Charles Riley, Jr. Revocable Trust, et al. v. Venice Beach Citizens Association, Inc., No.
5, September Term, 2023. Opinion by Gould, J.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT – PRIOR GRANTING OF SUMMARY JUDGMENT -
IMPLICATION
The Supreme Court of Maryland held that a circuit court abused its discretion in vacating
a prior order granting partial summary judgment. A court’s decision to vacate a prior order
is reviewed for an abuse of discretion; reversal of the circuit court is appropriate if the
court’s decision is “well removed from any center mark imagined by the reviewing court
and beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally acceptable.” In re
Adoption/Guardianship No. 3598, 347 Md. 295, 313 (1997) (quoting North v. North, 102
Md. App. 1, 14 (1994)).
SUMMARY JUDGMENT – COMPLIANCE WITH MARYLAND RULE 2-501(g)
Maryland Rule 2-501(g) provides that an order that specifies “the issues or facts that are
not in genuine dispute” is subject to modification by the circuit court only “to prevent
manifest injustice.” Appellate courts apply an abuse of discretion standard to the trial
court’s determination that the modification was necessary to prevent manifest injustice.
COUNTERCLAIM - PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT CLAIM – REQUIREMENT
TO RAISE
A defendant’s counterclaim that exists independently from the plaintiff’s claim is not
rendered moot if the defendant prevails on the plaintiff’s claim. The defendant, therefore,
is an aggrieved party if the counterclaim is dismissed. If the plaintiff appeals, the dismissal
of the counterclaim is not before an appellate court and will ordinarily not be reviewed
unless the defendant cross-appeals.
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
Case No.: C-02-CV-19-003841
Argued: October 2, 2023
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF MARYLAND
No. 5
September Term, 2023
______________________________________
CHARLES RILEY, JR. REVOCABLE
TRUST, et al.
v.
VENICE BEACH
CITIZENS ASSOCIATION, INC.
______________________________________
Fader, C.J.,
Watts,
Hotten,
Booth,
Biran,
Gould,
Eaves,
JJ.
______________________________________
Opinion by Gould, J.
Hotten and Eaves, JJ., dissent.
______________________________________
Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State
Government Article) this document is authentic. Filed: April 19, 2024
2024.04.19
12:11:12
-04'00'
Gregory Hilton, Clerk
The main issue in this title dispute is whether a party has a right to rely on a favorable
partial summary judgment ruling when the rest of the case goes to trial. The issue arises
from a dispute between a homeowner and a citizens association over a parcel of
undeveloped land. The parcel was bisected into two sections by a stone wall. The
homeowner claimed adverse possession over the entire parcel, but in an amended
complaint, the homeowner treated the two sections as distinct parcels acquired at different
times and on different grounds. The homeowner moved for summary judgment on the
claim to the smaller section, which the circuit court granted.1
A different judge presided over the bench trial on the homeowner’s claim to the
larger section. When the homeowner finished his case-in-chief, the citizens association
moved for judgment. The trial court granted the citizens association’s motion and entered
judgment for it on the homeowner’s claims, including the claim to the smaller section that
had been resolved in the homeowner’s favor on summary judgment.
After the trial court denied the homeowner’s motion to alter or amend the judgment,
he appealed to the Appellate Court of Maryland which, among other things, affirmed the
trial court’s disposition of the homeowner’s claims to both the smaller and larger sections.
We granted the homeowner’s petition for certiorari. The citizens association did not
cross-petition.
1
As we explain later, the claim to the larger section was pursued by a limited
liability company formed and owned solely by the homeowner. The distinction between
the homeowner and his limited liability company, however, is not relevant to our analysis.
On the main issue, we hold that the circuit court abused its discretion by implicitly
vacating the summary judgment entered in the homeowner’s favor on his claim to the
smaller section and then entering judgment for the citizens association on that claim. For
the reasons discussed below, we reverse in part and remand for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Petitioner Charles Riley, Jr. bought a residential property (“home lot”) on Wayman
Avenue in the Venice Beach community in Anne Arundel County in 1987.2 Riley’s house
faces east toward Wayman Avenue and the Chesapeake Bay. A 4,443 square foot,
undeveloped parcel of land (“Subject Property”) lies southeast of the home lot. The home
lot shares a small part of its eastern border with the western border of the Subject Property.
The Subject Property is bordered to the east by Wayman Avenue, which runs parallel to
the Chesapeake Bay, and to the south by Chesapeake Avenue.
When Riley bought the home lot, the Subject Property was bisected by a block wall
that severed the Subject Property into two sections: a 2283 square foot parcel on the north
2
On August 17, 1991, Mr. Riley conveyed fee simple title of the home lot to himself
in his capacity as trustee for the Charles Riley, Jr. Revocable Trust (“Riley Trust”), of
which he was the sole trustee and beneficiary. Thus, after that date, Mr. Riley’s actions
with respect to that property, including filing this lawsuit, were undertaken in his capacity
as the trustee for the Riley Trust. Because it does not affect the outcome of this case, when
we refer to Riley, we will not specify whether he was acting in his individual capacity or
as trustee of the Riley Trust.
3
The record is inconsistent as to whether the Small Section was 228 square feet or
288 square feet. The survey in the record indicates it was 228 square feet, so we accept that
number as correct.
2
side of the wall (“Small Section”) and a 4,215 square foot parcel on the south side of the
wall (“Large Section”). The home lot lies next to the Small Section and catty-corner to the
Large Section.
The Subject Property was part of an undeveloped tract of land (“Venice Beach
property”) acquired by Osborn T. Taylor in 1919. The Venice Beach property was
subdivided and developed into a residential community. When Mr. Osborn died in 1935,
he still owned parts of the original tract, consisting of beach, roads, and undeveloped
parcels—including the Subject Property (“remaining Venice Beach property”).
By 1977, through inter vivos transfers and inheritances, the remaining Venice Beach
property was owned by three individuals as tenants in common: Irena Leak, with a 37.5
percent interest, Jennie Wilder, with a 37.5 percent interest, and Benjamin Taylor, with a
25 percent interest. In 1977, Ms. Leak deeded her interest in the remaining Venice Beach
property—including the Subject Property—to her son, John Clay Leak, Jr. In 1987, Mr.
Leak sold his interest in one parcel of the remaining Venice Beach property—the Subject
Property—to Richard and Marcella Jones.4 And in June 2019, the Joneses deeded their
interest in the Subject Property to Bay Pride, LLC (“Bay Pride”), a limited liability
company formed and owned by Riley.
Ms. Wilder died in 1978, leaving her interest in the remaining Venice Beach
property to her two children. In 1987, the Wilder children executed a deed to convey their
4
In 1987, the Joneses conveyed their interest to a trust they established called the
Jones Family Trust. This conveyance is irrelevant to any issue before this Court. To make
it easier to keep track of the cast of characters, we will not distinguish between the Joneses
and their trust and will refer to both as the “Joneses.”
3
interest in the remaining Venice Beach property to the Respondent, Venice Beach Citizens
Association, Inc. (“Association”). That interest, however, was still owned by their late
mother’s estate and so in the early 1990s, the transfer was declared invalid by the circuit
court. In 2017, the Association received and recorded a deed correcting the defect.
Nobody seems to know what happened to Benjamin Taylor’s interest. He died in
1956. His lone survivor was his wife; she died in 1996. The identities and whereabouts of
his heirs are not known. So, by June 2019, the only known title holders of the Subject
Property were Bay Pride and the Association.
The Complaint
On November 22, 2019, Riley and Bay Pride sued the Association in the Circuit
Court for Anne Arundel County. They subsequently amended their complaint to join the
unknown heirs of Benjamin Taylor, who were served by publication. The amended
complaint asserted five counts.
In counts one and three, captioned “adverse possession” and “quiet title,”
respectively, Riley sought a declaration that he had acquired full legal title to the Small
Section. For convenience, we will refer to these two counts as the “Small Section claim.”
In counts two and four, also captioned “adverse possession” and “quiet title,”
respectively, Bay Pride sought a declaration that it had acquired full legal title to the Large
Section. For convenience, we will refer to these two counts as the “Large Section claim.”
In count five, Riley and Bay Pride asked the court to appoint a trustee to sell the
Subject Property in lieu of a partition among its joint tenant owners (“Trustee Sale claim”).
4
The Association’s Counterclaim
The Association countersued Riley and Bay Pride. Claiming that the Venice Beach
community residents used and maintained the Subject Property, the Association’s amended
counterclaim asked the court to declare, among other things, that it had a prescriptive
easement benefiting those members. The Association also sought to enjoin Riley and Bay
Pride from interfering with the easement.
Riley Awarded Summary Judgment
on the Small Section Claim
Riley moved for partial summary judgment on the Small Section claim. Riley’s
supporting affidavit explained that the block wall severing the Subject Property was there
when he bought the home lot in 1987. And, in the early 1990s, he incorporated the Small
Section into the home lot through landscaping, curbing, and fencing. He alone maintained
the Small Section since 1987. Riley also supported his motion with affidavits from other
witnesses and various deeds, emails, surveys, and pictures.
In response, the Association did not dispute that Riley incorporated the Small
Section into the home lot’s landscape design or that he exclusively possessed and
maintained it since 1987. The Association instead argued that Riley did not establish the
element of hostile use of the Subject Property. Why? Because Bay Pride held an interest in
the Subject Property, and so Riley’s maintenance and use of the Small Section could not
have been hostile.
The circuit court (Alban, J.) heard the motion in December 2020. The court later
issued a Memorandum Opinion and accompanying order granting Riley’s motion (“Small
5
Section SJ Order”). As the court observed, since 1994, Riley “treated the [Small Section]
as his own property through landscaping it[,]” which was “visible and obvious, making the
possession open” to any observer. Rejecting the Association’s argument that Riley did not
establish the element of hostile use, the court noted that Bay Pride acquired its interest in
2019, and by then, Riley already owned the Small Section by adverse possession. That
means when Bay Pride took title to the Subject Property, it did not include the Small
Section.
Riley Awarded Default Judgment Against
Benjamin Taylor’s Heirs on His Small Section Claim
As noted above, Riley and Bay Pride joined the unknown heirs to Benjamin Taylor
as defendants and, with the court’s permission, served them by publication. None
responded, prompting Riley and Bay Pride to request an order of default, which the court
granted. Riley subsequently moved for a default judgment against the Benjamin Taylor
heirs on the Small Section claim, which the court (Alban, J.) also granted. With that ruling,
Riley successfully resolved his Small Section claim.
Or so he thought.
Riley and Bay Pride Awarded Summary Judgment
on the Association’s Prescriptive Easement Counterclaim
Riley and Bay Pride separately moved for summary judgment on the Association’s
counterclaim for a prescriptive easement. They focused on the Association’s failure to
6
demonstrate the elements of adversity and uninterrupted use for 20 years.5 They contended
that the Large Section was not used by community members, other than the Joneses, until
2003 when “Hurricane Isabel dumped sand and storm debris from the Chesapeake onto the
Subject Property.” They claimed that before then, the Subject Property “was in a natural
state, marshy in areas and overgrown with cattails and phragmites.” Further, because the
Association filed its counterclaim on May 14, 2020, they claimed that the Association’s
continuous use was fewer than 20 years. And they relied on correspondence establishing
that the Association sought and received permission from Bay Pride and its predecessor,
the Joneses, before holding community events there. Thus, they argued, the Association
could not prove adverse use of the Subject Property.
The Association countered that when it asked for permission to use the Subject
Property, it was doing so merely as a courtesy to keep the peace. The Association argued
that it did not have to prove that it physically used the Subject Property for 20 years and
that “one need not gather on community open space in order to enjoy the benefits the open
space brings to the community.” The Association maintained that although the nature of
its use of the Subject Property before 2003 was different than its physical use after 2003,
its use was still “sufficient to meet the criteria for its claim for its established prescriptive
easement.”
5
A claimant seeking to establish a prescriptive easement must prove adverse,
exclusive, and uninterrupted use of another’s real property for 20 years. Banks v. Pusey,
393 Md. 688, 699 (2006).
7
The circuit court (Alban, J.) determined that the Association’s letters seeking
permission “are what they appear to be, requests for permission.” The court found that the
Association’s request for permission “defeats the required adversity or hostility element
for a prescriptive easement” and thus granted summary judgment against the Association
on its amended counterclaim.
Bay Pride’s Motion for Summary Judgment
on the Large Section Claim
Five months after the circuit court entered the Small Section SJ Order, Bay Pride
moved for summary judgment on its Large Section claim. Bay Pride relied primarily on
the deeds under which title to the Subject Property found its way from Irena Leak to,
ultimately, Bay Pride. According to Bay Pride, the adverse possession clock started when,
notwithstanding her joint ownership with Ms. Wilder and Benjamin Taylor, Ms. Leak
conveyed a one hundred percent interest in the Subject Property to her son. The ouster
continued uninterrupted when, in 1987, Mr. Leak conveyed the Subject Property by special
warranty deed to the Joneses, who in turn conveyed it to the Jones Family Trust, who in
turn conveyed it to Bay Pride. Again, these deeds all purported to convey a one hundred
percent interest in the Subject Property without limitation or restriction. Bay Pride also
pointed out that the Joneses parked their car on the Subject Property and paid the real estate
taxes.
Based on these facts, and by tacking its brief ownership period onto the Joneses’
32-year ownership period, Bay Pride claimed adverse possession of the Large Section
“under color of title.” Bay Pride relied on several cases, including Merryman v.
8
Cumberland Paper Co. of Allegany County, 98 Md. 223 (1903), for the proposition that an
ouster of co-tenants occurs when the grantee of a deed purporting to convey “the whole
estate in fee” enters the property and “claims and holds the exclusive possession” of the
same for 20 years. Id. at 225. The court denied the motion four days before the start of trial.
The Trial
Only Bay Pride’s Large Section and Trustee Sale claims remained when the bench
trial began.6 A judge with no prior familiarity with the case was assigned to it the day
before. Although counsel for both sides tried to explain Bay Pride’s Large Section claim,
the trial court acknowledged that it “ha[d] no clue what anybody’s opening statement really
said.”
Bay Pride put on its case through two witnesses: Riley, who testified in person, and
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jones, Stephany Grillo, who testified through her recorded
video deposition. Riley also put into evidence six exhibits.
The Association moved for judgment at the end of Bay Pride’s case-in-chief. In
opposition, Bay Pride advanced the same ouster theory that it had made in its summary
judgment motion, focusing on the deeds of conveyance under which title passed from Irina
Leak to Bay Pride as well as its and the Joneses’ prior adverse use of the Large Section.
6
Riley, as trustee, was named as a plaintiff in count five, the Trustee Sale claim. In
their opening brief in this Court, Riley and Bay Pride explained that their Trustee Sale
claim was intended to be “a conditional claim” if the circuit court determined that they “did
not have absolute ownership of” the Small and Large Sections. As explained above, by the
time of trial, the circuit court had already ruled that Riley owned the Small Section. Thus,
at trial, only the Large Section was in play; as a result, the Trustee Sale claim concerned
the Large Section and belonged only to Bay Pride.
9
In reply, after addressing Bay Pride’s ouster theory, the Association told the court
that the Small Section SJ Order could be revised and, for the first time, asked the court to
enter judgment in the Association’s favor “on all of these issues.” The court responded that
Judge Alban’s decision was “not binding on” him and called for a lunch recess.
When the hearing resumed two hours later, after further discussion about Bay
Pride’s ouster theory, the court stated, “I’m granting the motion as to ouster.” The trial
judge explained that “[t]here hasn’t even been a prima facie case presented for ouster. So
that motion is granted. And we’re going to proceed on the adverse possession only at this
point. Is that correct? That’s the only thing left.”
In the discussion that ensued, the parties focused most of their remarks and
explanations on three issues. First, Bay Pride explained that its Large Section claim was
based on its ouster theory grounded on evidence that before the Association acquired its
interest in 2019, the Joneses “dominated and controlled” the Large Section for more than
20 years—which inured to Bay Pride’s benefit under a tacking theory. The Association
agreed that the adverse possession claim was based on ouster but argued that Bay Pride
failed to establish ouster. After listening to both parties, the trial court stated “[w]ell, it’s
as clear as mud, quite frankly.”
Second, the Association tried to resurrect its counterclaim for an easement, but this
time it argued for an easement by plat. When the Association tried to explain why Judge
Alban’s prior dismissal of that claim on summary judgment did not preclude the court from
revisiting the claim, the court interrupted counsel by stating “I don’t even want to hear
10
about Judge Alban. That’s not binding [] in any way on me and it’s got no bearing on what
we’re doing.”
Third, Bay Pride reminded the court of its outstanding motion for a default judgment
against the heirs of Benjamin Taylor, which requested a declaration that their collective 25
percent interest in the Large Section was now owned by Bay Pride. The Association argued
in response that if the heirs’ interests were forfeited, there was no reason why the forfeited
interests “would go to one party and not the other owner.”
The court ultimately granted the Association’s motion on all counts in Riley’s and
Bay Pride’s amended complaint, including Riley’s Small Section claim. The court also
denied Bay Pride’s request for a ruling on the Trustee Sale claim, explaining that “[y]ou
have to have clean hands to come into a court of equity.”
At no point during the argument did the parties or the trial court discuss the basis
for Riley’s Small Section claim.
The court entered a final judgment six days later. Riley and Bay Pride then moved
to alter or amend the judgment, which the trial court denied.
The Appellate Court’s Opinion
Riley and Bay Pride timely appealed to the Appellate Court of Maryland. In an
unreported opinion, the Appellate Court found that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion when it implicitly vacated the Small Section SJ Order and granted judgment
against Riley on his Small Section claim. Charles Riley, Jr. Revocable Tr. v. Venice Beach
Citizens Ass’n, Inc., Sept. Term 2021, No. 1064, 2023 WL 369752 (Md. App. Ct. Jan. 24,
11
2023). It also found that the circuit court’s denial of Bay Pride’s Large Section claim was
not clearly erroneous.
But the Appellate Court disagreed with the trial court’s refusal to consider Bay
Pride’s Trustee Sale claim. The Appellate Court determined that the evidence did not
support a finding that Bay Pride had unclean hands and thus remanded that claim for full
consideration.
Finally, based on its perception that the Association’s “counterclaim for a
prescriptive easement [was] tied” to the Trustee Sale claim, the Appellate Court instructed
the circuit court to reconsider the Association’s prescriptive easement claim if, upon full
consideration, it grants the Trustee Sale claim.
Certiorari Granted
We granted Riley’s and Bay Pride’s petition for certiorari. Charles Riley, Jr.
Revocable Tr. v. Venice Beach Citizens Ass’n, Inc., 483 Md. 571 (2023). They present two
questions for our review, which we have rephrased:
1. Did the circuit court commit reversible error when, in deciding the Association’s
motion for judgment at the close of Bay Pride’s prima facie case, it implicitly
vacated the Small Section SJ Order and granted judgment in the Association’s
favor on Riley’s Small Section claim?
2. Did the Appellate Court err in ordering the circuit court to reconsider the
Association’s claim for prescriptive easement, the dismissal of which on
summary judgment was not appealed by the Association?
We answer both questions in the affirmative.
12
DISCUSSION
The Circuit Court Abused Its Discretion in Vacating the
Small Section SJ Order and Entering Judgment
Against Riley on His Small Section Claim
Riley argues that having prevailed on his Small Section claim at summary judgment,
he had no duty to prove his Small Section claim at trial. A contrary result, he contends,
would defeat the purpose of summary judgment, which is to simplify the issues before the
court. Riley contends that the Small Section SJ Order was binding and modifiable only to
prevent “manifest injustice.” Riley further contends that the trial judge did not review the
Small Section SJ Order, let alone find that it was improvidently entered. Riley emphasizes
that the timing of the trial judge’s ruling—after Bay Pride put on its prima facie case—
highlights the prejudice to him because by then, it was too late for him to present evidence
to prove his Small Section claim.
The Association counters that vacating the Small Section SJ Order was a
discretionary decision amply supported by the record evidence. The Association argues
that the trial judge had the benefit of facts “unavailable” to Judge Alban, including:
1. Riley moved to Venice Beach in 1987.
2. Riley served for years on the Association’s board in the early 1990s.
3. Riley knew about the Association’s 1987 deed to the Subject Property and knew
that it was recorded a few months after Riley bought his home lot.
4. Riley knew that the 1987 Association deed included a statement of the developer’s
intent to convey the roads and open areas, including the Subject Property, to the
Association.
5. Riley learned in the 1990s that the 1987 deed, which provided the Association with
color of title, was invalid, and that the defect needed to be corrected.
13
6. Riley, as a member of the Association, co-hosted a party along with the Association
on the Subject Property in 2002.
7. Riley was a member of the board of the Association in 2017, the year the
Association’s deed to the Subject Property was finally corrected and recorded.
8. In January 2019, when Riley first demanded recognition that he owned “100
percent” of the Subject Property, Riley was on the board and knew that the
Association had recently perfected its deed for valid title to 37.5 percent of the
Subject Property.
9. Riley filed this suit in November 2019, only five months after Bay Pride received
an interest in the Subject Property, and sued the Association for full ownership of
the Small Section and the Large Section—to “enhance [his] peaceful enjoyment of
[his] property.”
The Association argues that, on these facts, the trial judge “understood Riley’s
‘unclean hands’ and correctly made this ruling.” The Association contends that because
Riley is the sole trustee and only beneficiary of his revocable trust and the only member of
Bay Pride, “both Petitioners—in the person of Mr. Riley”—had the opportunity to present
evidence on behalf of both of them, but that such evidence “supported a contradictory
conclusion than that reached by the court on summary judgment.” And because the Small
Section SJ Order was subject to revision at any time before final judgment was entered, the
trial judge rightfully set it aside because, “[u]pon hearing and understanding [Riley’s]
motivations, it would have been an error to allow [it] to stand.”
Analysis
We begin with a recognition that, “[a]s a general principle, one judge of a trial court
ruling on a matter is not bound by the prior ruling in the same case by another judge of the
court; the second judge, in his discretion, may ordinarily consider the matter de novo.”
14
State v. Frazier, 298 Md. 422, 449 (1984). This principle finds expression in Maryland
Rule 2-602(a), which gives the circuit court limited discretion to enter a final appealable
judgment on orders that partially resolve a case.7 Waterkeeper All., Inc. v. Md. Dep’t of
Agric., 439 Md. 262, 288 (2014) (“The purpose of Rule 2-602(a) is to prevent piecemeal
appeals, which, beyond being inefficient and costly, can create significant delays, hardship,
and procedural problems.” (quoting Smith v. Lead Indus. Ass’n, Inc., 386 Md. 12, 25
(2005))). A court’s decision to vacate its prior order is reviewed for an abuse of discretion,
Banegura v. Taylor, 312 Md. 609, 620-21 (1988), that is, reversal is appropriate when the
court’s decision is “well removed from any center mark imagined by the reviewing court
and beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally acceptable,” In re
Adoption/Guardianship No. 3598, 347 Md. 295, 313 (1997) (quoting North v. North, 102
Md. App. 1, 14 (1994)).
The breadth of the court’s discretion depends on context. Judges have a wide berth
on some issues, e.g., whether a leading question should be allowed. Alexis v. State, 437
7
Maryland Rule 2-602(a) provides:
Generally. Except as provided in section (b) of this Rule, an order or other
form of decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer than all of the
claims in an action (whether raised by original claim, counterclaim, cross-
claim, or third-party claim), or that adjudicates less than an entire claim, or
that adjudicates the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties to the
action:
(1) is not a final judgment;
(2) does not terminate the action as to any of the claims or any
of the parties; and
(3) is subject to revision at any time before the entry of a
judgment that adjudicates all of the claims by and against all of
the parties.
15
Md. 457, 479 (2014). Other discretionary decisions are “circumscribed by strong policy
considerations and well-articulated guidelines.” Id. (quoting Canterbury Riding Condo. v.
Chesapeake Invs., Inc., 66 Md. App. 635, 648 (1986)). The general rule allowing courts to
reconsider prior rulings without deference “is inapplicable if a statute or rule reflects a
different intent in a particular situation.” Frazier, 298 Md. at 449. That exception applies
here: The court’s discretion to modify a partial summary judgment order is informed by
Maryland Rule 2-501 and its animating principles.
A core purpose of the summary judgment process is to determine “whether there is
a triable issue of fact.” King v. Bankerd, 303 Md. 98, 111-12 (1985). Rule 2-501 serves
that objective in three respects. First, Rule 2-501 mandates compliance with specific
procedural requirements. For starters, summary judgment motions must be in writing.8 Md.
8
Rule 2-501 provides:
(a) Motion. Any party may file a written motion for summary judgment on
all or part of an action on the ground that there is no genuine dispute as to
any material fact and that the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
The motion shall be supported by affidavit if it is (1) filed before the day on
which the adverse party’s initial pleading or motion is filed or (2) based on
facts not contained in the record. A motion for summary judgment may not
be filed: (A) after any evidence is received at trial on the merits or (B) unless
permission of the court is granted, after the deadline for dispositive motions
specified in the scheduling order entered pursuant to Rule 2-504(b)(1)(F).
(b) Response. A response to a motion for summary judgment shall be in
writing and shall (1) identify with particularity each material fact as to which
it is contended that there is a genuine dispute and (2) as to each such fact,
identify and attach the relevant portion of the specific document, discovery
response, transcript of testimony (by page and line), or other statement under
oath that demonstrates the dispute. A response asserting the existence of a
16
Rule 2-501(a). Facts not conceded by the nonmoving party must be supported by an
affidavit. Id. The party opposing summary judgment must “identify with particularity” the
material facts in genuine dispute and establish such disputes with supporting evidence. Md.
Rule 2-501(b). This process equips the court to determine which material facts are
genuinely disputed and must be determined by trial.
Second, the timing requirements of Rule 2-501 also serve the issue-narrowing
function of summary judgment. Gone are the days when a summary judgment motion could
be made orally at trial, a practice that raised “due process considerations” of “fair notice
and opportunity to defend for the nonmoving party.” Beyer v. Morgan State Univ., 369 Md.
335, 359 n.16 (2002). Now, unless the court permits otherwise, summary judgment motions
must be filed within the deadline “specified in the scheduling order entered pursuant to
material fact or controverting any fact contained in the record shall be
supported by an affidavit or other written statement under oath.
***
(d) Affidavit of Defense Not Available. If the court is satisfied from the
affidavit of a party opposing a motion for summary judgment that the facts
essential to justify the opposition cannot be set forth for reasons stated in the
affidavit, the court may deny the motion or may order a continuance to permit
affidavits to be obtained or discovery to be conducted or may enter any other
order that justice requires.
***
(g) Order Specifying Issues or Facts Not in Dispute. When a ruling on a
motion for summary judgment does not dispose of the entire action and a
trial is necessary, the court may enter an order specifying the issues or facts
that are not in genuine dispute. The order controls the subsequent course of
the action but may be modified by the court to prevent manifest injustice.
17
Rule 2-504(b)(1)(F)[,]” which must be at least fifteen days after completing discovery. Md.
Rule 2-501(a). These timing provisions give the parties a fair opportunity to marshal
evidence to support and oppose summary judgment motions and allow for a decision before
trial.9
Third, the issue-narrowing function of summary judgment is served by the
flexibility baked into Rule 2-501 for the parties to seek and the court to grant partial
summary judgment, that is, summary judgment as to “all or part of [the] action[.]” Md.
Rule 2-501(a). The motion can thus resolve fewer than all counts of a multi-count
complaint or one or more elements of a single count. An example of the former would be
the Small Section SJ Order, which resolved two of the five counts in the amended
complaint; an example of the latter would be an order granting summary judgment on
liability only, leaving damages to be determined at trial. The court can even grant summary
judgment against the moving party when the summary judgment requirements are met. See,
e.g., Fraternal Ord. of Police Montgomery Cnty. Lodge 35, Inc. v. Manger, 175 Md. App.
476, 493 (2007).
But a motion must be denied if any material fact is genuinely disputed. Hill v. Cross
Country Settlements, LLC, 402 Md. 281, 294 (2007). Even then, however, the court may
salvage some issue-narrowing benefits of the process by using Rule 2-501(g):
When a ruling on a motion for summary judgment does not dispose of the
entire action and a trial is necessary, the court may enter an order specifying
9
Moreover, if a party files a motion before the other party has had an opportunity
to take the discovery necessary to establish an evidentiary basis to generate a genuine
factual dispute, the nonmoving party can establish the need for such discovery with an
affidavit in compliance with subsection (d) of Rule 2-501.
18
the issues or facts that are not in genuine dispute. The order controls the
subsequent course of the action but may be modified by the court to prevent
manifest injustice.
The parties disagree on whether the manifest injustice standard in subsection (g)
applies when a court revises a partial summary judgment order under Rule 2-602. Riley
argues that the manifest injustice standard applies because, by its nature, a partial summary
judgment narrows the issues for trial, and, in any event, the Small Section SJ Order
identified the undisputed material facts in the accompanying Memorandum Opinion. The
Association argues that the manifest injustice standard did not apply and that this Court
should review this case “under the correct standard for abuse of discretion.”
By its terms, subsection (g) applies to an order that specifies “the issues or facts that
are not in genuine dispute.” Md. Rule 2-501(g). The Small Section SJ Order qualifies as
such, as it states, in relevant part:
For the reasons expressed in this Court’s Memorandum Opinion of even date,
IT IS by the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, Maryland:
ORDERED, that the Court does not find a dispute of any material
fact exists in Motion for Summary Judgment A[.]
The Memorandum Opinion, in turn, recited the specific undisputed material facts
supporting the ruling. Thus, under subsection (g), the Small Section SJ Order should have
controlled the subsequent proceedings and was subject to modification only “to prevent
manifest injustice.”
In arguing otherwise, the Association seems to conflate the standard that the circuit
court must apply when modifying an order under subsection (g) and the standard of review
that an appellate court applies when it reviews that decision. These are distinct issues. The
19
circuit court’s decision to modify an order is inherently a judgment call based on the
circumstances. If the circuit court finds that modifying a prior order is necessary to prevent
manifest injustice, appellate courts review that determination for an abuse of discretion.
In any event, even if the Small Section SJ Order were modifiable under a less
onerous standard, the trial court still abused its discretion here.10 The summary judgment
process is designed to narrow the issues for trial. For it to work as intended, parties must
be able to rely on partial summary judgments; otherwise, the entire exercise would be
pointless, at best. From Riley’s perspective, it was worse than pointless.
That is because Riley did rely on the Small Section SJ Order, so he had no reason
to think that he would have to prove his Small Section claim again at trial. And neither the
Association nor the trial judge should have expected him to do so. The Association made
no pretrial request for reconsideration of the Small Section SJ Order. Nor did it take any
other action to timely inform Riley that it would seek to vacate it. The Association first
raised the issue during argument on its motion for judgment on the Large Section claim—
10
In holding that the Small Section SJ Order was subject to subsection (g), we note
that a pretrial order is modifiable under the same standard. See Md. Rule 2-504.2(c) (“The
order controls the subsequent course of the action but may be modified by the court to
prevent manifest injustice.”). Because a party’s reliance interest in a partial summary
judgment ruling is at least equal to its reliance interest in a pretrial order, we perceive no
persuasive reason for the former to warrant less deference than the latter. But even if a less
deferential standard would apply, we would be hard-pressed to justify a lower bar than the
standard governing scheduling orders, which can be modified only “to prevent injustice.”
See Md. Rule 2-504(c) (“The scheduling order controls the subsequent course of the action
but shall be modified by the court to prevent injustice.”). Here, under either the manifest
injustice standard or a plain injustice standard, the circuit court abused its discretion for the
reasons discussed.
20
and only when it was replying to Bay Pride’s opposition to that motion. By then, it was too
late for Riley to even attempt to prove his Small Section claim.
The trial court did not even address whether the Small Section SJ Order was correct
when it was made or whether any of the trial evidence undermined the basis for it. The trial
court never explained why it was disregarding that order; it simply declared that it was not
bound by it and did not “want to hear about” it. Nor did the court explicitly vacate the
Small Section SJ Order; it skipped that part and proceeded straight to entering judgment
against Riley on the Small Section claim. The result: prevailing on his summary judgment
motion put Riley in a worse position than if he had never filed it. That’s not how the
summary judgment process is supposed to work.
We reject the Association’s argument that the trial evidence tied the court’s hands
and compelled it to vacate the Small Section SJ Order. The Small Section and Large
Section claims were based on different operative facts. The Association points to Riley’s
participation on the Association’s board and his knowledge of its efforts to acquire title to
the Subject Property—that is, the evidence of Riley’s so-called unclean hands—and
contends that such evidence was not before Judge Alban. But if so, it is because such
evidence was irrelevant to the Small Section claim, which depended solely on Riley’s
incorporation of that section into his home lot. And none of that evidence was new, so if
the Association believed it was relevant, the Association could have put it before Judge
Alban.11
11
In any event, the Appellate Court correctly determined that the circuit court’s
finding of unclean hands was clearly erroneous.
21
Accordingly, although the circuit court has discretion under Rule 2-602 to revise or
vacate an order granting partial summary judgment before final judgment is entered, the
trial court abused that discretion here. We therefore reverse the Appellate Court’s judgment
on this issue and remand this case for further proceedings as detailed below.
The Association’s Counterclaim
for a Prescriptive Easement
As noted above, Judge Alban granted summary judgment against the Association
on its amended counterclaim for a prescriptive easement. At trial, when Bay Pride asked
the trial court to grant its Trustee Sale claim, the Association tried to resurrect its
prescriptive easement claim so that a buyer would have to honor the rights of the Venice
Beach community members to use the Subject Property. The trial court denied the Trustee
Sale claim and rejected the Association’s request to revisit its prescriptive easement claim.
The Appellate Court vacated the judgment on the Trustee Sale claim and remanded
the case with instructions to consider it. The Association did not seek further review of that
decision, so that issue is not before us. But perceiving a connection between the Trustee
Sale claim and the Association’s claim for a prescriptive easement, the Appellate Court
also instructed the trial court, on remand, to reconsider the Association’s counterclaim for
a prescriptive easement if it grants the Trustee Sale claim. That decision is before us.
Riley and Bay Pride argue that the Appellate Court erred because, among other
things, the Association neither cross-appealed the dismissal of its prescriptive easement
claim nor addressed the issue in its brief in the Appellate Court. The Association counters
that it could not have cross-appealed because it “prevailed on all issues” and was thus not
22
aggrieved by the lower court’s decision. That is, the Association insists that because the
trial court denied Bay Pride’s Trustee Sale claim, its request for a prescriptive easement
became moot because, as an owner of the Subject Property, it did not need a prescriptive
easement.
The Association’s prescriptive easement claim did not depend entirely on Bay
Pride’s success in its Trustee Sale claim. In its amended counterclaim, the Association
asked the court to declare that the Subject Property was encumbered by a prescriptive
easement “for the benefit of the members and the community of Venice Beach, regardless
of how the title to the Subject Property was ultimately resolved[.]” Separately, the
Association requested that “in the event that the Subject Property is sold as a result of this
action, that it remain subject to the unrestricted rights of Venice Beach to use and maintain
the Subject Property[.]” The Association also asked the court to enjoin Riley and Bay Pride
“from taking any action to interfere with the rights of Venice Beach for the continued use
of the Subject Property[.]” In sum, the Association sought recognition of a prescriptive
easement no matter who held title to the Subject Property—Riley, Bay Pride, the
Association, or anyone else.
The Association was thus aggrieved by the dismissal of its prescriptive easement
claim. As such, because the Association failed to cross-appeal, the issue was not before the
Appellate Court. See Taylor v. Wahby, 271 Md. 101, 110 (1974). Accordingly, we reverse
the Appellate Court’s conditional revival of the Association’s amended counterclaim.
23
Conclusion
We hold that the circuit court abused its discretion in vacating the Small Section SJ
Order and entering judgment against Riley on his Small Section claim, thus we reverse the
Appellate Court’s judgment affirming the circuit court as to that claim. The remand orders
from the Appellate Court to the circuit court should be revised to instruct the circuit court
to enter a separate declaratory judgment for Riley, in his capacity as trustee, against all
defendants on counts one and three of the amended complaint. The separate judgment
should declare that Riley owns the Small Section and should describe the Small Section
with specificity to avoid future controversies over its boundaries.
We also hold that the Appellate Court erred in conditionally reinstating the
Association’s counterclaim for a prescriptive easement, thus we reverse the Appellate
Court’s judgment as to that claim. The remand instructions from the Appellate Court to the
circuit court should be revised accordingly.
JUDGMENT OF THE APPELLATE
COURT OF MARYLAND
REVERSED IN PART. CASE
REMANDED TO APPELLATE
COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO
REVISE ITS REMAND ORDER
CONSISTENT WITH THIS
OPINION. COSTS TO BE PAID BY
RESPONDENT.
24
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
Case No.: C-02-CV-19-003841 IN THE SUPREME COURT
Argued: October 2, 2023
OF MARYLAND
No. 5
September Term, 2023
CHARLES RILEY, JR. REVOCABLE
TRUST, et al.
v.
VENICE BEACH
CITIZENS ASSOCIATION, INC.
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Fader, C.J.
Watts,
Hotten,
Booth,
Biran,
Gould,
Eaves,
JJ.
Dissenting Opinion by Hotten, J. which,
Eaves, J., joins.
Filed: April 19, 2024
I respectfully dissent. I would answer both of Mr. Riley’s1 questions in the negative.
In my view, the circuit court did not abuse its considerable discretion when vacating an
interlocutory grant of summary judgment under the facts presented. I also would hold that
the Appellate Court did not abuse its discretion in remanding the prescriptive easement
claim of the Association alongside Mr. Riley’s sale in lieu of partition claim, as the two
claims are inextricably linked.
The Circuit Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion.
First, the Majority recognizes that “one judge of a [circuit] court ruling on a matter
is not bound by the prior ruling in the same case by another judge of the court; the second
judge, in [their] discretion, may ordinarily consider the matter de novo.” State v. Frazier,
298 Md. 422, 449, 470 A.2d 1269, 1283 (1984). Indeed, interlocutory orders under
Maryland Rule 2-602 are rulings to which revisory discretion applies. See, e.g., Henley v.
Prince George’s Cnty., 305 Md. 320, 328, 503 A.2d 1333, 1337 (1986) (“Because the order
of June 2 did not dispose of the claim[,] . . . it was interlocutory and subject to revision in
the discretion of the [circuit] court.”).
However, the Majority points to Maryland Rule 2-501(g) as a “rule [which] reflects
a different intent in a particular situation[]” and limits a subsequent judge’s discretion.
Frazier, 298 Md. at 449, 470 A.2d at 1283. The Majority seems to believe that, in this
case, the circuit court’s prior grant of summary judgment in favor of Mr. Riley was an
order qualified under Maryland Rule 2-501(g). Accordingly, the Majority believes that the
1
Like the Majority, I will refer to Mr. Riley in lieu of the two entities of which he
comprises the sole membership of and which are Petitioners in this matter.
circuit court could only modify the prior order to “prevent manifest injustice.” I would
hold that the prior order does not qualify under Maryland Rule 2-501(g), and therefore, the
circuit court did not abuse its considerable discretion in vacating the order.
Orders granting summary judgment are not inherently orders under Maryland Rule
2-501(g). This Court applies the plain language of our Rules and reads the Rules as
operating together harmoniously. Fuster v. State, 437 Md. 653, 664–65, 89 A.3d 1114,
1120 (2014). Maryland Rule 2-501(g) provides:
When a ruling on a motion for summary judgment does not dispose of the
entire action and a trial is necessary, the court may enter an order specifying
the issues or facts that are not in genuine dispute. The order controls the
subsequent course of the action but may be modified by the court to prevent
manifest injustice.
(Emphasis added). This Court has defined “may” as generally being permissive. Uthus v.
Valley Mill Camp, Inc., 472 Md. 378, 397, 246 A.3d 1225, 1236 (2021). This permissive
order is distinguishable from the order granting summary judgment. Maryland Rule 2-
501(f) provides in relevant part that “[t]he court shall enter judgment in favor of or against
the moving party if the motion and response show that there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact and that the party in whose favor judgment is entered is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.” (Emphasis added).
In Alleghany Corp. v. Aldebaran Corp., 173 Md. 472, 478, 196 A. 418, 420 (1938),
this Court explained the difference between a court’s decree and its opinion. There, the
circuit court had issued an order for a “a writ of preliminary injunction” barring a
corporation from seeking a vote within another corporation for consolidation of the two.
Id. at 476, 196 A. at 419. The Appellants who sought such consolidation appealed the
2
order, expressing concern that the circuit court “in its opinion announced the conclusion
that the proposed plan of consolidation violated ‘rights secured by the Maryland law, and
by contract[.]’” Id. at 478, 196 A. at 420. We held that
[w]hat the [circuit] court decided must be found, and may only be found, in
its decree which is that the defendants be temporarily restrained from
proceeding with the consolidation. That conclusion was expressed in its
decree which alone is definitive. Its reasons for that conclusion as expressed
in its opinion, while helpful and entitled to great weight, do not determine
the propriety of its decree, for the decree may be affirmed even though the
reasons for it are wrong.
Id., 196 A. at 420 (emphasis added).
In Randolph Hills, Inc. v. Shoreham Devs., Inc., 266 Md. 182, 188, 292 A.2d 662,
665 (1972), the circuit court issued “a memorandum and order granting . . . motions for
summary judgments[.]” Id. at 187, 292 A.2d at 664–65. This Court held that, while
[i]t would appear from the text of the memorandum that [the circuit court]
intended to follow the mandate of [Maryland Rule 610 d 4,2] . . .[the circuit
court] failed to incorporate . . . the facts that appear without substantial
controversy, including the extent to which the amount of damages or other
relief is not in the controversy . . . in [its] formal order.”
Id. at 188, 292 A.2d at 665. We relied on Alleghany Corp. to opine that “it has been long
established that the language of a memorandum or opinion cannot be imported in an order
or decree save in cases where the order or decree is ambiguous[.]” Id., 292 A.2d at 665.
To rectify this absence, the party for whom summary judgment was ordered “filed
a motion for the entry of an order limiting issues[,]” but no action on this motion was taken.
Id. at 189, 292 A.2d at 665. Instead, the record indicated that the circuit court issued an
2
See Md. Rule 2-501 (“Section (g) is derived from former Rule 610 d 4.”).
3
“oral order” which sought to limit the issues of the subsequent trial. Id., 292 A.2d at 665.
We concluded that this “order” was “deficient in form[,]” opining that “[i]t cannot be
fathomed from the record what this ‘oral order’ was and it was certainly never entered on
the docket. We can only assume that it may have been an oral repetition of the provisions
of the [initial] memorandum.” Id., 292 A.2d at 665–66.
Both Alleghany Corp. and Randolph Hills, Inc. held that an order may not qualify
under Maryland Rule 2-501(g) by virtue of an accompanying memorandum opinion. What
Mr. Riley requests and the Majority holds is inapposite to our precedent. As recited by the
Majority, the previous order granting summary judgment in favor of Mr. Riley does not
expressly limit the issues in a subsequent trial. Slip Op. at 19. Like Randolph Hills, Inc.,
the circuit court did not express the requisite limiting directive in the order to bring it under
Maryland Rule 2-501(g). Thus, the order was within the broad revisionary reach of
subsequent trial judges’ discretion. See, e.g., Henley, 305 Md. at 328, 503 A.2d at 1337
(“Because the order of June 2 did not dispose of the claim[,] . . . it was interlocutory and
subject to revision in the discretion of the [circuit] court.”).
We have held that the abuse of discretion standard is very deferential. See Wilson
v. John Crane, Inc., 385 Md. 185, 199, 867 A.2d 1077, 1084 (2005) (“[A]n abuse of
discretion should only be found in the extraordinary, exceptional, or most egregious
case.”); Devincentz v. State, 460 Md. 518, 550, 191 A.3d 373, 391 (2018) (“[T]he [circuit]
court’s decision must be well removed from any center mark imagined by the reviewing
court and beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally acceptable.” (quotation
marks and citation omitted)). “[D]iscretion will not be disturbed unless clearly shown to
4
have been abused[,]” and it shall not be disturbed “particularly . . . where[] . . . the [matter]
. . . was decided by the [circuit] court on the merits[.]” Hardy v. Metts, 282 Md. 1, 6, 381
A.2d 683, 686 (1978).
In the view of the Majority, the circuit court’s vacatur of the prior grant of summary
judgment was an abuse of discretion by virtue of exceeding the limitation of Maryland
Rule 2-501(g). In the alternative, the Majority posits that the circuit court abused its
discretion by disregarding the purpose of the summary judgment rules. Slip Op. at 20.
Neither of these are the case here. As explained, in my view, the prior grant of summary
judgment was not qualified under Maryland Rule 2-501(g). I would hold that our precedent
supports a different conclusion than the alternative grounds advanced by the Majority.
Our general rule, as expressed in Frazier, has roots extending over two-hundred
years. See Robinson v. Harford Cnty. Comm’rs, 12 Md. 132, 141 (1858) (“It has been long
settled . . . that during the entire term in which a judgment is rendered in a court of record,
the judgment is under the control of the court, and liable to be stricken out, altered, or
amended[.]”). We have previously explained that the rationale behind this is because “the
trial judge, who occupies a position of greater responsibility, should have the right to reject
a prior decision of a judge of equal jurisdiction[.]” Nat’l Liberty Ins. Co. of Am. v. Thrall,
181 Md. 19, 23, 27 A.2d 353, 355 (1942) (emphasis added).
The Majority posits that the vacatur of the prior order defeated the purpose of the
summary judgment rule and placed Mr. Riley in a worse position than he would have been
had he not moved for summary judgment. Slip Op. at 21. The circuit court’s vacatur does
not defeat the purpose of the rule. The Majority points to King v. Bankerd, 303 Md. 98,
5
111–12, 492 A.2d 608, 615 (1985) for the purpose of summary judgment in determining
whether there is a triable issue of fact. Slip Op. at 16. However, this intent does not exist
in a vacuum. Fuster requires our Rules to be read as “operat[ing] together as a consistent
and harmonious body of law[.]” 437 Md. at 664, 89 A.3d at 1120 (quotation marks and
citation omitted). The purpose of Maryland Rule 2-602(a) is to prevent “piecemeal
appeals[.]” Smith v. Lead Indus. Ass’n, Inc., 386 Md. 12, 25, 871 A.2d 545, 553 (2005).
As opposed to interlocutory orders under Maryland Rule 2-602(a), entering final judgment
under section (b) is reserved for the “very infrequent [and] harsh case.” Id. at 24, 871 A.2d
at 552 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Nat’l Liberty Ins. Co. speaks of the trial judge’s “greater responsibility[]” as
compared to previous judges in the same matter. 181 Md. at 23, 27 A.2d at 355. Indeed,
a trial judge is “obliged” to override a prior order “if [they] conclude[] that it had been
improvidently issued.” Langrall, Muir & Noppinger v. Gladding, 282 Md. 397, 402 n.3,
384 A.2d 737, 740 n.3 (1978). The record supports the circuit court’s belief that vacatur
was demanded here. The circuit court indicated that Mr. Riley had failed to offer even a
“scintilla” of evidence of the Association’s ouster, a necessary element of Mr. Riley’s
adverse possession claim. See Hanson v. Johnson, 62 Md. 25, 29 (1884) (“The mere entry
and possession of one tenant in common . . . will not be adverse to the co-tenant[.] . . . To
constitute adverse possession in such cases, there must be an ouster, an entry and
possession, hostile to the title of the co-tenant.”) (emphasis in original).
Maryland’s long history of granting revisory authority to trial judges evidences an
intent in the interlocutory order rule to preserve issues, even if set aside from trial, for
6
subsequent circuit court review if the facts and justice demands it. To read Maryland Rules
2-501 and 2-602 harmoniously, an interlocutory summary judgment order cannot
inherently become a final judgment. Such occurrences would not be the “infrequent” cases
that Smith contemplates. 386 Md. at 24, 871 A.2d at 552. To accept otherwise would
allow piecemeal appeals from every interlocutory summary judgment order, in violation of
the purpose of Maryland Rule 2-602(a). Id. at 25, 871 A.2d at 552. Further, Mr. Riley’s
reliance on the prior grant of summary judgment is not persuasive. Maryland Rule 2-
602(a)(2) states that “an order . . . that adjudicates fewer than all of the claims in an action[;]
. . . does not terminate the action as to any of the claims or any of the parties[.]”
In my view, this is not “the extraordinary, exceptional, or most egregious case[,]”
Wilson, 385 Md. at 199, 867 A. 2d at 1084, nor is it “beyond the fringe” of minimal
acceptability. Devincentz, 460 Md. at 550, 191 A.3d at 391. The circuit court did not abuse
the considerable discretion it is afforded in considering the facts presented and
reconsidering a prior interlocutory order in the same action.
The Appellate Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion.
In reversing the Appellate Court’s remand of the Association’s counterclaim for a
prescriptive easement, the Majority relies on Taylor v. Wahby, 271 Md. 101, 110, 314 A.2d
100, 105 (1974). Slip Op. at 23. There this Court reiterated that we “consistently follow[]
the rule that a judgment or decree from which no appeal has been taken may not be reversed
for the benefit of one who did not appeal even though in regard to him the judgment or
decree was both erroneous and injurious.” Taylor, 271 Md. at 110, 314 A.2d at 104–05.
In the view of the Majority, because the Association requested a prescriptive easement
7
regardless of who owned title to the Subject Property, including the Association itself,
when the circuit court granted summary judgment against the Association’s counter claim
the Association became aggrieved. Slip Op. 23. With respect, I do not agree.
This Court has held that “[a] basic rule of appellate jurisprudence is that a party may
not appeal from a judgment wholly in its favor.” Rodriguez v. Cooper, 458 Md. 425, 441,
182 A.3d 853, 863 (2018) (cleaned up). In my view, the Association was correct: the
judgment from the circuit court vacating the prior order and entering judgment for the
Association was wholly within the Association’s favor and precluded its appeal. If one
retains title to land, they cannot gain an easement over their land. See, e.g., Lindsay v.
Annapolis Roads Prop. Owners Ass’n, 431 Md. 274, 292, 64 A.3d 916, 927 (2013)
(“[U]nity of ownership of both the dominant and the servient estates extinguishes generally
any easements[.]”); Hall v. City of Balt., 56 Md. 187, 195 (1881) (“The implied covenant .
. . was rescinded and abrogated by the deed . . . whereby [the owner] acquired the fee
simple title . . . and consequently all right[s that] . . . could be derived only from the implied
covenant of the parties, no longer existed.”).
Following the grant of judgment in the Association’s favor by the circuit court, the
Association retained its title to the Subject Property and could not have received an
easement. Accordingly, the Association could not have appealed to the Appellate Court.
However, the Appellate Court recognized the inexorable link between the Association’s
counter claim and Mr. Riley’s sale in lieu of partition claims and exercised its discretion to
revive the issue and remand it for consideration. Maryland Rule 8-131(a) provides the
Appellate Court the discretion to reach issues not before it “if necessary or desirable to
8
guide the [circuit] court or to avoid the expense and delay of another appeal.” See Jones
v. State, 379 Md. 704, 713, 843 A.2d 778, 783 (2004) (“[A]n appellate court has discretion
to excuse a waiver or procedural default and to consider an issue even though it was not
properly raised or preserved by a party.”).
“[W]e do not reverse the [Appellate Court] for the exercise of its discretion unless
it has clearly been abused.” Jones, 379 Md. at 715, 843 A.2d at 784. Indeed, “we respect
the judgment of the [Appellate Court] in determining whether it needed to consider the
issue for the proper execution of justice[.]” Id., 843 A.2d at 785. In the judgment of the
Appellate Court, “[b]ecause the claim for a prescriptive easement is tied to the claim for
sale in lieu of partition, it should be reconsidered and ruled upon on remand in the event
the court grants the claim for sale in lieu of partition.” Charles Riley, Jr. Revocable Tr. v.
Venice Beach Citizens Ass’n, Inc., No. 1064, Sept. Term, 2021, 2023 WL 369752, at *15
( Jan. 24, 2023). Arguably, “the proper execution of justice[]” would incentivize the
consideration of the Association’s counterclaim lest the Association, as the Majority feared
for Mr. Riley, suffers from their success at the trial level. Regardless, I do not believe it is
our place to overrule the discretion of the Appellate Court absent an abuse of that
discretion, which I do not see. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
Justice Eaves has authorized me to state that she joins in this opinion.
9