Ronalda Sullivan v. Caruso Builder Belle Oak, LLC, No. 1909, Sept. Term 2019. Opinion
by Zic, J.
REAL PROPERTY – MD. CODE ANN., REAL PROP. ARTICLE § 14-117 –
PROPERTY SALES CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS – ESTIMATED COSTS OF
DEFERRED WATER AND SEWER CHARGES – DISCLOSURES
Section 14-117(a)(3)(i) of the Real Property Article of the Maryland Code provides that
in an initial sale contract for residential real property in Prince George’s County, a seller
must provide the purchaser certain disclosures regarding deferred water and sewer
assessment costs for which the purchaser may be liable. Two of the required disclosures
under the statute are the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment” and the “amount
remaining on the assessment, including interest.”
The plain language of the statute makes clear that for the “estimated payoff amount,” the
seller must disclose to the purchaser an estimate that reflects a good faith calculation of
the advance payoff amount that would be due on the settlement date.
The legislative history of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) supports our plain language interpretation.
The legislative history indicates that the General Assembly intended the statutory
disclosures to improve transparency and provide accurate information to purchasers,
thereby providing purchasers the opportunity to save money by prepaying the assessment
in full and avoiding interest payments.
Circuit Court for Prince George’s County
Case No. CAL19-06087
REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 1909
September Term, 2019
RONALDA SULLIVAN
v.
CARUSO BUILDER BELLE OAK, LLC
Nazarian,
Beachley,
Zic,
JJ.
Opinion by Zic, J.
Filed: July 2, 2021
* Friedman, Daniel A., and Gould, Steven B.,
Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
JJ., did not participate in the Court’s decision to
2021-07-06 12:26-04:00
report this opinion pursuant to Maryland Rule
8-605.1.
Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
When a purchaser buys residential real property in Prince George’s County, the
seller must provide the purchaser with certain disclosures regarding the deferred water
and sewer assessment in the initial sale contract under § 14-117(a)(3)(i) of the Real
Property Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland. Deferred water and sewer
assessments are paid by purchasers and are used to reimburse the entities or persons who
installed water and sewer lines on the residential real property. Based upon our reading
of the statute, the purpose of these disclosures is to inform purchasers that the water and
sewer assessments exist and to inform them of the costs of paying the assessments. Two
of the required disclosures—the “amount remaining on the assessment, including
interest” and the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment”—are at issue in this case.
Md. Code Ann., Real Prop. § 14-117(a)(3)(i)(4), (7) (2015 Repl. & Supp. 2020). While
the disclosures are not defined by the statute, the “amount remaining on the assessment,
including interest” is the total cost of paying the assessment over a certain number of
years, which includes interest. Purchasers, however, have the option of prepaying the
entire assessment or paying off the amount remaining on the assessment in total
satisfaction at any time—this is the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment.”
Appellant Ronalda Sullivan contends that appellee Caruso Builder Belle Oak,
LLC (“Caruso”) did not comply with the disclosure requirements under § 14-117(a)(3)(i)
in her initial sale contract for residential real property in Prince George’s County and that
she properly stated a claim upon which relief may be granted. Caruso argues that it
complied with the disclosure requirements of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) and that Ms. Sullivan
failed to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The Circuit Court for Prince
George’s County agreed with Caruso and granted its renewed motion to dismiss. Ms.
Sullivan appealed. As we explain below, we disagree with the circuit court and conclude
that it erred by granting Caruso’s renewed motion to dismiss. We therefore reverse the
judgment of the circuit court and remand the case for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
Ms. Sullivan contracted with Caruso, a developer, to purchase a newly constructed
home on real property in Prince George’s County. The real property is located in a
subdivision known as Belle Oak. The parties entered into an Agreement of Purchase and
Sale (“Purchase Agreement”) on July 17, 2015, and Ms. Sullivan closed on her property
on February 24, 2016. The Purchase Agreement contains 13 addenda and is subject to a
Declaration for Deferred Water and Sewer Facilities Charges (“Declaration”).
The Declaration states that the annual assessment “is for the purpose of
reimbursing the Utility Company for its cost of providing Water and Sewer Facilities to
the Lots.” Addendum Number 11 to the Purchase Agreement provides that the
assessment is “payable to a private utility company or its assigns (the ‘Company’).”1 The
Declaration requires each lot owner to pay an annual assessment of $900.00 per year,
with a “reasonable rate of interest,” for a period of 23 years. Addendum Number 1 to the
Purchase Agreement provides that the interest rate on the assessment is 8%. In total, a
1
In this case, the assessment is paid to Belle Oak Utilities, LLC to reimburse it for
its expense of providing water and sewer facilities to Ms. Sullivan’s real property. Under
the Purchase Agreement, Caruso is the seller of the real property and is responsible for
disclosing the cost of the assessment owed to Belle Oak Utilities, LLC to Ms. Sullivan.
See Real Prop. § 14-117(a)(3), (b)(2).
2
purchaser is obligated to pay $20,700 for deferred water and sewer charges if the
purchaser pays the fee annually over the 23-year period. Additionally, Addendum
Number 11 states that “[t]here is a right of prepayment for the Water and Sewer Charges,
and the prepayment figure may be ascertained by contacting the Company or by
reviewing the Water and Sewer Declaration.” The Declaration provides that “[u]pon
written request of an Owner, the Utility Company, its successors, assigns, or designees
shall provide Owner with a present day value of any assessment levied pursuant to this
Declaration and Owner may prepay the outstanding assessment at present day values in
total satisfaction of Owner[’s] obligations hereunder.”
The disclosures under § 14-117(a)(3)(i) that Caruso provided to Ms. Sullivan are
listed in Addendum Number 1 to the Purchase Agreement:
Disclosure Required Under Section 14-117 – Estimated
Deferred Water and Sewer Charges.
The Purchaser is hereby advised . . . that the Seller shall
disclose the estimated cost . . . of any deferred water and
sewer charges for the Property for which the Purchaser may
become liable. . . . The following additional information is
hereby disclosed:
1. As stated above, there are deferred
private water and sewer assessments;
2. The amount of the annual assessment
$900.00;
3. The approximate number of payments
remaining on the assessment is 23 years;
4. The amount remaining on the
assessment, including interest is $20,700;
3
5. The name and address of the person or
entity most recently responsible for
collection of the assessments is: Belle
Oak Utilities, LLC c/o Sandy
Excavating, 4230 Ray Road, LaPlata,
Maryland 20646;
6. The interest rate on the assessments is 8
percent;
7. The estimated payoff amount of the
assessment is $20,700;
8. The payoff of the assessment is allowed
without prepayment penalty.
Importantly, the disclosures for the “amount remaining on the assessment, including
interest” and the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment” are both $20,700.
Ms. Sullivan filed a complaint (“Original Complaint”) against Caruso in the
Circuit Court of Prince George’s County on her own behalf and on behalf of a class of
similarly situated persons.2 Caruso subsequently filed a motion to dismiss for failure to
state a claim, alleging that Ms. Sullivan’s Original Complaint presented conflicting and
2
By the parties’ consent, this case serves as a test case for six other cases pending
in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County involving similarly situated homeowners
and developers: Scott v. Caruso Builder Balmoral, LLC, No. CAL19-06086 (Md. Cir. Ct.
Prince George’s Cnty. filed Feb. 22, 2019); Chesier v. Caruso Windsong, LLC, No.
CAL19-06088 (Md. Cir. Ct. Prince George’s Cnty. filed Feb. 22, 2019); Lewis v. Caruso
Builder Indianhead, LLC, No. CAL19-06089 (Md. Cir. Ct. Prince George’s Cnty. filed
Feb. 22, 2019); White v. Caruso Builder 2016, LLC, No. CAL19-06090 (Md. Cir. Ct.
Prince George’s Cnty. filed Feb. 22, 2019); Jones v. Caruso Builder Washington
Overlook, LLC, No. CAL19-06091 (Md. Cir. Ct. Prince George’s Cnty. filed Feb. 22,
2019); Blakeney v. Caruso Bowie, LLC, No. CAL19-06092 (Md. Cir. Ct. Prince George’s
Cnty. filed Feb. 22, 2019). Due to the similarity of the cases, counsel for all parties
agreed to designate Sullivan v. Caruso Builder Belle Oak, LLC as the active case and to
stay the remaining six cases pending the outcome of Sullivan. Counsel for all parties
agreed that this appeal will be binding on the six stayed cases.
4
inaccurate claims. Caruso argued that the Original Complaint erroneously alleged that
the Purchase Agreement failed to disclose the “estimated payoff amount” of the water
and sewer assessment because the “estimated payoff amount” was disclosed twice in the
Purchase Agreement, in both Addendum Number 1 and Addendum Number 11. Ms.
Sullivan initialed and signed the Purchase Agreement on the pages that contained the
disclosures.
Ms. Sullivan subsequently filed a First Amended Class Action Complaint
(“Amended Complaint”), adding supplemental factual allegations:
12. When Caruso enters into purchase agreements, Caruso
fails to accurately disclose in the contract the
estimated payoff amount of the water and sewer
assessment.
....
15. Through its use of form purchase agreements, Caruso
failed to disclose important information related to the
existence and cost of the water and sewer assessments
to new home purchasers in Prince George’s County,
Maryland.
....
27. The Declaration provides that an “Owner may prepay
the outstanding assessment at present day values in
total satisfaction of Owners’ obligations hereunder.”
Declaration, Liber 30568 at Folio 447.
28. [Ms. Sullivan]’s purchase agreement provided that the
property is subject to annual water and sewer
assessments in the amount of nine-hundred dollars
($900.00) per year for twenty-three (23) years.
5
29. The purchase agreement disclosed that the “amount
remaining on the assessment, including interest is
$20,700[.]”
30. The purchase agreement also disclosed that the
“estimated payoff amount of the assessment is
$20,700[.]”
(second and third alteration in original) (emphasis added). Ms. Sullivan further expanded
upon the allegations in her single count for violation of Real Property § 14-
117(a)(3)(i)(7):
49. Md. Code Ann., Real. Prop. § 14-117(a)(3)(i)(7)
provides that a contract for the initial sale of residential
real property located in Prince George’s County for
which there are deferred private water and sewer
assessments recorded by a declaration deferring costs
for water and sewer improvements for which the
purchaser may be liable shall contain a disclosure that
includes the estimated payoff amount of the
assessment.
50. [Ms. Sullivan]’s purchase agreement provided that the
“estimated payoff amount of the assessment is
$20,700[.]”
51. This amount ($20,700) was also the same amount
disclosed as being the “amount remaining on the
assessment, including interest[.]”
52. Because the Declaration provides that [Ms. Sullivan]
may prepay the outstanding assessment ($20,700) at
present value, the actual “estimated payoff amount”
cannot be equal to the “amount remaining on the
assessment, including interest” because the actual
“estimated payoff amount” cannot include the 8%
interest accruing on the water and sewer assessment
for 23 years.
6
53. The actual “estimated payoff amount” can only be
determined by performing a present value calculation
of the total future amount due.
54. The actual “estimated payoff amount” must be less
than the “amount remaining on the assessment,
including interest.”
55. [Ms. Sullivan]’s purchase agreement did not contain a
disclosure that included the estimated payoff amount
of the water and sewer assessment as required by Md.
Code Ann., Real Prop. § 14-117(a)(3)(i)(7).
(second and third alteration in original). In response, Caruso filed a renewed motion to
dismiss, incorporating the same arguments as its original motion to dismiss, which were
previously noted above. The circuit court held a motions hearing and subsequently
dismissed the Amended Complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be
granted as a matter of law. Specifically, the circuit court determined that § 14-
117(a)(3)(i)(7) does not mandate a specific formula to calculate the “estimated payoff
amount of the assessment” and that the section does not require a present day value
calculation. The court further found that Caruso’s disclosures complied with § 14-
117(a)(3)(i)(7). Ms. Sullivan then noted this appeal.
QUESTIONS PRESENTED
Ms. Sullivan raises one question for our review,3 which we rephrased and recast as
two separate questions:
3
Ms. Sullivan phrased her single question presented as follows:
Whether the seller of residential real property located in
Prince George’s County complies with RP § 14-
117(a)(3)(i)(7) by disclosing that the “estimated payoff
7
1. Does a seller of residential real property located in Prince George’s
County comply with Real Property § 14-117(a)(3)(i) when, in an initial
sale contract, the disclosure for the “estimated payoff amount of the
assessment” is equal to the disclosure for the “amount remaining on the
assessment, including interest”?
2. Did the circuit court err in granting Caruso’s renewed motion to dismiss
for failure to state a claim?
We hold that the circuit court erred in granting Caruso’s renewed motion to dismiss for
failure to state a claim. We therefore reverse the judgment of the circuit court and
remand the case for further proceedings.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim de novo.
Lamson v. Montgomery County, 460 Md. 349, 360 (2018) (citing Reichs Ford Rd. Joint
Venture v. State Rds. Comm’n of the State Highway Admin., 388 Md. 500, 509 (2005)).
“[W]e must determine whether the complaint, on its face, [states] a legally sufficient
cause of action.” Schisler v. State, 177 Md. App. 731, 743 (2007) (quoting Fioretti v.
Maryland State Bd. of Dental Exam’rs, 351 Md. 66, 72 (1998)). This also applies to a
motion to dismiss an amended complaint. Schisler, 177 Md. App. at 743.
amount of the [deferred private water and sewer] assessment”
is equal to the “amount remaining on the assessment,
including interest,” in the initial sale contract when the
assessment includes an interest rate of 8% and the declaration
creating the assessment allows a homeowner to prepay the
assessment “at present day values” in total satisfaction of the
homeowner’s obligation under the declaration?
(alteration in original).
8
A pleading must contain “such statements of fact as may be necessary to show the
pleader’s entitlement to relief or ground of defense.” Md. Rule 2-303(b); see LaSalle
Bank, N.A. v. Reeves, 173 Md. App. 392, 410-11 (2007) (noting that one of the main
purposes of pleading is to ensure that opposing parties are apprised of the basis of the
claim and the relief sought). We “presume the truth of all well-pleaded facts in the
complaint, along with any reasonable inferences derived therefrom.” Schisler, 177 Md.
App. at 743 (quoting Fioretti, 351 Md. at 72). The facts we consider are limited to the
four corners of the complaint and any incorporated supporting exhibits. See RRC Ne.,
LLC v. BAA Md., Inc., 413 Md. 638, 643 (2010) (citing Converge Servs. Grp., LLC v.
Curran, 383 Md. 462, 475 (2004)). Bald allegations and conclusory statements are
insufficient to state a claim. RRC Ne., LLC, 413 Md. at 644. The pleader, however, does
not need to allege all the ultimate operative facts. Kline v. Lightman, 243 Md. 460, 478
(1966); see also Ronald M. Sharrow, Chartered v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 306
Md. 754, 770 (1986) (noting that while the complaint lacked the “desired specificity,” the
allegations were nonetheless “adequate”).
In the present case, whether the circuit court’s grant of the motion to dismiss was
legally correct hinges on a question of statutory interpretation. “The interpretation of a
statute is a question of law that [an appellate court] reviews de novo.” Brown v. State,
454 Md. 546, 550 (2017) (citing Bellard v. State, 452 Md. 467, 480-81 (2017)). Because
this case concerns purely questions of law, our standard of review throughout the entirety
of this opinion is de novo.
9
DISCUSSION
We will first conduct a statutory construction analysis of § 14-117(a)(3)(i). Based
on that analysis, we will then determine whether the Amended Complaint stated a claim
upon which relief may be granted.
I. STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION ANALYSIS OF § 14-117(A)(3)(I).
At issue is the proper interpretation of the “estimated payoff amount of the
assessment” under § 14-117(a)(3)(i). Ms. Sullivan contends that Caruso did not comply
with the disclosure requirement under this statutory provision because, according to her
statutory interpretation, the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment” cannot be
identical to the “amount remaining on the assessment, including interest” and the
“estimated payoff amount” must be accurate. Conversely, Caruso argues that it provided
the proper disclosures as required by § 14-117(a)(3)(i) because the word “estimate”
permits a variance and thus the disclosed payoff amount need not be precise.
“The cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intent
of the General Assembly.” Daughtry v. Nadel, 248 Md. App. 594, 611-12 (2020)
(quoting Bellard, 452 Md. at 481). Our analysis begins “with the plain language of the
statute, and ordinary, popular understanding of the English language dictates
interpretation of its terminology.” Blackstone v. Sharma, 461 Md. 87, 113 (2018)
(quoting Schreyer v. Chaplain, 416 Md. 94, 101 (2010)). “We do so on the tacit theory
that the General Assembly is presumed to have meant what it said and said what it
meant.” Daughtry, 248 Md. App. at 612 (quoting Peterson v. State, 467 Md. 713, 727
(2020)). “[W]e must ‘read the statute as a whole to ensure that no word, clause, sentence
10
or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory.’” Daughtry, 248
Md. App. at 612 (quoting Berry v. Queen, 469 Md. 674, 687 (2020)). Our analysis is not
limited to a specific statutory provision at issue; “[i]nstead, ‘[t]he plain language must be
viewed within the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs, considering the
purpose, aim or policy of the Legislature in enacting the statute.’” Id. at 612 (second
alteration in original).
If we conclude that the language “is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the
statute’s apparent purpose,” we usually stop there and our analysis ends. State v.
Johnson, 415 Md. 413, 421 (2010). Even if the language is unambiguous, “[w]hile not
necessary in every instance, we often find it prudent to scrutinize the legislative history to
confirm that our interpretation of the statute’s plain language accords with the
legislature’s intent.” Daughtry, 248 Md. App. at 613 (alteration in original) (quoting
Berry, 469 Md. at 687-88); see also In re S.K., 466 Md. 31, 50 (2019) (“[T]he modern
tendency . . . is to continue the analysis of the statute beyond the plain meaning to
examine ‘extrinsic sources of legislative intent’ in order to ‘check [] our reading of a
statute’s plain language’ through examining ‘the context of a statute, the overall statutory
scheme, and archival legislative history of relevant enactments.’” (second alteration in
original) (quoting Brown, 454 Md. at 551)).
If the language is ambiguous, we look to the statute’s structure, relationship to
other laws, general purpose, and legislative history. Hailes v. State, 442 Md. 488, 495-96
(2015) (citing Gardner v. State, 420 Md. 1, 9 (2011)). We seek to construe and reconcile
related statutory provisions harmoniously, “to the extent possible consistent with the
11
statute’s object and scope.” Gardner, 420 Md. at 9 (quoting Johnson, 415 Md. at 421-
22). In ascertaining legislative intent, we “may consider the consequences resulting from
one meaning rather than another[] and adopt that construction which avoids an illogical
or unreasonable result, or one which is inconsistent with common sense.” Kaczorowski v.
Mayor of Baltimore, 309 Md. 505, 513 (1987) (quoting Tucker v. Fireman’s Fund Ins.
Co., 308 Md. 69, 75 (1986)). “[T]he real legislative intention prevail[s] over the
intention indicated by the literal meaning.” Kaczorowski, 309 Md. at 516 (quoting Potter
v. Bethesda Fire Dep’t, Inc., 309 Md. 347, 353 (1987)). Lastly, there is “a canon of
statutory construction that remedial statutes are liberally construed to suppress the evil
and advance the remedy.” Harrison v. John F. Pilli & Sons, Inc., 321 Md. 336, 341
(1990); see also Washington Suburban Sanitary Comm’n v. Phillips, 413 Md. 606, 620
(2010) (citing Harrison for the same proposition).
A. The Statute’s Language
Section 14-117(a)(3)(i) provides eight required disclosures regarding deferred
water and sewer assessments in a contract for the initial sale of residential real property in
Prince George’s County:
In Prince George’s County, a contract for the initial sale of
residential real property for which there are deferred private
water and sewer assessments recorded by a covenant or
declaration deferring costs for water and sewer improvements
for which the purchaser may be liable shall contain a
disclosure that includes:
1. The existence of the deferred private
water and sewer assessments;
2. The amount of the annual assessment;
12
3. The approximate number of payments
remaining on the assessment;
4. The amount remaining on the
assessment, including interest;
5. The name and address of the person or
entity most recently responsible for
collection of the assessment;
6. The interest rate on the assessment;
7. The estimated payoff amount of the
assessment; and
8. A statement that payoff of the
assessment is allowed without
prepayment penalty.
Md. Code Ann., Real Prop. § 14-117(a)(3)(i) (2015 Repl. & Supp. 2020) (emphasis
added). The damages section articulates:
Violation of subsection (a)(3) of this section entitles the
purchaser to:
(i) Recover from the seller the total amount
of deferred charges the purchaser will be
obligated to pay following the sale;
(ii) Recover from the seller any money
actually paid by the purchaser on the
deferred charge that was lost as a result
of a violation of subsection (a)(3) of this
section; or
(iii) If the violation is discovered before
settlement, rescind the real estate
contract without penalty.
Real Prop. § 14-117(b)(2) (2015 Repl. & Supp. 2020).
13
For comparison purposes, § 14-117.1 “applies only to existing single-family
residential real property in Prince George’s County” and requires that “[a] person or
entity that imposes a deferred water and sewer charge . . . include with each bill a
statement that includes:”
(1) The amount of the annual assessment;
(2) The approximate number of payments remaining on
the assessment;
(3) The amount remaining on the assessment, including
interest;
(4) The name and address of the person or entity most
recently responsible for collection of the assessment;
(5) The method used to compute the deferred water and
sewer charge on the property;
(6) The interest rate on the assessment;
(7) The estimated payoff amount of the assessment; and
(8) A statement that payoff of the assessment is allowed
without prepayment penalty.
Real Prop. § 14-117.1 (2015 Repl.). This provision, unlike § 14-117(a)(3)(i), specifies
that “[t]he balance owed on a deferred water and sewer assessment may be redeemed at
the present value of the assessment.” Id. (emphasis added).
B. The “Estimated Payoff Amount of the Assessment” Must Reflect
a Good Faith Calculation of the Payoff Amount that Would Be
Due on the Date of Settlement.
In this instance, the meaning of the phrase “estimated payoff amount” is at issue.
At the outset, we observe that § 14-117 does not define the word “estimate” and does not
14
require a specific formula or calculation for the “estimated payoff amount.” We will
therefore look to the ordinary and popular understanding of the word “estimate” to
determine its meaning. See Blackstone, 461 Md. at 113. To do this, we may consult a
dictionary. Chow v. State, 393 Md. 431, 445 (2006).
To make an estimate means to “roughly calculate or judge the value, number,
quantity, or extent of.” Oxford Dictionary of English 599 (Angus Stevenson ed., 3d ed.
2010). The word “estimate” is also defined as “an approximate calculation or judgment
of the value, number, quantity, or extent of something.”4 Id. The word “approximate”
means to “estimate or calculate (a quantity) fairly accurately” or to “come close or be
similar to something in quality, nature, or quantity.” Id. at 77. “Approximate” also
describes something that is “close to the actual, but not completely accurate or exact.” Id.
The parties agree, and so do we, that the word “estimate” is synonymous with the word
“approximate.” We determine that the ordinary, popular meaning of the “estimated
payoff amount” is an estimate that is fairly accurate and close to the actual payoff
amount, but it does not need to be exact.
Ms. Sullivan argues that because an “estimate” is an “approximate calculation,”
the “estimated payoff amount” must be accurate and “nearly correct.” She further
contends that a present day value calculation was required to determine the “estimated
payoff amount of the assessment” under § 14-117(a)(3)(i) because the Declaration
4
The Merriam-Webster Dictionary similarly defines “estimate” as “a rough or
approximate calculation.” Merriam-Webster, The Merriam-Webster Dictionary 244
(2016).
15
specifies that an “Owner may prepay the outstanding assessment at present day values in
total satisfaction of Owner[’s] obligations hereunder.” According to Ms. Sullivan,
Caruso did not perform a present day value calculation and thus did not attempt to
provide an accurate “estimated payoff amount” given that the disclosed amount ($20,700)
was more than double the actual payoff amount at the time of the initial sale.5 She also
contends that the two disclosures cannot be equal when there is interest on the assessment
and the Declaration provides for a prepayment discount. Ms. Sullivan reasons that if a
seller simply repeats the number for the “amount remaining on the assessment, including
interest” for the “estimated payoff amount,” then the General Assembly’s requirement for
a seller to disclose the “estimated payoff amount” would be superfluous.
Conversely, Caruso contends that because an “estimate” or an “approximation” is
not the actual amount, a variance between the estimate and actual payoff amount is not a
violation of the statute. Furthermore, it argues that nothing in § 14-117 suggests that
such a variance constitutes a violation of the provision. According to Caruso, an
“estimate” is an approximation or rough calculation, which precludes accuracy. Caruso
notes that § 14-117(a)(3)(i) does not require or even mention a present day value
calculation while § 14-117.1(c) specifically provides that “[t]he balance owed on a
deferred water and sewer assessment may be redeemed at the present value of the
assessment.” Caruso contends that if the General Assembly intended for a present day
value calculation to be used in § 14-117(a)(3)(i), it would have expressly stated as much.
5
In her brief, Ms. Sullivan calculates the present day value of the assessment to be
$10,080.67 at the time of settlement.
16
Lastly, Caruso asserts that the “estimated payoff amount” is the maximum amount that a
purchaser would pay for the assessment, representing a worst-case scenario for the payor.
As Caruso correctly notes, the statute itself does not require a present day value
calculation. To further aid our plain language analysis, we may look at other sections of
the statute and the scheme to which § 14-117(a)(3)(i) belongs. See Daughtry, 248 Md.
App. at 612. As noted above, § 14-117(a)(3)(i) applies to the initial sale of residential
real property while § 14-117.1 applies to the billing of “a deferred water and sewer
charge” for “existing single-family residential real property in Prince George’s County.”
If the General Assembly wanted to require a present day value calculation to be used for
initial sales, it could have easily provided for it in § 14-117(a)(3)(i) because § 14-117.1(c)
specifically provides that the balance owed on the assessment “may be redeemed at the
present value.” While we conclude that § 14-117(a)(3)(i) does not require a present day
value calculation, the Declaration states that an “Owner may prepay the outstanding
assessment at present day values in total satisfaction of Owner[’s] obligations
hereunder[,]” so a present day value calculation may be used in this instance.6 (emphasis
added).
More importantly, it is clear that at the date of settlement, whenever that date may
be, interest has not started to accrue. It is illogical for the “amount remaining on the
6
Ms. Sullivan asserts that “[t]his case requires this Court to employ basic
principles of both statutory interpretation and math.” We disagree with this intimation.
We are neither required to calculate the value of the “estimated payoff amount” nor
calculate the present day value. We merely determine that a present day value formula
may be used pursuant to the Declaration.
17
assessment, including interest” and the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment” to
be the exact same amount when both are calculated at the time of settlement. In this case,
the “estimated payoff amount” at the time of settlement cannot be equal to the “amount
remaining on the assessment, including interest,” which is the amount paid by the
purchaser in annual payments of $900 with an 8% interest rate over a 23-year period for a
total of $20,700. At the time of the initial sale, the “amount remaining on the assessment,
including interest” is the maximum amount a purchaser would pay on the water and
sewer assessment at the end of the amortization period, while the “estimated payoff
amount of the assessment” is the lower amount to pay off the assessment in full at the
time of settlement. The plain language of the statute indicates that the purpose of the
disclosures is to ensure purchasers are aware of the option to prepay the assessment at a
lower amount.7 By requiring sellers to disclose both amounts, and because the
“estimated payoff amount” is naturally a lower value than the “amount remaining on the
assessment, including interest,” the legislature intended to notify purchasers of the less
expensive option of prepaying the assessment. If the General Assembly intended it to be
acceptable for a developer to provide the same amount for the disclosures required by §
7
To be sure, Addendum Number 11 to the Purchase Agreement states that “[t]here
is a right of prepayment for the Water and Sewer Charges, and the prepayment figure
may be ascertained by contacting the Company or by reviewing the Water and Sewer
Declaration.” The purchaser, thereby, is informed that she has the right to prepay the
assessment. Indeed, the eighth disclosure of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) states that the “payoff
amount of the assessment is allowed without prepayment penalty.” Pursuant to § 14-
117(a)(3)(i)(7), however, the “estimated payoff amount of the assessment” must be
included in the disclosure even though the purchaser is told in more than one document
that she may payoff the assessment early.
18
14-117(a)(3)(i)(4) and (7), then it would be “surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or
nugatory” to require two different disclosures. Daughtry, 248 Md. App. at 612 (quoting
Berry, 469 Md. at 687).
If we adopt Caruso’s view, that the “estimated payoff amount” is simply the
maximum amount a purchaser would pay for the assessment, that would not comport
with § 14-117(a)(3)(i)(7) and render it superfluous. By specifying two different
disclosures, the General Assembly intended for sellers to inform purchasers that they
have the option of saving money by prepaying the assessment and an estimated amount
of those savings.
Additionally, even if the seller provided a number for the “estimated payoff
amount” that was not equal to the “amount remaining on the assessment, including
interest,” these figures may still not notify the purchaser of the option to save money by
prepaying the assessment. For example, if the seller inserted $20,699 for the “estimated
payoff amount” and $20,700 for the “amount remaining on the assessment, including
interest,” a purchaser would not be sufficiently notified that she would in fact save money
by prepaying the assessment. We recognize that mistakes in calculations may be made or
rounding errors may occur, but to satisfy the disclosure requirement of § 14-
117(a)(3)(i)(7), we hold that the estimate must reflect a good faith calculation of the
advance payoff amount that would be due on the settlement date.8 It is unambiguous that
8
See Blondell v. Littlepage, 413 Md. 96, 113-14 (2010) (citing Clancy v. King,
405 Md. 541, 565-66 (2008) (noting that in every contract there is an implied duty of
good faith and fair dealing)); Port E. Transfer, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 330 Md. 376,
19
the General Assembly intended that the disclosure for the “estimated payoff amount” be
made in good faith and fairly accurate to notify the purchaser that she has the option to
save money by prepaying the assessment in full at the time of settlement. We next turn to
the statute’s legislative history to confirm our interpretation.
C. The Legislative History of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) Supports Our Plain
Language Interpretation.
Although we are satisfied that we may stop at our plain language analysis, we will
exercise our discretion and look to the legislative history of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) to confirm
our interpretation of the statutory language. The legislative bill file for House Bill 1043
of the 2014 Session, which became § 14-117 and § 14-117.1, contains little that sheds
light on the meaning of “estimated payoff amount.” Consistent with the statute itself, the
Floor Reports of the House Environmental Matters Committee and the Senate Education,
Health, and Environmental Affairs Committee state that this bill “requires a contract for
the initial sale of residential real property in Prince George’s County to include specified
disclosures relating to deferred water and sewer assessments.” H. Env’t Matters Comm.,
Floor Report on House Bill 1043, 2014 Leg., 434th Sess. (Md. 2014); S. Educ., Health, &
385 (1993) (“Even when the parties are silent on the issue, the law will impose an
implied promise of good faith.”); Julian v. Christopher, 320 Md. 1, 9 (1990) (In a
contract, “there exists an implied covenant that each of the parties thereto will act in good
faith and deal fairly with the others.” (quoting Food Fair Stores, Inc. v. Blumberg, 234
Md. 521, 534 (1964))).
20
Env’t Affs. Comm., Floor Report on House Bill 1043, 2014 Leg., 434th Sess. (Md.
2014).9
The Fiscal and Policy Note accompanying the legislation provides the same and
specifies that the disclosure statement in sales contracts must include “the amount
remaining on the assessment, including interest” and “the estimated payoff amount of the
assessment.” Dep’t of Legis. Servs., Revised Fiscal and Policy Note on House Bill 1043,
2014 Leg., 434th Sess., at 1-2 (Md. 2014). The House Floor Report additionally
mentions that an amendment to the bill “ma[de] minor changes to the specified
disclosures” in an initial sales contract but does not indicate the reasoning behind such an
amendment. H. Env’t Matters Comm., Floor Report on House Bill 1043, 2014 Leg.,
434th Sess. (Md. 2014). Looking to the drafting history, § 14-117(a)(3)(i)(7) originally
began as “[t]he payoff amount of the assessment” and an amendment to the bill added the
word “estimated” to the beginning of that phrase. H. Env’t Matters Comm.,
Amendments to House Bill 1043 (First Reading File Bill), 2014 Leg., 434th Sess. (Md.
2014). The statutory language referencing the “amount remaining on the assessment,
including interest” remained unchanged. House Bill 1043’s bill file and the Fiscal and
Policy Note, however, do not indicate what was meant by adding the word “estimated” or
its meaning.
9
“In analyzing a statute, Floor Reports often serve as ‘key legislative history
documents.’” Daughtry, 248 Md. App. at 621 n.19 (quoting Hayden v. Maryland Dep’t
of Nat. Res., 242 Md. App. 505, 530 (2019)).
21
The circumstances surrounding the adoption of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) are informative
regarding the legislature’s purpose. In 2012, the General Assembly established the Task
Force to Study Rates and Charges in the Washington Suburban Sanitary District in
response to growing concerns from policymakers regarding deferred water and sewer
connection fees assessed on new homeowners by private developers. See Washington
Suburban Sanitary District Transparency and Rate Relief Act of 2012, 2012 Md. Laws
ch. 685. The Task Force Report is indicative of the legislature’s purpose because the
Fiscal and Policy Note and the House Floor Report rely on and summarize the Task
Force’s key findings. See H. Env’t Matters Comm., Floor Report on House Bill 1043,
2014 Leg., 434th Sess. (Md. 2014); Dep’t of Legis. Servs., Revised Fiscal and Policy
Note on House Bill 1043, 2014 Leg., 434th Sess., at 3-4 (Md. 2014); see also S. Educ.,
Health, & Env’t Affs. Comm., Floor Report on House Bill 1043, 2014 Leg., 434th Sess.
(Md. 2014) (summarizing and containing information found in, but not directly citing, the
Task Force Report).
Specifically, the General Assembly instructed the Task Force to make
recommendations regarding (1) “standards for developers to follow when charging
property owners for the cost of constructing water and sewer facilities and connecting
property to the water and sewer facilities” and (2) “improving the transparency” of
developers’ practice of charging property owners for such costs. 2012 Md. Laws ch. 685,
§ 2(g)(5); see also Task Force to Study Rates & Charges in the Wash. Suburban Sanitary
22
Dist., Report 3 (2013) [hereinafter Task Force Report].10 The Task Force Report, issued
in December 2013, sheds light on the transparency issues regarding deferred water and
sewer assessments charged by private developers. See Task Force Report, supra, at 5.
According to the Task Force Report, the General Assembly established the
Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission (“WSSC”) in 1918 to address concerns that
“waste from both Montgomery and Prince George’s counties was contaminating streams
within the [District of Columbia].” Id. at 1. The WSSC was responsible for the
construction of new water and sewer lines in its territory and then would “impose an
annual front foot benefit charge on owners of new residential, commercial, or industrial
development to recover the costs” of construction. Id. at 21. After the enactment of
legislation in 1998,11 however, the WSSC no longer imposes or collects front foot benefit
charges. Id. Instead, private developers now impose and collect these charges. Id.
To gather information and obtain public input on deferred water and sewer fees
charged by private developers, the Task Force held a public hearing. Id. at 3. The Task
Force summarized the key concerns raised by homeowners, including, but not limited to:
• Disclosure statements not routinely provided to potential
homeowners prior to settlement
• Homeowners unaware of deferred water and sewer
charges prior to purchasing home
10
The Task Force was also instructed to compare rate caps on water and sewer
rate increases charged by the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission with rates
charged by other states, ascertain the effect of such a rate cap or prepayment discount,
and study the process developers use for charging the construction and connection to
water and sewer facilities. 2012 Md. Laws ch. 685, § 2(g)(1)–(4).
11
See 1998 Md. Laws ch. 516.
23
• Homeowners may not have purchased home if they knew
about the deferred water and sewer charges
....
• Accountability needs to be improved
• Limited oversight by WSSC on how the private
assessments are calculated and set by private developers
• Measures need to be implemented to govern the entities
imposing the charges
• Existing process is ripe for potential fraud and abuse by
private developers
....
• Provide additional options for paying the front foot benefit
charge or deferred water and sewer charges
• Homeowners do not have the option of prepaying deferred
water or sewer charge or including the amount in the
homeowner’s mortgage
....
• Increase public awareness on the reasons for imposing the
front foot benefit charge and the deferred water and sewer
charges by private developers
• Inform the public on the methodology for calculating the
deferred water and sewer charges
Id. at 4 (emphasis added). One of the “predomina[nt] issues expressed at the public
hearing centered on the lack of disclosure of the deferred water and sewer charges at the
time of purchasing the home.” Id. at 3.
24
Based on the public hearing and other work sessions, the Task Force observed that
while private developers are generally responsible for constructing and financing water
and sewer pipelines within the WSSC service territory, the charges for the costs of
construction are “imposed and collected by the private developers with no oversight by
the WSSC or county government.” Id. at 20. The Task Force noted that “[w]hile
customers are often given the option to pay the assessment in full up front, in practice
few do.” Id. at 21. Rather, customers usually receive an annual bill for the deferred
assessment. Id. But at the hearing some homeowners expressed a desire to prepay the
entire deferred assessment in a lump sum and others wished for the assessment to be
included in the initial sale price of the home. Id. at 23.
The Task Force issued 13 recommendations based on its findings, two of which
are relevant:
Recommendation 7: Require a contract for the sale of new
residential real property in Prince George’s County to contain
a disclosure statement regarding the estimated cost of any
deferred water and sewer charges for which the purchaser
may become liable. The disclosure statement must include
the amount of the annual assessment; the number of years of
the assessment; the amount of the full assessment, including
interest; the name and address of the person/entity
responsible for collection of the assessment; the interest rate
on the assessment; the payoff amount of the assessment; and a
statement that payoff of the assessment is allowed without
penalty.
These recommendations should be considered for future
action on resale property.
Recommendation 8: If the information for the sale contract
of residential real property is not included, the purchaser is
entitled to recover from the seller the total amount of deferred
25
charges the purchaser will be obligated to pay following the
sale and any money actually paid by the purchaser on the
deferred charge that was lost as a result of the violation. If
the violation is discovered before settlement, the buyer may
rescind the real estate contract without penalty.
Id. at vii-viii, 24 (emphasis added). Recommendations 7 and 8 clearly reflect and address
homeowners’ concerns about the lack of disclosure and transparency regarding deferred
water and sewer assessments charged by private developers. In response to the Task
Force Report and recommendations, the General Assembly enacted House Bill 1043,12
which codified Recommendations 7 and 8 almost verbatim as § 14-117(a)(3)(i) and § 14-
117(b)(2), respectively.13
Because the Court of Appeals determined that § 14-117 is “clearly remedial,” we
liberally construe the statute to “suppress the evil and advance the remedy.”14 Harrison
v. John F. Pilli & Sons, Inc., 321 Md. 336, 341 (1990). In light of the Task Force’s stated
goal to “improv[e] the transparency” of how private developers charge and disclose
12
The General Assembly adopted six of the Task Force’s 13 recommendations.
See Dep’t of Legis. Servs., Revised Fiscal and Policy Note on House Bill 1043, 2014
Leg., 434th Sess., at 3 (Md. 2014).
13
The General Assembly clarified that § 14-117(a)(3)(i) only applies to the
“initial” sale of residential real property and inserted the words “estimated” in front of
“payoff amount” (Disclosure 7) and “prepayment” in front of “penalty” (Disclosure 8).
Compare Real Prop. § 14-117(a)(3)(i) with Task Force Report, supra, at vii-viii. The
remedies provided by Recommendation 8 remained the same in § 14-117(b)(2).
Compare Real Prop. § 14-117(b)(2) with Task Force Report, supra, at viii.
14
At the time Harrison v. John F. Pilli & Sons, Inc., 321 Md. 336 (1990) was
decided, the disclosure provisions for deferred water and sewer charges were codified as
§ 14-118, which was subsequently transferred to § 14-117 by Chapter 756 of the 1989
Laws of Maryland. 321 Md. at 338 n.1. The disclosure provisions at issue in this case
went into effect on October 1, 2014. 2014 Md. Laws ch. 441.
26
deferred water and sewer charges and the penalties set forth for violating subsection
(a)(3), it is clear that the General Assembly passed House Bill 1043 to provide purchasers
with detailed information about water and sewer fees at the time of the initial sale and to
provide a remedy when developers violate the disclosure requirements. 2012 Md. Laws
ch. 685, § 2(g)(5). Thus, the disclosures must transparently alert the purchaser that the
deferred water and sewer charges can be prepaid in full at the time of settlement. See
Neal v. Fisher, 312 Md. 685, 694 (1988) (stating that “court[s] should not permit ‘a
narrow or grudging process of construction to exemplify and perpetuate the very evils to
be remedied’” (quoting Van Beeck v. Sabine Towing Co., 300 U.S. 342, 350-51 (1937))).
Ms. Sullivan asserts that the goal of the General Assembly—to afford purchasers
the opportunity to save thousands of dollars in interest by prepaying the assessment in
full—cannot be carried out if the seller provides an inaccurate “estimated payoff
amount,” leading the purchaser to erroneously believe that there is no financial benefit to
prepaying. Conversely, Caruso argues that its disclosure statements effectuated the
remedial purpose of the statute because the Purchase Agreement provided the disclosures
twice in Addendum Number 1 and Addendum Number 11.
We agree with Ms. Sullivan. As discussed above, the legislative history indicates
that the General Assembly, by adopting and codifying the Task Force’s
recommendations, wanted purchasers in Prince George’s County to have the opportunity
27
to save money by prepaying the assessment in full and avoiding interest payments.15 See
Blackstone v. Sharma, 461 Md. 87, 114 (2018) (We must “consider the consequences
resulting from one meaning rather than another, and adopt that construction which avoids
an illogical or unreasonable result, or one which is inconsistent with common sense.”
(quoting Spangler v. McQuitty, 449 Md. 33, 50 (2016))).
In sum, the historical context and legislative history of § 14-117(a)(3)(i) reveal
that the General Assembly intended the statutory disclosures to improve transparency and
provide accurate information to purchasers. This accords with our plain language
interpretation.
II. THE AMENDED COMPLAINT STATES A CLAIM UPON WHICH RELIEF
MAY BE GRANTED.
With the above statutory interpretation in mind, we now return to the Amended
Complaint. In analyzing this pleading, we presume the truth of the alleged facts and
draw reasonable inferences derived from those facts. See Schisler v. State, 177 Md. App.
15
The Task Force Report additionally provided examples of how purchasers
within the WSSC service area and other counties in Maryland can save significant
amounts of money by prepaying their deferred assessments in full. See Task Force
Report, supra, at 18 (“By paying off the charge early, the property owner [within the
WSSC area] avoids future annual interest charges relating to the front foot benefit
assessment.”); id. at 19 (“As with WSSC, a property owner [in Anne Arundel County]
has the option to pay off their front foot benefit assessment early, and by doing so the
property owner avoids the cost of interest that would otherwise be applied to annual
payments. Given the current interest rate of approximately 3.45%, a property owner that
pays the front foot benefit assessment in full in the first year can save as much as 62%
compared to making each annual payment over 30 years.”); id. at 31-32 (providing an
example of how a property owner within the WSSC area can save over $6,300 by
prepaying the assessment as opposed to annual payments totaling $16,110.61 over 21
years).
28
731, 743 (2007). The Amended Complaint alleged that the Purchase Agreement
“disclosed” that the “amount remaining on the assessment, including interest” and the
“estimated payoff amount of the assessment” are both $20,700 and in doing so, Caruso
“fail[ed] to accurately disclose” the estimated payoff amount. Instead of asserting there
was no disclosure, Ms. Sullivan alleged that the disclosure provided was not in
compliance with § 14-117(a)(3)(i). She explained that because the Declaration specifies
that a present day value may be used, “[t]he actual ‘estimated payoff amount’ can only be
determined by performing a present value calculation.” Ms. Sullivan asserted that
because a present value may be used, “the actual ‘estimated payoff amount’ cannot be
equal to the ‘amount remaining on the assessment, including interest’ because the actual
‘estimated payoff amount’ cannot include the 8% interest accruing on the water and
sewer assessment for 23 years.” In other words, Ms. Sullivan alleged that if one of the
disclosures includes interest but the other does not, then the two disclosures could not be
the same value. Consequently, the “estimated payoff amount” must be less than the
“amount remaining on the assessment, including interest.” According to Ms. Sullivan,
Caruso did not provide an “accurate” disclosure of the “estimated payoff amount” “as
required” by § 14-117(a)(3)(i)(7).
While the Amended Complaint is not a model of clarity, the allegations are
adequate to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. It is sufficient to alert Caruso
of the basis of Ms. Sullivan’s claims and requested relief, namely that the disclosures
were not in compliance with § 14-117(a)(3)(i). See Md. Rule 2-303(b); LaSalle Bank,
N.A. v. Reeves, 173 Md. App. 392, 410-11 (2007).
29
CONCLUSION
We hold that under Real Property § 14-117(a)(3)(i), the disclosure for the
“estimated payoff amount of the assessment” must reflect a good faith calculation that
notifies the purchaser that she has the option to save money by prepaying the assessment
in full at the time of settlement. Based on this interpretation, we determine that Ms.
Sullivan’s Amended Complaint sufficiently stated a claim upon which relief may be
granted. We therefore hold that the circuit court erred in granting Caruso’s renewed
motion to dismiss.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
REVERSED; CASE REMANDED FOR
FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT
WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS TO BE
PAID BY APPELLEE.
30