Prince George's County v. Brown

Decision Date01 September 1993
Docket NumberNo. 92,92
Citation334 Md. 650,640 A.2d 1142
PartiesPRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, Maryland v. Sidney J. BROWN. ,
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Bernadette F. Lamson, Associate County Atty. (Michael P. Whalen, County Atty., Albert J. Lochte, Deputy County Atty., and J. Michael Dougherty, Jr., Associate County Atty., all on brief), Upper Marlboro, for appellant.

Julia M. Freit, Asst. Atty. Gen. (J. Joseph Curran, Jr., both on brief, Baltimore), for the State of Maryland as amicus curiae.

Robert B. Ostrom (Knight, Manzi, Brennan, Ostrom & Ham, P.A., all on brief), Upper Marlboro, for appellee.

Argued before MURPHY, C.J., and ELDRIDGE, RODOWSKY, CHASANOW, KARWACKI, BELL and RAKER, JJ.

KARWACKI, Judge.

We issued a writ of certiorari in this case to determine whether a supplemental deed of trust recorded in Maryland is subject to state recordation and Prince George's County transfer tax when the deed of trust which it supplements was only recorded outside the State of Maryland. Specifically, we are asked whether the supplemental instrument exemption provided by Maryland Code (1986), § 12-108(e) of the Tax-Property Article extends to an instrument that supplements an instrument previously recorded in a sister state. We hold that this exemption does not apply to instruments that supplement instruments previously recorded outside Maryland, and consequently such instruments are subject to both state recordation and the County's transfer tax.

I

On June 28, 1991, Sydney J. Brown ("Brown") recorded among the land records of Prince George's County three supplemental deeds of trust on real property in that county. All three of the Maryland deeds of trust provided additional security for loans previously made by Sovran Bank ("Sovran") to Brown and his related interests to finance a real estate project in Loudon County, Virginia. The original loans were made between 1987 and 1991 and were secured by deeds of trust covering that property and recorded among the land records of Loudon County, Virginia. In order to additionally secure and strengthen its position, but not in consideration of any additional loans, Sovran required the following three deeds of trust to be recorded among the land records of Prince George's County: (1) a $2,000,000 Supplemental Deed of Trust between Brown and Sovran Bank on which the County assessed and collected a $30,000 county transfer tax and a $8,800 state recordation tax; (2) a $4,505,000 Supplemental Deed of Trust between Brown, Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership and Sovran Bank on which the County assessed and collected $67,575 in county transfer taxes and $19,822 in state recordation taxes; and (3) a $14,133,000 Supplemental and/or Indemnity Deed of Trust between Brown and Sovran Bank on which the County assessed and collected a $180,000 county transfer tax.

Brown and Alan I. Kay control Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership. Shellhorn, Inc. is a Virginia corporation of which Alan I. Kay is president and Brown is vice-president. Brown and Alan I. Kay are general partners of Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership, a Virginia limited partnership. Stuart G. Brown is Brown's son. Brown, Kay, Stuart G. Brown, Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership are all parties to the loan transactions with Sovran Bank. The relevant facts concerning each of the Maryland Deeds of Trust are as follows.

A. Maryland $2 Million Deed of Trust

Brown and Kay obtained a loan of $2,000,000 on December 30, 1988 from Sovran. At that time, Brown and Kay, as borrowers, executed a promissory note in the same amount. Kay also executed the promissory note on behalf of Shellhorn, Inc., as guarantor of the promissory note. Sovran secured its loan by obtaining an indemnity deed of trust from Shellhorn, Inc. for the same amount encumbering real property in Loudon County, Virginia ("Virginia Indemnity Deed of Trust"). Brown and Kay, as borrowers, Shellhorn, Inc., as guarantor, and Sovran executed three amendments to the promissory note on June 20, 1989, July 25, 1989 and November 10, 1989. These amendments extended the maturity date on the loan, but left the principal amount owed unchanged.

The November 10, 1989 amendment also added Stuart G. Brown as borrower and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership as guarantor. On November 10, 1989, Sovran further secured its loan by obtaining an amendment to the Virginia Indemnity Deed of Trust encumbering additional property in Loudon County, Virginia.

On June 26, 1991, Brown, Kay and Stuart Brown, as borrowers, Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership, as guarantors, and Sovran effected the most recent changes to the promissory note through the execution of a Modification Agreement Deed of Trust Note. This modification agreement extended the maturity date of the loan and changed the interest rate. On that same day, Sovran also additionally secured its loan by obtaining a $2 million deed of trust from Brown encumbering real property in Prince George's County, Maryland (the "Maryland $2 Million Deed of Trust"). This deed of trust encumbering the Prince George's property is one of the three deeds of trust at issue in this case.

Sovran first recorded its security interest reflected in the Maryland $2 Million Deed of Trust among the Land Records of Prince George's County on June 28, 1991, and it was at this time that the County collected state recordation and county transfer taxes upon such recordation. The previously discussed indemnity deeds of trust from Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership were recorded among the land records of Loudon County, Virginia by Sovran on December 30, 1988, November 16, 1989 and June 28, 1991. No other instruments reflecting this transaction were recorded among the Land Records of any other county in Maryland or Baltimore City.

B. Maryland $4.5 Million Deed of Trust

Brown, Shellhorn, Inc., and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership obtained a $4,505,000 loan from Sovran on June 26, 1991. To evidence their debt, Brown, Shellhorn, Inc., and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership executed a promissory note in the same amount. Sovran secured its loan by obtaining a deed of trust from Brown, Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership which encumbered real property in Loudon County, Virginia. Sovran also secured that loan by obtaining a deed of trust from Brown, Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership which encumbered real property in Prince George's County, Maryland (the "Maryland $4.5 Million Deed of Trust").

Sovran recorded its security interest reflected in the Maryland $4.5 Million Deed of Trust among the Land Records of Prince George's County on June 28, 1991, and it was at this time that the County collected state recordation and county transfer taxes. Sovran recorded its security interest reflected in the Virginia $4.5 Million Deed of Trust among the Land Records of Loudon County, Virginia on June 28, 1991, as well. Sovran did not record any other instrument reflecting this transaction among the land records of any other county in Maryland or Baltimore City.

C. Maryland $14 Million Indemnity Deed of Trust

The third deed of trust secured three loans made by Sovran between June, 1987 and June, 1991. The loans were in the amounts of $8,400,000, $3,500,000, and $2,233,000, for a total of $14,133,000. In return, Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership executed three promissory notes and several amendments to the promissory notes. Sovran secured the three loans by obtaining deeds of trust from Shellhorn, Inc. and Shellhorn Associates Limited Partnership encumbering real property in Loudon County, Virginia.

Brown executed several guarantee agreements during June, 1991, guaranteeing the three loans. On June 26, 1991 Sovran agreed to treat the three loans on a consolidated basis, and Brown executed a deed of trust encumbering real property in Prince George's County to secure his guarantees. The total amount of the debt guaranteed was $14,133,000, but the Indemnity Deed of Trust secured only $12,000,000 of that debt. Because the Indemnity Deed of Trust secured only $12,000,000, the County collected a county transfer tax on only $12,000,000 of the $14,133,000 owed. Furthermore, because state recordation tax is deferred on an indemnity instrument until a default occurs on the loan that is guaranteed, the County deferred the collection of state recordation tax pursuant to Maryland Code (1986) § 12-105(f) of the Tax-Property Article. Sovran did not record any other instrument reflecting this transaction among the Land Records of any other county in Maryland or Baltimore City.

After paying the state recordation and county transfer taxes on the three Maryland deeds of trust, Brown filed a claim for refund, claiming that the Maryland deeds of trust were exempt from state recordation tax as supplemental instruments pursuant to § 12-108(e) of the Tax-Property Article. Brown contended that the Virginia deeds of trust qualified as previously recorded instruments of writing, § 12-101(c), and that the Maryland deeds of trust qualified as supplemental instruments of writing because they supplemented the previously recorded instruments of writing, i.e., the Virginia deeds of trust. See § 12-101(g). Because the Maryland deeds of trust secured pre-existing debts and the amount of consideration given in those loans was not increased, Brown argued that the Maryland deeds of trust were exempt from recordation tax as supplemental instruments of writing. See § 12-108(e). He also argued that the deeds of trust were exempt from county transfer tax because no actual consideration or additional consideration was payable, as required by § 10-187(a) of the Prince George's County Code (1991). On March 25, 1992, the County's Department of Finance denied Brown's refund request. On March 27, 1992,...

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