Helinski v. Harford Memorial, 133

Decision Date27 August 2003
Docket NumberNo. 133,133
Citation831 A.2d 40,376 Md. 606
PartiesGail Lynn HELINSKI and Mark P. Mueller v. HARFORD MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Stanley A. Snyder, Randolph C. Baker (Margolis, Pritzker & Epstein, P.A., on brief), Towson, for petitioners.

Kevin T. Olszewski, Bel Air, for respondent.

Argued before BELL, C.J., ELDRIDGE, RAKER, WILNER, CATHELL, HARRELL and BATTAGLIA, JJ.

HARRELL, J.

On 2 October 2001, Harford Memorial Hospital, Inc. ("Respondent") obtained a judgment in the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Harford County, against Constance Helinski ("Judgment Debtor") for a personal debt in the amount of $4,727.53, plus costs and attorneys' fees. On 8 November 2001, Respondent filed a Notice of Lien in the Circuit Court for Harford County and, on 13 November 2001, filed a Request for Writ of Execution with respect to certain improved real property in Harford County owned as joint tenants by the Judgment Debtor and the Petitioners, Gail Helinski and Mark P. Mueller. The writ was issued by the Clerk's office on 20 November 2001, but the Judgment Debtor died in late December before the Sheriff executed on the writ. Contending that the property was transferred to them by operation of law at the decedent's death free and clear of the judgment lien against Constance Helinski, Petitioners filed in the District Court a Motion to Release the Property from Levy, which was denied. Petitioners then appealed the judgment to the Circuit Court for Harford County, which affirmed the denial by the District Court of Petitioners' motion. We granted certiorari on Petitioners' initiative to determine, because Maryland law requires a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship to be severed before the interest of one joint tenant can be levied upon, whether such a severance occurred on the facts of this case. 373 Md. 406, 818 A.2d 1105 (2003). We conclude that a severance did not occur here prior to the Judgment Debtor's demise. Thus, we shall reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court.

I.

The facts are undisputed. Prior to the Judgment Debtor's death, Petitioners and the Judgment Debtor owned improved property in Forest Hill, Maryland (the "Property") as joint tenants, with rights of survivorship. Respondent's judgment against Constance Helinski, obtained on 2 October 2001, was for a personal debt in the amount of $4,727.53 plus costs and attorneys' fees. A Notice of Lien as to the judgment was recorded in the Circuit Court. Next, Respondent filed a Request for Writ of Execution with respect to the Property on 13 November 2001, which was issued and delivered to the Sheriff on 20 November 2001.

A little over a month later, on 27 December 2001, Constance Helinski died. Three weeks later, on 17 January 2002, the Sheriff went to the Property and served a copy of the Writ of Execution upon Gail Helinski and Mark P. Mueller, the Petitioners in the present case, and learned for the first time of Constance Helinski's passing. The sheriff wrote on his return "mortuus est" as to the Judgment Debtor.

It is undisputed that the Sheriff failed on 17 January 2002 to post "a copy of the writ and the schedule in a prominent place on the property," as required by Rule 3-642(a).1 The record also indicates that he failed to furnish a copy of the schedule to the surviving Ms. Helinski or Mr. Mueller, who were in possession of the Property, as required by Maryland Rule 3-642(a).2

Petitioners filed a Motion to Release the Property from Levy, together with a Request for Hearing, in the District Court, contending that, because the Judgment Debtor died before the Sheriff executed the writ against the Property, her individual interest in the Property died with her. Consequently, they argued, as surviving joint tenants, that they owned the Property free and clear of any judgment lien against the late Ms. Helinski. The District Court disagreed and ruled in favor of the Respondent, finding that the date of execution of the writ related back to the date that the Sheriff received the writ. As that date, 20 November 2001, preceded the Judgment Debtor's demise on 27 December 2001, the court determined the writ reached her interest in the property.

Petitioners appealed to the Circuit Court, which affirmed the District Court's ruling that the date of execution relates back to the date that the Sheriff received the writ. The Circuit Court, in addition to agreeing with the relation back reasoning of the District Court, also looked to the language of Maryland Rule 3-641(c),3, requiring the Sheriff to "endorse on the writ the exact hour and date of its receipt and maintain a record of actions taken pursuant to it." From this the court discerned that the moment of receipt is key in determining at what point a writ is executed.

II.
A.

Petitioners first note the fundamental premise that a joint tenancy must be severed in order for a judgment creditor to attach the interest of an individual joint tenant. Petitioners maintain that an individual judgment debtor's interest is severed when a judgment creditor executes against the judgment debtor's interest in real property while he or she is living. Once the judgment debtor has died, however, there is no longer an interest in the real property upon which to levy.

On the facts of the present case, Petitioners contend that the mere delivery of the Writ of Execution to the Sheriff did not sever the joint tenancy or create a lien on the Property. Because the Sheriff did not attempt to execute the writ until after the death of the Judgment Debtor, they claim that there was no pre-mortem severance of the joint tenancy and thus no property interest to which the lien could attach when ultimately executed. As the interest of one joint tenant passes to the other joint tenant or tenants at his or her death as a matter of law, Petitioners ultimately posit that they acquired the Judgment Debtor's interest in the Property at her death and that, from that moment forward, the Judgment Debtor held no interest to which Respondent's lien later could attach.

Petitioners support their argument by citing, inter alia, Eder v. Rothamel, holding that "a judgment lien, without levy or execution on the judgment, does not sever a joint tenancy or prevent the interest of the judgment debtor from passing to or ripening in the surviving co-tenants, free of lien." 202 Md. 189, 193, 95 A.2d 860, 862 (1953). Petitioners also direct our attention to various cases of our sister states purporting to hold that something more than a judgment lien is necessary to sever a joint tenancy. Recognizing that these cases are not binding on this Court, Petitioners argue that these cases nonetheless merit our favorable consideration. See, e.g., Grothe v. Cortlandt Corp., 11 Cal. App.4th 1313, 15 Cal.Rptr.2d 38 (1992)

(lien does not sever joint tenancy); People's Trust & Savings Bank v. Haas, 328 Ill. 468, 160 N.E. 85 (1927) (judgment alone does not sever joint tenancy); Van Antwerp v. Horan, 390 Ill. 449, 61 N.E.2d 358 (1945) (levy does not transfer possession of real property to the sheriff and therefore does not sever a joint tenancy); Knibb v. Security Ins. Co., 121 R.I. 406, 399 A.2d 1214 (1979) (judicial sale of real property is necessary to sever joint tenancy).

B.

Respondent concedes, as it must, that a joint tenancy first must be severed in order to levy upon one joint tenant's interest in the Property; however, it contends in the present case that a severance occurred at the moment the Sheriff received the Writ of Execution from the Clerk's office. Accordingly, Respondent claims that the Property was levied upon properly when the Sheriff received the writ nearly a month before the Judgment Debtor died. Respondent argues that an inchoate lien was created when the Sheriff received the writ, and that the date of execution of the writ "relates back" to 20 November 2001, provided that the Sheriff perfected the writ within the statutory period by executing it. Respondent urges us to adopt the following policy rationale for implementing such a "writ in the mitt" rule: The effective execution of a writ is not dependent on actual delivery to that person or posting on the property because the "modern" sheriff plays only a ministerial role in transmitting the writ to the owner of the interest in the property. Adoption of his policy, Respondent contends, would eliminate the harm befalling a creditor who files first, but whose interest is levied last by the Sheriff. Such a policy also would reduce the incentive for a creditor to offer inducements and cajolery to sheriffs to execute its writs first.

Respondent directs our attention to American Security & Trust Co. v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co. to support its argument that the date of the levy relates back to the date the writ was delivered to the Sheriff. 246 Md. 36, 40, 227 A.2d 214, 215 (1967). In American Security, the sheriff took possession of an automobile in execution of a writ he received a month before. In upholding the sheriff's sale of the automobile to satisfy a judgment debt, despite the fact that it had been used to secure a loan to its owner during the period between delivery and execution of the writ, this Court held that "the lien of an execution has as its effective date, not the day on which the levy was actually made, but the day on which the writ ... was delivered to the sheriff." Id. In this manner, the Court explained, the claims of competing creditors could be prioritized according to the date the sheriff received the writ. Id.

C.

In response, Petitioners attempt to distinguish a levy on personal property from a levy on real property as a means to discredit Respondent's "relation back" argument. Petitioners assert that American Security is not analogous to the instant case because real property is treated differently than personal property for such purposes in Maryland. Petitioner notes that our precedents hold that, for real...

To continue reading

Request your trial
24 cases
  • Storetrax v. Gurland
    • United States
    • Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    • March 31, 2006
    ...no deferential appellate review," and the appellate court "must apply the law as it discerns it to be." Helinski v. Hartford Memorial Hosp., Inc., 376 Md. 606, 614, 831 A.2d 40 (2003) (citing Heat & Power Corp. v. Air Prods. & Chems., Inc., 320 Md. 584, 591, 578 A.2d 1202 It appears that th......
  • Chambers v. Cardinal
    • United States
    • Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    • November 8, 2007
    .... . ."). And, a joint tenancy can also be severed if one or more of the four unities is destroyed. Helinski v. Harford Memorial Hosp., Inc., 376 Md. 606, 616, 831 A.2d 40 (2003) (citing Eder, 202 Md. at 192, 95 A.2d Severance occurs voluntarily if a joint tenant takes an action that destroy......
  • In re Anthony W.
    • United States
    • Court of Appeals of Maryland
    • August 1, 2005
    ...Nesbit v. Government Employees Insurance Company, 382 Md. 65, 72, 854 A.2d 879, 883 (2004). See Helinski v. Harford Mem. Hosp., Inc., 376 Md. 606, 614, 831 A.2d 40, 45 (2003) (noting that we must apply the law as we discern it to be); Ferris v. State, 355 Md. 356, 368, 735 A.2d 491, 497 The......
  • Meeks v. Dashiell
    • United States
    • Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    • January 26, 2006
    ...of a motion for summary judgment, we need not defer to the motion court's determination of questions of law. Helinski v. Harford Memorial, 376 Md. 606, 614, 831 A.2d 40 (2003); Comptroller v. Gannett, 356 Md. 699, 707, 741 A.2d 1130 Upon an appeal challenging the denial of a motion for summ......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT