULE 2-535(b) – “DILIGENCE AND GOOD
FAITH” TEST
The equitable considerations of “diligence and good faith,” do not apply to “jurisdictional
mistakes” under Md. Rule 2-535(b) that would render a default judgment void. Once the
circuit court determines that the issuing court exceeded either its in personam jurisdiction
or its subject matter jurisdiction, the court must find the prior judgment invalid.
PERSONAL JURISDICTION – SERVICE OF PROCESS -- WAIVER
To determine whether a defaulting defendant waived his or her right to challenge the circuit
court’s in personam jurisdiction, the circuit court should consider (1) whether the plaintiff
made a good faith effort to serve the defendant and whether the plaintiff reasonably should
have known that service would be challenged; (2) whether the defaulting defendant had
actual, sufficient notice of the proceedings and his or her opportunity to defend prior to the
court’s final judgment; and (3) whether the defaulting defendant’s inaction after gaining
such knowledge rendered the plaintiff unable to prosecute his or her case.
Circuit Court for Baltimore City
Case No. 24-C-08-001241
REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 1726
September Term, 2016
______________________________________
PHLONDA PEAY
v.
REGINALD BARNETT
______________________________________
Eyler, Deborah S.,
Berger,
Zarnoch, Robert A.
(Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
JJ.
______________________________________
Opinion by Zarnoch, J.
______________________________________
Filed: March 29, 2018
On its surface, this case seems to involve a simple question -- whether the Circuit
Court for Baltimore City correctly denied a defendant’s motion to vacate a default
judgment against her where there was a defect in service of process, but where she likely
had actual notice of the proceedings and did not diligently challenge the judgment for more
than six years. Logic would suggest an obvious yes. However, relevant caselaw blocks an
easy answer here. For the U.S. Supreme Court has said that “[a] defendant is always free
to ignore judicial proceedings, risk a default judgment, and then challenge that judgment
on jurisdictional grounds in a collateral proceeding.” Ins. Corp. of Ireland, Ltd. v.
Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinée, 456 U.S. 694, 706 (1982). And the Court of Appeals
of Maryland, relying on the proposition that there can be no valid proceeding against a
defendant in the absence of proper service, has allowed a challenge four years after entry
of a default judgment and six years after actual knowledge of the litigation by the defaulting
party. See Little v. Miller, 220 Md. 309 (1959). Further complicating this increasingly
complicated issue is a trend in the caselaw -- particularly in federal courts -- making it
easier to find that a defaulting defendant has waived personal jurisdiction by his or her
conduct. See Ins. Corp. of Ireland, supra, 456 U.S. at 703-05. In reliance upon this
authority, we conclude that in this case, the circuit court, rather than focusing on post-
judgment diligence, should have considered whether the appellant, Phlonda Peay, has
waived personal jurisdiction. Thus, we reverse and remand this case for further
proceedings.
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2006, appellee Reginald Barnett, who was an inmate at the Maryland
Correctional Adjustment Center (“Super Max”) was seriously injured after several officers
entered his cell and shackled him. Barnett was taken to the hospital in Super Max, and
then transported to an outside hospital to have his wounds sutured, and ultimately, was
transferred to a different prison facility.1 On February 19, 2008, Barnett filed a complaint
in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City against several officers whom Barnett alleged were
involved in the incident.2 The defendants included appellant Phlonda Peay, who was a
captain at Super Max at the time of Barnett’s injuries. Although Barnett alleged that only
some of the officers were directly involved, he asserted that Peay, along with three others,
approved and supervised the other officers’ conduct.
1
Before a lawsuit was filed, a number of actions occurred on the administrative front.
A departmental Internal Investigation Unit investigated the incident as an “Excessive Use
of Force” complaint filed by Barnett. Five employees were named, but not Peay. On June
20, 2006, the unit found that four employees used excessive force and that Officer Owen
failed to stop unnecessary use of force. As a result, the four employees were terminated
and Lt. Owen was demoted to sergeant. On August 28, 2006, Barnett filed a complaint with
the Inmate Grievance Commission. That complaint was dismissed because of Barnett’s
failure to seek relief through the “Administrative Remedy Procedure” of the Department
of Correction, a decision not challenged by Barnett.
2
Barnett’s complaint named as defendants the State of Maryland, the Department of
Public Safety and Correctional Services (DPSCS), the Division of Correction, six named
officers at Super Max, including Peay, as well as four unnamed officers. In total, Barnett
named thirteen defendants. The complaint recited that the defendants were given timely
notice pursuant to the Maryland Tort Claims Act, Md. Code (1984, 2017 Repl. Vol.), State
Gov’t Art., § 12-106. The Attorney General’s office accepted service for the State and the
agency but apparently was not asked to accept service for the “officers” under Md. Rule 2-
124(k).
2
According to the docket, Peay was originally listed as “Capt. Phlander Peay.” The
complaint stated that Peay and the five other officers had the mailing address of the DPSCS
in Baltimore City. On May 20, 2008, a notice of a motions hearing was mailed to Peay
and the other five officers via DPSCS. A similar notice was sent to the same address on
June 2, 2008, and another on June 12, 2008 and June 19, 2008. On July 9, 2008, Barnett
filed a request to defer dismissal, apparently because he had not yet been able to serve the
six individual officers. The court granted the request and deferred dismissal until
December 31, 2008. Another notice of a motions hearing was mailed to Peay at DPSCS
on August 11, 2008, and again on September 2, 3, and 5, 2008. After the court denied the
third motion to dismiss filed by the State of Maryland, DPSCS, and the Department of
Public Safety, more notices were sent to Peay on September 22 and October 22, 2008.
A private process server went to Peay’s Owings Mills apartment on December 25,
2008 to serve Peay with the complaint and a summons. Peay’s sister, Donna Dingle,
answered the door. The process server filed an affidavit on December 31, 2008 stating that
Peay’s “sister and co-resident” had been served with the papers at Peay’s Owings Mills
home address in Baltimore County. Peay did not file an answer to the complaint. The
docket indicates that after Dingle was served at Peay’s home address, the court’s notices
were sent to Peay with her correct name, often to both her home address as well as to
DPSCS.
Reminder notices were mailed to all of the defendants on May 14, 2009. The trial
was set to begin on August 3, 2009. On June 2, 2009, Barnett filed a request for an order
of default against the five remaining defendants, including Peay. On July 1, 2009, the
3
circuit court entered a default order against each of the defendants and notice of the default
order was mailed to Peay’s Owings Mills address.3 On August 7, 2009, the circuit court
directed the Clerk of the Court to enter judgment in favor of Barnett, and against the five
remaining defendants for $250,000 in compensatory non-economic damages, and
$250,000 in punitive damages. All five defendants were held jointly and severally liable
for a total of $500,000. Copies of the final judgment were mailed on the same day.
From January of 2010 through June of 2015, Barnett filed multiple requests for writs
of garnishment of wages against the defendants’ employers, including a writ of
garnishment to Peay’s then-employer, the University of Maryland Medical System, which
was served on or around on June 1, 2015. Approximately nine months after the writ was
filed, on March 28, 2016, Peay took action for the first time in this case by filing a motion
to set aside the judgment of default and requesting a hearing. Peay’s motion included two
affidavits and a copy of her lease during the period when Peay’s sister, Dingle, was served.
The first was the sworn statement of Peay, stating that Dingle was only visiting Peay and
their mother, who lived on the floor above Peay, and that Dingle did not live with Peay on
December 25, 2008 or any other relevant time. The second was an affidavit from Dingle,
stating that she did not live with Peay at the time of service and did not give her the papers
3
On July 14, 2009, the court granted the motion for summary judgment filed by the
State of Maryland, DPSCS, and the Division of Correction. The motion argued that Barnett
had failed to state a cause of action against the State defendants and that he had not
exhausted his administrative remedies. The motion was granted for reasons stated on the
record at a hearing. The transcript of that hearing is not included in the record of this case.
Thus, we are not sure of the grounds for the granting of the motion.
4
that were served on her on December 25, 2008. Peay’s lease indicated that it was effective
at the time the papers were served on her sister and that Peay was the only named tenant in
the residence.
On May 25, 2016, the circuit court held a hearing on Peay’s motion to set aside the
judgment. In a July 15, 2016 memorandum opinion, the circuit court found that service on
Peay’s sister was invalid, and that this constituted a “mistake” under Md. Rule 2-535(b).
However, the circuit judge denied the motion because Peay had not diligently sought to set
aside the judgment. Peay appealed to this Court.
DISCUSSION
This case requires consideration of procedural rules relating to service of process,
personal jurisdiction, the entry of a default judgment, and a circuit court’s discretion to set
aside or revise an order of default. Typically, we review the circuit court’s decision
whether to grant a motion to revise a judgment pursuant to Md. Rule4 2-535(b)5 under an
abuse of discretion standard. See Rule 2-535(b); Wells v. Wells, 168 Md. App. 382, 394
(2006) (“The existence of a factual predicate of fraud, mistake, or irregularity, necessary
to support vacating a judgment under Rule 2-535(b), is a question of law. If the factual
predicate exists, the court’s decision on the motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion.”)
(Citation omitted).
4
Hereinafter, all references to a “Rule” refer to the Maryland Rules, unless otherwise
stated.
5
We review the language of Rule 2-535(b) in detail below.
5
The basis of Peay’s motion to set aside the judgment is that she was not properly
served with notice of the proceedings. Rule 2-121(a) governs the proper method of service
of process, and requires the following:
Service of process may be made within this State or, when
authorized by the law of this State, outside of this State (1) by
delivering to the person to be served a copy of the summons,
complaint, and all other papers filed with it; (2) if the person
to be served is an individual, by leaving a copy of the
summons, complaint, and all other papers filed with it at
the individual’s dwelling house or usual place of abode with
a resident of suitable age and discretion; or (3) by mailing to
the person to be served a copy of the summons, complaint, and
all other papers filed with it by certified mail requesting:
“Restricted Delivery--show to whom, date, address of
delivery.” Service by certified mail under this Rule is complete
upon delivery. [ . . . ]
Thus, because service was not made on Peay, herself, to be valid, it must have been
left “with a resident of suitable age and discretion” at Peay’s “dwelling house or usual place
of abode.” Rule 2-121(a). The circuit court’s decision “[w]hether a person has been served
with process is essentially a question of fact.” Wilson v. Md. Dep’t of Env’t, 217 Md. App.
271, 286 (2014) (Alteration in original) (quoting Harris v. Womack, 75 Md. App. 580, 585
(1988)).
A. The Two-Step Default Judgment Process
Rule 2-613 governs the default judgment process. An underlying purpose of the
default judgment rule is to provide the plaintiff “a means of relief against the delay and
neglect of defendants.” See Smith-Myers Corp. v. Sherill, 209 Md. App. 494, 508 (2013)
(quoting Glass v. Glass, 284 Md. 169, 172 (1978)); see also Md. Rule 2-613. The Rule
provides the circuit court with broad discretion to vacate an order of default before it
6
becomes an enrolled, final judgment. See Md. Rule 2-613(a). Additionally, prior to 1984,
Maryland’s default judgment process provided the circuit court with the power to enter a
default judgment once the time period for which a defendant was required to plead expired;
that judgment was considered final and the defendant could file an immediate appeal, even
before the court determined damages. See Franklin Credit Mgmt. Corp. v. Nefflen, 436
Md. 300, 313 (2013) (hereinafter Franklin Credit II).6
In 1984, the Rules were changed to reflect a two-step default process. See id. at 317.
Today the Rule provides that, once “the time for pleading has expired” and a defendant has
not pled, upon the plaintiff’s request, “the court . . . shall enter an order of default.” Md.
Rule 2-613(b). The remainder of the Rule provides, in pertinent part, the following:
(c) Promptly upon entry of an order of default, the clerk shall
issue a notice informing the defendant that the order of default
has been entered and that the defendant may move to vacate
the order within 30 days after its entry. [ . . . ]
(d) The defendant may move to vacate the order of default
within 30 days after its entry. The motion shall state the reasons
for the failure to plead and the legal and factual basis for the
defense to the claim.
(e) If the court finds that there is a substantial and sufficient
basis for an actual controversy as to the merits of the action and
that it is equitable to excuse the failure to plead, the court shall
vacate the order.
6
As the Court explained in Franklin Credit II, the problem with the old framework
was that, in addition to filing an appeal, “a defaulting defendant also could have moved to
set aside the judgment of default under former Rule 625 (1983), which permitted the court
to exercise its revisory power over the judgment for a period of thirty days.” Id. (Footnote
omitted). Once the court conducted further proceedings and made a determination of
damages, the defendant in default could appeal again, this time based on the court’s
damages award. Id. at 314.
7
(f) If a motion was not filed under section (d) of this Rule or
was filed and denied, the court, upon request, may enter a
judgment by default . . . , if it is satisfied (1) that it has
jurisdiction to enter the judgment and (2) that the notice
required by section (c) of this Rule was mailed. [ . . . ]
Md. Rule 2-613(c)-(f).
Under the current process, after the time for pleading has expired, the circuit court
enters an order of default, which is “interlocutory in nature and can be revised by the court
at any time up until the point a final judgment is entered.” Bliss v. Wiatrowski, 125 Md.
App. 258, 265 (Citations omitted), cert. denied, 354 Md. 571 (1999). “Because the
defendant has an opportunity, under section (d) . . . to vacate the order of default that, in
effect, is an adverse finding on liability, the defendant does not enjoy the same opportunity
once the default judgment is entered.” Franklin Credit Mgmt. Corp. v. Nefflen, 208 Md.
App. 712, 733 (2012) (hereinafter Franklin Credit I) (quoting Wells, 168 Md. App. at 393),
aff’d, Franklin Credit II, supra, 436 Md. 300.
At the expiration of thirty days, if the defendant does not move to vacate or the
motion is denied, and the court “is satisfied (1) that it has jurisdiction to enter the judgment
and (2) that the notice required by section (c) of this Rule was mailed,” the court may
determine damages and enter a default judgment. See Rule 2-613(f). The default judgment
is the circuit court’s final determination of both liability and damages.7 See Franklin Credit
7
Accordingly, only upon the entry of a default judgment may an appeal be taken. See
Rule 1-202 (defining a “judgment” as “any order of court final in its nature entered pursuant
to these rules”). This process “was intended to avoid the ‘piecemeal appeal’ issue that
arose under the former rules.” Franklin Credit II, 436 Md. at 317 (quoting Banegura v.
Taylor, 312 Md. 609, 618 (1988)). The purpose of the limited revisory power in default
8
I, 208 Md. App. at 731-33 (“[A] default judgment is a final judgment for which the court’s
revisory power is limited.”).
In her motion to set aside the default judgment, Peay primarily advanced two
contentions to justify setting aside the default judgment: (1) she was not properly served,
because her sister, Dingle, was not a “resident” under Rule 2-121 at the time of attempted
service; and (2) that she “has a meritorious defense to the claim and to a judgment entered
against her by default,” because she was not present when Barnett claims he was assaulted
by officers at Super Max. Peay’s bases for setting aside the judgment mirror the criteria
required under Rule 2-613(c) for a motion to vacate an order of default within thirty days
after entry of the order of default. However, Peay filed her motion to set aside the default
well beyond the thirty-day window after entry of the order. To give the circuit court the
power to vacate the default judgment, therefore, another rule must apply.
B. The Circuit Court’s Revisory Power Under Rule 2-535(b)
Rule 2-535(a) provides broad discretion to the circuit court to revise its judgment
within thirty days after entry.8 However, Rule 2-613(g) expressly restricts the circuit court
judgment cases is “to avoid giving the defendant in default two opportunities to set [the
judgment of liability] aside.” Franklin Credit I, 208 Md. App. at 733 (quoting Curry v.
Hillcrest Clinic, Inc., 337 Md. 412, 427 (1995)).
8
Rule 2-535(a) provides, in pertinent part:
On motion of any party filed within 30 days after entry of
judgment, the court may exercise revisory power and control
over the judgment and, if the action was tried before the court,
may take any action that it could have taken under Rule 2-534.
9
from exercising its revisory powers under 2-535(a) in default judgment cases. See Rule 2-
613(g). We reviewed our caselaw explaining this restriction in Franklin Credit I:
[U]nlike an order of default, . . . a default judgment is a final
judgment for which the court’s revisory power is limited.
[Bliss, 125 Md. App. at 265]. Accord [Wells, 168 Md. App. at
393] (“[W]hen a default judgment is entered, the court retains
the broad revisory power only ‘as to the relief granted.’ “);
Holly Hall Publ’n, Inc. v. County Banking and Trust Co., 147
Md. App. 251, 259 n. 6, 807 A.2d 1201, cert. denied, 371 Md.
614, 810 A.2d 961 (2002) (“a default judgment is not subject
to the revisory power under 2–535(a), except as to the relief
granted.”).
208 Md. App. at 732-33.
Despite Rule 2-613(g)’s restriction on the court’s revisory power under Rule 2-
535(a), the Rule leaves open the court’s power to revise the judgment under 2-535(b). See
Wells, 168 Md. App. at 394 (“The narrow revisory power of the court under Rule 2-
535(b) is unaffected by Rule 2-613(g).”). Subsection (b) provides: “On motion of any
party filed at any time, the court may exercise revisory power and control over the judgment
in case of fraud, mistake, or irregularity.” Rule 2-535(b); see Pickett v. Noba, Inc., 114
Md. App. 552, 556–57 (1997). Once the circuit court enters its default judgment in
compliance with Rule 2-613, therefore, that judgment “may be stricken or revised only
upon a showing of fraud, mistake, or irregularity in conformance with Md. Rule 2-535(b).”
Dir. of Fin. of Baltimore City v. Harris, 90 Md. App. 506, 511 (1992); see also Wells, 168
Md. App. at 394 (quoting Md. Rule 2-535(b)) (“That revisory power [under Rule 2-535(b)],
10
which the court has after a judgment is enrolled . . . requires a showing of ‘fraud, mistake,
or irregularity.’”).9
Unlike the court’s power to vacate a default order under Rule 2-613(c), Rule 2-
535(b) provides the circuit court’s power to revise a default judgment after the judgment
becomes final. See Thacker v. Hale, 146 Md. App. 203, 231 (2002) (quoting Eliason v.
Comm’r of Pers., 230 Md. 56, 59 (1962)) (explaining that Rule 2-535(b) “embraces all
the power the courts of this State have to revise and control enrolled judgments and
decrees”). Additionally, “[a] motion may be treated as a motion to revise under Md. Rule
2–535 even if it is not labeled as such.” Pickett, 114 Md. App. at 557 (Citation omitted).
For purposes of this appeal, therefore, and as the circuit court did below, we treat Peay’s
motion to set aside the default judgment as a motion to revise under Rule 2-535(b).
The court’s revisory power under subsection (b) “is an exception to the general
rule.” See Pelletier v. Burson, 213 Md. App. 284, 290 (2013). As such, “Maryland courts
have narrowly defined and strictly applied the terms fraud, mistake, [and] irregularity, in
order to ensure finality of judgments.” Id. (Alteration in original) (quoting Thacker, 146
Md. App. at 217). Our policy favoring the finality of judgments, therefore, guides our
application of the court’s Rule 2-535(b) revisory power. To ensure the finality of
9
Further, “[t]he touchstones for applying Md. Rule 2–535 are further illuminated by
[Md. Code (1974, 2013 Repl. Vol.), Cts. & Jud. Proc. Art. (“CJP”),] § 6-408.” Powell v.
Breslin, 430 Md. 52, 70-71 (2013). Pursuant to CJP § 6-408, in addition to “fraud, mistake,
or irregularity,” another ground for the court’s revisory power is the “failure of an
employee of the court or of the clerk’s office to perform a duty required by statute or rule.”
CJP § 6-408.
11
judgments, the movant must carry his or her significant burden of proof -- to establish
“[t]he existence of fraud, mistake, or irregularity . . . by ‘clear and convincing evidence.’”
Id. (quoting Das v. Das, 133 Md. App. 1, 18 (2000)).
Peay did not argue in her motion to set aside the default judgment that any particular
ground under Rule 2-535(b) applied.10 The primary assertion in Peay’s motion relating to
a “fraud, mistake, or irregularity” was that her sister, Dingle, was not a “resident” at Peay’s
home as required by Rule 2-121(a), and therefore, that she was not properly served.
Because she was not properly served, Peay argues that the circuit court had no personal
jurisdiction over her, and therefore, the default judgment is void.
1. Improper Service of Process, if Not Waived, Constitutes a “Mistake”
Under Rule 2-535(b).
We have previously held that “[i]mproper service of process is a proper ground to
strike a judgment under Rule 2–535.” Pickett, 114 Md. App. at 558 (citing Miles v.
Hamilton, 269 Md. 708 (1973)). Based on the Court of Appeals’ and this Court’s prior
interpretations of Rule 2-535(b), the only ground pertinent to the facts of this case is that
of “mistake.” A “mistake” under the Rule refers only to a “jurisdictional mistake.” See
Chapman v. Kamara, 356 Md. 426, 436 (1999) (citing Claibourne v. Willis, 347 Md. 684
(1997)) (“Mistake is limited to a jurisdictional mistake.”). The Court of Appeals elaborated
10
Peay’s motion did include, however, an assertion that resembles one requirement to
invoke the court’s revisory power under Rule 2-535(b) -- that the movant show that he or
she “has a meritorious defense to the complaint.” See Harris, 90 Md. App. at 514 (citing
Shaw v. Adams, 263 Md. 294, 296 (1971)). However, the failure to assert a meritorious
claim or defense would not bar the defendant’s request for relief from a void judgment.
12
on this principle in Chapman that “[t]he typical kind of mistake occurs when a judgment
has been entered in the absence of valid service of process; hence the court never obtains
personal jurisdiction over a party.” Id. (quoting Tandra S. v. Tyrone W., 336 Md. 303, 317
(1994)).
Peay filed with her motion to set aside the judgment two affidavits indicating that
Dingle did not live with Peay at the time of service. Peay also attached a copy of her lease
at the time the process server attempted service, which listed her as the only lessee of the
apartment. Dingle’s affidavit does not indicate whether she told the process server that she
did or did not live at Peay’s address, and neither party put forth any evidence to explain
why the process server’s affidavit indicated that notice was served on Peay’s “sister and
co-resident.” Although Peay’s sister stated that she “did not give to [Peay] any paperwork
which was served on [her]” at Peay’s address, Peay has never asserted whether she actually
received the papers, and neither explained what happened to them after they were given to
Dingle at Peay’s home on Christmas Day. Both Peay and Dingle affirm in their affidavits,
however, that Dingle did not live at Peay’s home and, therefore, was not a “resident” under
Rule 2-121(a).
In this case, the circuit court found that Peay was not properly served because the
papers were served on Dingle, who the court found was not a “resident” under Rule 2-
121(a) at the time of attempted service.11 Assuming Peay did not waive the right to raise
11
In his brief, Barnett argues that service on Dingle was proper because the use of the
word “resident” in Md. Rule 2-121 “indicates an intent that the person served must only be
present at the abode rather than living there.” This is contrary to the law generally. See
62B Am. Jur. 2d Process § 193 (2018) (“[A] short-term houseguest is not a person residing
13
the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction or insufficiency of service of process, this defect
would typically constitute the prototypical “jurisdictional mistake” under Rule 2-535(b).
See Chapman, 356 Md. at 436.
2. Mere Lack of Diligence Does Not Prevent a Court From Revising a
Void Judgment.
Once the circuit court determined that the defect in service of process constituted a
“mistake,” it proceeded to address a second hurdle that a party seeking relief generally
must cross if requesting revision under Rule 2-535(b). That is, the moving party must
prove that she exercised ordinary diligence and acted in good faith. See Capobianco v.
Gordon, 19 Md. App. 662, 668 (1974) (Citations omitted).12 The “diligence and good faith
test” emerged in our courts of equity more than a century ago and developed alongside the
requirement for “strong” evidence of fraud, mistake, or irregularity to justify the revision
of an enrolled judgment. See Craig v. Wroth, 47 Md. 281, 282 (1877).
In this case, the circuit court applied the “diligence and good faith test” and
concluded that, although Peay had established that a “mistake” had occurred in the defect
in the usual place of abode of the person to be served . . . . Abode service is improper where
the papers are left with the defendant’s daughter-in-law who is only a visitor.”). However,
at first blush, some support for Barnett’s position is found in Plushner v. Mills, 429 A.2d
444 (R.I. 1981). There, the defendant had actual notice of the lawsuit and process was
served on his daughter while she was at his residence, even though she resided elsewhere.
Id. at 446. However, the daughter possessed a key to the defendant’s residence, and was
placed in charge of the dwelling in his absence. Id. at 445. Given a broad view of residency,
the court found that the daughter was a member of the defendant’s household. Id. at 446.
No such facts are present here. In our view, the circuit court correctly concluded that
service on Peay’s sister did not comply with Maryland’s Rules.
12
The movant must also show that he or she has a meritorious defense, but we need
not discuss that requirement here.
14
of service of process, she had not demonstrated that she exercised diligence and good faith
in bringing the motion. The court emphasized that Peay had waited six years to move to
vacate the default judgment, “failed to even allege that she did not receive subsequent
Motions for Order of Default, an Order of Default, a Motion for Default Judgment and a
Default Judgment,” and that she “inexplicably waited until March 28, 2016, nearly nine (9)
months after the writ [of garnishment] was issued, to challenge any of the underlying
judgments.”13 The court concluded:
Because Defendant Peay is unable to establish any basis for
failing to respond to any of the notices and motions sent to her
dwelling, all seeking a judgment against her, and her failure to
participate or challenge these orders for six years, there is no
basis to determine that Defendant Peay acted in good faith or
with due diligence.
It is clear from our courts’ prior analyses of grounds under Rule 2-535(b), however,
that the equitable considerations of “diligence and good faith” do not apply to
“jurisdictional mistakes” that would render a default judgment void. This conclusion holds
true for a mistake involving either a mistake of “jurisdiction over the person -- obtained by
proper service of process,” or “jurisdiction over the subject matter -- the cause of action
and the relief sought.” See Thacker, 146 Md. App. at 225. Once the circuit court
determines that the issuing court exceeded either its in personam jurisdiction or its subject
matter jurisdiction, the court must find the prior judgment invalid.
13
A reasonable assumption underlying the circuit court’s findings is that Peay had
actual knowledge of the proceedings.
15
Particularly in earlier discussions of the “diligence and good faith” test, our courts
have been careful to exclude instances in which the court issuing the default judgment
lacked personal jurisdiction. In one of the Court of Appeals’ earliest opinions highlighting
this exclusion, it said, “where the process has been regularly served upon a party. . . , a
strong case must be presented, to justify the [c]ourt in striking out the judgment after the
term has passed.” Anderson v. Graff, 41 Md. 601, 608 (1875). Refusing to vacate the
judgment, the Court emphasized, “It must not be lost sight of, that the process was regularly
served upon the appellant as garnishee, by the sheriff.” Id. at 609 (quoting Freidenrich v.
Moore, 24 Md. 295, 308 (1866)). Similarly, the Court of Appeals in Pumpian v. E.L. Rice
& Co. reiterated that only “[w]here [the] process has been regularly served upon the
defendant” will the facts of an alleged “fraud, deceit, surprise, or irregularity” become
relevant. 135 Md. 364, 109 A. 71, 72 (1919) (quoting Foxwell v. Foxwell, 122 Md. 272, 89
A. 494, 496 (1914)). In Little, the Court of Appeals responded to the assertion that the
defendant was required to show that he “acted in good faith and with reasonable diligence”:
Both the plaintiffs and the trial court appear to have overlooked
the distinction between a defect in the proceedings which goes
to the jurisdiction of the court and other grounds upon which
the reopening of a judgment may be sought. If, for example, a
defendant learns that a judgment against him has been obtained
by fraud or surprise and he does nothing for a long time to have
it stricken out, he may well lose any right to relief which he
might have had; but if, for some defect in service, the court
lacked jurisdiction to proceed to judgment, quite a different
situation is presented.
220 Md. at 314 (Citations omitted). The facts in Little to some extent mirror those here.
As the Court of Appeals noted:
16
[The circuit court] evidently found that the defendant knew of
this suit since some time in March, 1952, and thought that he
did nothing about the suit or the judgment until 1958. The
judge then concluded as a matter of law that these findings
would bar the striking out of the judgment at the late date when
such relief was sought . . . .
In this we think he was in error. Knowledge on the part of the
defendant of the pendency of the suit and his consequent
opportunity to come in and defend against the claim asserted,
do not, of themselves, cure the defect of lack of personal
service, and do not bar relief against a judgment obtained
without personal service on the defendant.
Id. at 316.14
In Tyrone W., we emphasized the exclusion of these circumstances from the
application of the “diligence and good faith” test in the following way:
A circuit court’s decision about whether to grant a party relief
from a judgment (except from a judgment that is void as
having been entered without jurisdiction . . . ) on one of the
grounds available for doing so is an equitable consideration
within its sound discretion.
129 Md. App. at 281 (Emphasis added) (Citations omitted). Further blunting a diligence
inquiry is the Supreme Court’s apparent blessing of a defendant’s decision to delay and
default. Ins. Corp. of Ireland, 456 U.S. at 706 (“A defendant is always free to ignore the
judicial proceedings, risk a default judgment, and then challenge that judgment on
jurisdictional grounds in a collateral proceeding.”).
14
On this point, the nearly sixty-year-old decision in Little remains good law. As we
discuss later, however, this may not be true of dicta in the case on waiver of personal
jurisdiction.
17
Accordingly, the circuit court has no discretion to deny a motion to vacate a default
judgment, based only on the equitable consideration of whether the defendant acted
diligently and in good faith, where the circuit court never obtained personal jurisdiction
over the defendant. The “diligence and good faith” test, does not apply to cases in which
the court must decide whether a “jurisdictional mistake” justifies its exercise of its Rule 2-
535(b) revisory power. Once the court finds that such a jurisdictional mistake exists, it
must also find that the judgment is void and “without significance.” See Miles, 269 Md. at
713 (Citations omitted).
It appears from the record that the complaint and summons were delivered to Peay’s
home address, the affidavit of service indicated on its face proper service under Rule 2-
121, Peay did not claim that she did not receive the numerous notices of the default
proceedings by mail, and Peay never provided any date upon which she became aware of
the proceedings against her. The circuit court’s decision to deny Peay’s motion to revise
or vacate the default judgment, however, cannot be upheld on the basis of her lack of
diligence in bringing the motion. The court found that service of process was defective,
but despite some facts that might have suggested waiver, made no finding that Peay had
either waived or did not waive the right to object to the court’s lack of personal jurisdiction.
On that basis, the circuit court erred.
C. The right to object to the circuit court’s personal jurisdiction over the
defendant may be waived.
18
Although the circuit court erred in denying Peay’s motion to vacate on the basis of
Peay’s lack of diligence, some of the court’s findings regarding Peay’s actions may not be
without significance to a waiver determination.15 When a defendant raises improper
service of process as grounds to revise a default judgment as a “mistake” under Rule 2-
535(b), the circuit court must determine, if applicable, whether the judgment is nonetheless
valid by virtue of the defendant’s waiver of lack of personal jurisdiction. As we noted in
Chapman, “Rule 2-535 has no application when the defenses of lack of personal
jurisdiction and/or insufficient service of process have been waived.” 356 Md. at 438 n. 6
(citing Md. Rule 2-322(a)). Accordingly, once the court in this case determined that service
did not comply with Rule 2-121, it should have considered whether the circuit court
obtained jurisdiction as a result of Peay’s waiver of the right to object to the court’s lack
of personal jurisdiction, rather than applying the “diligence and good faith” test.
Here, if the right to raise the defense of personal jurisdiction was not waived, and
the default judgment was therefore void as a matter of law, the court must exercise its Rule
2-535(b) power to vacate the judgment on the ground of “jurisdictional mistake.” But if
the court determines that the issuing court obtained personal jurisdiction over the
defendant, in spite of the defect in service, there is no “mistake” to justify the circuit court’s
exercise of its revisory power under Rule 2-535(b).
The caselaw on waiver of personal jurisdiction has evolved from the time of Little.
While not a waiver case, the Little Court in dicta stated that there can be no valid
15
A potential waiver issue is always present when personal jurisdiction is at issue and
the defendant’s diligence is challenged.
19
proceeding against a person unless he or she “voluntarily waives such constitutional right.”
220 Md. at 315 (quoting Harvey v. Slacum, 181 Md. 206, 210 (1942)). However, nearly
twenty-five years later, in Ins. Corp. of Ireland, the U.S. Supreme Court said that “the
requirement of personal jurisdiction may be intentionally waived, or for various reasons a
defendant may be estopped from raising the issue . . . . The actions of the defendant may
amount to a legal submission to the jurisdiction of the court, whether voluntary or not.”
456 U.S. at 704–0516; see also Northbrook Bank & Trust Co. v. 300 Level, Inc., 37 N.E.3d
857, 863 (Ill. App. 2015) (“[A] defendant can validly waive service, even without filing
16
While the Supreme Court in Ins. Corp. of Ireland grounded personal jurisdiction in
the Due Process Clause, see 456 U.S. at 702-03, the constitutional dimension to defects in
service of process appears to disappear when the defendant has actual notice of the
proceeding. See 5C Wright, Miller, Kane, Marcus, Spencer & Steinman, Fed. Prac. &
Proc. Civ. § 1391 (3d ed. 2017). The authors of this treatise go on to note:
A distinction should be drawn, however, between service of
process objections and personal jurisdiction objections. An
objection to personal jurisdiction may raise constitutional
issues, and the non-appearance of the defendant should not
constitute a waiver of that defense. Indeed, if there has been a
failure of due process, that objection may permit relief from
any judgment that has been entered or may be raised on
collateral attack. Some personal jurisdiction objections are not
so compelling, however. If the defendant is merely arguing that
there is no jurisdiction because service of process or the content
of the papers was defective or improper and thus did not
effectuate jurisdiction over his person, then the objection is not
of a constitutional dimension . . . .
Id.
Both the Federal Rules (Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 12(b), (h)) and the Maryland Rules (Rule 2-
322(a)) distinguish between a waiver of personal jurisdiction and waiver of “insufficiency
of process” and “insufficiency of service of process.”
20
pleadings, if it undertakes actions -- involving not only the parties to the case, but to the
court itself-- which establish the standard elements of equitable estoppel.”).17
Based on our review, we can find no Maryland case which addresses circumstances
in which the return of service on its face complies with Rule 2-121(a), the record indicates
that the default papers and subsequent notices were delivered to the defendant’s home
address, and the plaintiff had no reason to know the sufficiency of service of process might
be challenged until after some circumstance which would prevent the plaintiff from
litigating his or her claim. We note, however, the persuasiveness of the test laid out by the
court in Combustion Systems, 112 F.R.D. 685, in determining whether a defaulting
defendant has waived his or her right to challenge the circuit court’s in personam
jurisdiction.
17
Since Little, the Maryland Rules have changed with respect to the waiver of personal
jurisdiction and a defendant’s right to raise the defense of lack of service of process. Prior
to March 31, 1976, Maryland’s Rule governing preliminary objections merely permitted
defendants to raise the lack of personal jurisdiction and insufficiency of service of process
in a motion to dismiss. See Md. Rule 323(a)(2), (5) (1961). The Rule required, in a
separate subsection, that a motion raising defenses “except the defense of lack of
jurisdiction over the subject matter” must be filed before any other pleading. See Md. Rule
323(c) (1961). It did not, however, indicate expressly that the failure to do so would result
in a waiver of the right to raise the defense. Rule 323 was amended, however, in 1976 and
provided that, although motions raising the defense of lack of subject matter jurisdiction
may be filed at any time, if the defenses of lack of jurisdiction over the person or
insufficiency of service of process are not filed before any other pleading, “the defense
shall be deemed to have been waived.” Md. Rule 323(b) (1976) (now found at Rule 2-
322). This Rule does not govern the waiver-by-conduct question presented in this case.
See U.S. to use of Combustion Sys. Sales v. E. Metal Prod. & Fabrication, Inc., 112 F.R.D
685, 687 (M.D.N.C. 1986) (hereinafter Combustion Systems) (Citations omitted) (noting
that the similar Federal Rule “only sets the outer limits for waiver due to untimely assertion
of a defense. It does not encompass waiver by implication”).
21
The court in Combustion Systems provided a two-tier test to determine if a defendant
should be stopped from challenging service of process -- there, referred to as a “waiver by
implication.” Id. at 688. The first question is whether the plaintiff made a good faith effort
to serve under the rules governing service of process. Id. at 688. The court suggested that,
in making this determination, the court should examine “the type and extent of defect in
service and the notice received by the defendant.” Id. Clearly, where the defendant never
received any notice of the proceedings prior to judgment, the circuit court should find that
the judgment was void. Additionally, where defects are ascertainable on the face of the
return of service, or where the plaintiff has knowledge of the defect and does nothing to
correct it, the plaintiff cannot be said to have made a good faith effort to serve the
defendant.
Secondly, the defendant must have “actual knowledge of the commencement of the
action and his [or her] duty to defend.” Combustion Systems, 112 F.R.D. at 689. The court
in Combustion Systems noted, “This notice requires more than vague, general knowledge
that a lawsuit will be or has been filed. Defendant must have knowledge that an action has
in fact been commenced and sufficient notice so that it can be inferred that he [or she]
knows of [the] duty to defend against the action.” Id. However, “where the defective
service may likely confuse the defendant as to the need to respond, even actual notice will
not be sufficient” to fulfill this second requirement. Id.
These considerations are consistent with and reinforce our Courts’ application of
equitable estoppel where the defendant’s delay and “conduct, misrepresentation or
silence,” see Pryor v. Pryor, 240 Md. 224, 230 (1968) (quoting Croyle v. Croyle, 184 Md.
22
126, 136 (1944)), have caused a prejudicial and detrimental change to the position of the
plaintiff. See Womack, 75 Md. App. at 589.
The court in Frank Keevan & Son, Inc. v. Callier Steel Pipe & Tube, Inc., articulates
a position similar to Combustion Systems, and explained that inferring a waiver takes away
the incentive for defendants,
to avoid service of process by tricking process servers and
lulling the opposing party into a good faith belief that service
has been made. Then years after default was entered, and the
lawsuit litigated, the erstwhile defendant could emerge . . . in
an attempt to set aside the default.
107 F.R.D. 665, 673-74 (S.D. Fla. 1985). Further, applying these equitable considerations
motivates defendants to raise objections to service of process early, rather than waiting
until after the court has expended its resources in reaching a final judgment and preserves
the finality of judgments. 18 See Thacker, 146 Md. App. at 229.
18
See Frank Keevan & Son elaborating on its underlying reasoning:
[W]hen a defendant’s actions or inactions amount to willful
misconduct, gross neglect, or other extreme and unusual
behavior, a default judgment is appropriate and even necessary
to ensure the functioning of the judicial process. A defendant
cannot be permitted to “avoid or delay a plaintiff’s right to
judicial resolution of a dispute by ignoring the proceeding.”
107 F.R.D. at 670 (quoting McKenzie v. Wakulla Cnty., 89 F.R.D. 444, 445 (N.D. Fla.
1981)).
23
Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s decision to deny Peay’s motion to set
aside the judgment and remand for further proceedings and a determination on waiver of
personal jurisdiction.19
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
BALTIMORE CITY REVERSED AND CASE
REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH
THIS OPINION. COSTS TO BE DIVIDED
EQUALLY BETWEEN THE PARTIES.
19
If Peay has any objection on the basis of a subject matter jurisdiction issue, such as
exhaustion of administrative remedies, see n. 3, supra, she may raise it on remand.
24