Scarfield v. Muntjan ( 2015 )


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  • Frank D. Scarfield, Sr., et al. v. Peter A. Muntjan, et al., No. 82, September Term, 2014,
    Opinion by Adkins, J.
    CIVIL PROCEDURE — JURY DEMAND — MARYLAND RULE 2-325 —
    WAIVER — REVIVAL: When an amended complaint with an accompanying jury
    demand contains only one new count, which is dismissed for failure to state a claim, that
    new issue and timely jury demand are insufficient to revive a previously waived jury
    demand for counts in the original complaint.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No.: 24-C-10-009292
    Argued: May 6, 2015
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 82
    September Term, 2014
    FRANK D. SCARFIELD, SR., et al.
    v.
    PETER A. MUNTJAN, et al.
    Barbera, C.J.
    *Harrell
    Battaglia
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Adkins, J.
    Filed: July 24, 2015
    * Harrell, J., now retired, participated in the
    hearing and conference of this case while an
    active member of this Court; after being recalled
    pursuant to the Constitution, Article IV, Section
    3A, he also participated in the decision and
    adoption of this opinion.
    The right to a trial by jury in civil proceedings is enshrined in the Maryland
    Declaration of Rights1 and further guaranteed in Maryland Rule 2-5112.                 But the
    Legislature and Courts may impose reasonable limitations on that right.              One such
    limitation is found in Maryland Rule 2-325, which provides that a party’s failure to demand
    a jury trial within 15 days after service of the last pleading directed to the issue constitutes
    a waiver by that party of a jury trial. An exception to this waiver rule applies when a party
    files an amended complaint, asserting a new substantive issue and demanding a jury trial.
    Under such a circumstance, the new claim may revive a previously waived jury trial. In
    this case, we must determine whether an amended complaint in which a party demanded a
    jury trial but added only one new count, which was dismissed for failure to state a claim,
    revives a previously waived jury trial.
    FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
    This case arises from a dispute between a tenant, Peter A. Muntjan, and various
    actors associated with his landlord, Frank D. Scarfield.3 Muntjan, an artist, leased from
    1
    Article 5 of the Declaration of Rights provides in part that “the Inhabitants of
    Maryland are entitled to the Common Law of England, and the trial by Jury, according to
    the course of that Law.”
    Article 23 provides: “The right of trial by Jury of all issues of fact in civil
    proceedings in the several Courts of Law in this State, where the amount in controversy
    exceeds the sum of $15,000, shall be inviolably preserved.”
    2
    Maryland Rule 2-511(a) provides: “The right of trial by jury as guaranteed by the
    Maryland Constitution and the Maryland Declaration of Rights or as provided by law shall
    be preserved to the parties inviolate.”
    3
    Muntjan’s Amended Complaint listed Frank D. Scarfield, Deborah Scarfield
    Torre, and Bettina M. Mabry as defendants. The record suggests Muntjan’s lease
    agreement was actually with Brewery Station, Inc. For ease of exposition—because
    Scarfield a 3,000 square foot unit at 7101 Sollers Point Road (Building #8) for use as an
    art studio. After Scarfield filed a Complaint alleging that Muntjan had held over on his
    lease, the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Baltimore County, ordered that a Writ of
    Possession be issued and ordered the Sheriff of Baltimore County to execute the writ no
    sooner than 12:00 p.m. on December 19, 2007. At that time, a constable of Baltimore
    County executed the writ and evicted Muntjan from the property.
    Three years later, on December 20, 2010, Muntjan, representing himself, filed a
    complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, alleging one count for Trover and
    Conversion (“Count I”) and another for Invasion of Privacy (“Count II”), related to the
    2007 ejectment and repossession. Scarfield filed a motion to dismiss Count II, which the
    Circuit Court granted on September 21, 2011, on statute of limitations grounds. On
    October 7, 2011, Scarfield filed his answer to Count I, without requesting a jury trial. Over
    four months later, on February 24, 2012, Muntjan filed a jury demand. Then, on April 16,
    2012, he filed an Amended Complaint reasserting Counts I and II and adding a third for
    Abuse of Process (“Count III”). Included with his Amended Complaint was a jury demand.
    Scarfield filed a motion to strike both Muntjan’s Amended Complaint and his jury
    demand. The Circuit Court denied the motion to strike the Amended Complaint, but made
    no ruling as to the jury demand. Scarfield later filed a motion to dismiss Counts II and III
    for failure to state a claim and orally renewed his motion to strike the jury demand.
    Regarding the jury demand, Scarfield argued that an amended complaint is not a pleading
    Brewery Station, Inc. was not made party to this suit—we will refer only to Scarfield,
    including when discussing acts performed by Brewery Station, Inc.
    2
    under Maryland Rule 1-202. Thus, he asserted, because Maryland Rule 2-325 requires that
    a jury demand be filed within 15 days after service of the last pleading filed, Muntjan’s
    jury demand filed with his Amended Complaint was ineffective.
    In ruling on the motion to strike the jury demand, the Circuit Court first observed
    that an amended complaint is a pleading. To permit a plaintiff to amend a complaint to
    demand a jury trial at any time would defeat the “orderly process” laid out in Rule 2-325
    (a) and (b), it reasoned. Recognizing what it saw as one possible exception where an
    amendment is permitted to add completely new claims that would not result in prejudice
    were a jury demand to be entertained, the Circuit Court concluded that the only new
    count—Abuse of Process—“is certainly related to the same . . . events” as Count I. The
    Circuit Court reasoned Muntjan could not revive the jury demand for the previous counts
    in this way because it would permit Muntjan to “resurrect a demand that [he] had already
    waived by not making it with the original complaint.”4
    Muntjan appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, presenting eight questions for
    review. Muntjan v. Scarfield, No. 1065, Sept. Term, 2012, Slip Op. at 1–2 (Md. Ct. Spec.
    App., Aug. 5, 2012). The intermediate appellate court, in an unreported opinion, made two
    rulings relevant to this appeal.5 First, the panel unanimously held that the Circuit Court
    4
    On motion by Scarfield, the Circuit Court dismissed Counts II and III for failure
    to state a claim.
    5
    Muntjan also asked the Court of Special Appeals to decide several issues related
    to discovery. The intermediate appellate court did not address these issues due to the
    disposition of the case after its decision. Muntjan v. Scarfield, No. 1065, Sept. Term, 2012,
    Slip Op. at 34 (Md. Ct. Spec. App., Aug. 5, 2012). Because our holding calls for a remand,
    3
    correctly dismissed Count III, stating: “Because Mr. Muntjan’s claim for abuse of process
    is based on initiation of the eviction process, as opposed to abuse of the process after
    process was issued, his amended complaint did not state a cause of action for abuse of
    process.” 
    Id. at 34.
    Second, the divided panel held that the Circuit Court erred in denying Muntjan’s
    jury demand. Restricting itself to the Circuit Court’s reasoning in denying the jury demand,
    the Court of Special Appeals held first that “for a plaintiff to revive a once-waived right to
    a jury trial based on the filing of an amended complaint, the amended complaint must raise
    a new issue, i.e., a claim that is based on a set of facts different from those relied on in
    support of the original claims.” 
    Id. at 22–23.
    Second, it held that “the amended complaint
    in this case raised a new issue [because] Muntjan’s claim for Abuse of Process was based
    on a separate set of facts involving appellees’ purpose in initiating the eviction.” 
    Id. at 23.
    Thus, with respect to some aspects of Count I, the Court of Special Appeals held that
    Muntjan was entitled to a remand for a jury trial.6
    Dissenting as to the jury demand, Judge Rodowsky (specially assigned) considered
    the Circuit Court “right, . . . but for the wrong reason.” Muntjan v. Scarfield, No. 1065,
    Sept. Term, 2012, Slip Op. at 3 (Md. Ct. Spec. App., Aug. 5, 2012) (Rodowsky, J.,
    dissenting). Agreeing that Count III failed to state a claim upon which relief could be
    the Court of Special Appeals should consider these discovery issues before it remands to
    the Circuit Court.
    6
    The Court of Special Appeals also held that the Circuit Court erred in dismissing
    Count II for Invasion of Privacy on statute of limitations grounds. Muntjan, at 31–32.
    4
    granted, Judge Rodowsky reasoned that Count III “did not present a claim at law triable of
    right and the gears of Rule 2-325 were not engaged.” 
    Id. at 3.
    His dissent also questioned
    the practical implications of entertaining Muntjan’s jury demand, observing that, under the
    Majority’s holding, “the right to demand a jury trial that has been waived could be revived
    simply by a plaintiff’s filing anything that purports to be a claim that was not asserted in
    an earlier pleading.” 
    Id. at 5.
    We granted Scarfield’s Petition for Writ of Certiorari, limiting our consideration to
    the following question:
    Does the filing of an amended complaint which presents a new
    claim and jury demand revive a previously waived right to a
    jury trial where the new claim is dismissed for a failure to state
    a claim upon which relief can be granted?
    Because we answer no, we shall reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and
    remand for further proceedings.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Whether Muntjan was entitled to a jury trial pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-325 is a
    legal question, and so we review the lower court’s decision without deference. See Duckett
    v. Riley, 
    428 Md. 471
    , 477, 
    52 A.3d 84
    , 87 (2012) (“This is a purely legal inquiry; therefore,
    we construe Rule 2-325(a) without giving deference to the intermediate appellate court’s
    interpretation.”). “[T]he principles applied to statutory interpretation are also used to
    interpret the Maryland Rules.” Davis v. Slater, 
    383 Md. 599
    , 604, 
    861 A.2d 78
    , 81 (2004)
    (citation omitted). Thus,
    to ascertain the meaning of [a] rule of procedure we first look
    to the normal, plain meaning of the language. If that language
    5
    is clear and unambiguous, we need not look beyond the
    provision’s terms to inform our analysis; however, the goal of
    our examination is always to discern the legislative purpose,
    the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by a
    particular provision, be it statutory, constitutional or part of the
    Rules. To that end, we must consider the context in which the
    . . . rule appears, including related statutes or rules, and relevant
    legislative history. Also, where the language of the . . . rule is
    ambiguous, external evidence may be referred to for discerning
    the purpose of the legislature, including the bill’s title or
    function paragraphs, relevant case law, and secondary sources.
    
    Id. at 604–05,
    861 A.2d at 81 (internal citations omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    When interpreting the Maryland Rules, we are mindful that they “shall be construed
    to secure simplicity in procedure, fairness in administration, and elimination of
    unjustifiable expense and delay.” Md. Rule 1-201(a). Moreover, “we must bear in mind
    that they are ‘precise rubrics,’ established to promote the orderly and efficient
    administration of justice, and thus are to be strictly followed.” In re Kaela, 
    394 Md. 432
    ,
    471, 
    906 A.2d 915
    , 938 (2006) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    We recently discussed the legal bases for the right to a civil jury trial:
    Articles 5 and 23 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights
    enshrine the right to a civil jury trial. Article 23 provides
    specifically, the right of trial by Jury of all issues of fact in civil
    proceedings in the several Courts of Law in this State, where
    the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $15,000, shall
    be inviolably preserved. Although inviolably preserved, the
    right to have a civil jury trial may be regulated reasonably:
    Indeed, it is generally acknowledged that the right to a trial by
    jury can, for all practical purposes, become meaningless to the
    individual and burdensome to the state unless the exercise of it
    is regulated to some extent.
    6
    
    Duckett, 428 Md. at 477
    –78, 52 A.3d at 88 (internal quotation marks, footnote, alterations,
    and citations omitted). Maryland Rule 2-325 regulates this constitutionally guaranteed jury
    right and provides in part:
    (a) Demand. Any party may elect a trial by jury of any issue
    triable of right by a jury by filing a demand therefor in writing
    either as a separate paper or separately titled at the conclusion
    of a pleading and immediately preceding any required
    certificate of service.
    (b) Waiver. The failure of a party to file the demand within 15
    days after service of the last pleading filed by any party
    directed to the issue constitutes a waiver of trial by jury.
    Thus, failure to file a jury demand within 15 days of service of the last pleading constitutes
    a waiver of the right.
    Here, Muntjan failed to file a jury demand within 15 days of service of the last
    pleading after his initial Complaint. Muntjan included a jury demand in his Amended
    Complaint in which he added Count III. The Circuit Court dismissed, however—and the
    Court of Special Appeals affirmed the dismissal of—Count III for failure to state a claim.
    The jury demand, then, was included in an amended complaint that added no additional
    counts other than the dismissed Count III.
    Scarfield argued in the Circuit Court that an amended complaint is not a pleading,
    relying on the list of pleadings provided in Maryland Rule 1-202. This Rule defines
    pleading as “a complaint, a counterclaim, a cross-claim, a third-party complaint, an answer,
    an answer to a counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party complaint, a reply to an answer, or
    7
    a charging document as used in Title 4.”7 Md. Rule 1-202. Thus, asserts Scarfield, the
    question is settled because there was no pleading to which the jury demand could attach.
    We do not read Rule 1-202 quite so narrowly. The Circuit Court reasoned that “[a]n
    amended complaint is a pleading in the sense that it [is] an amendment of a pleading.” This
    comports with Rule 2-341, which governs Amendment of Pleadings. That Rule indicates
    that what is commonly referred to as an amended complaint is not a distinct procedural
    vehicle but is more accurately conceived of as “an amendment to a pleading” or “an
    amended pleading.” Md. Rule 2-341(a) & (e). This explains why we have repeatedly
    characterized an amended complaint as a pleading. See, e.g., Mathews v. Cassidy Turley
    Md., Inc., 
    435 Md. 584
    , 595–96 n.9, 
    80 A.3d 269
    , 275 n.9 (2013) (“After some initial
    skirmishing by the parties about whether the filing of the First Amended Complaint should
    be permitted, the Circuit Court accepted the amended pleading at the December 2011
    motions hearing.”); Hanna v. ARE Acquisitions, LLC, 
    400 Md. 650
    , 653, 
    929 A.2d 892
    ,
    893 (2007) (“The operative pleading is ARE’s second amended complaint[.]”); Crawford
    v. Leahy, 
    326 Md. 160
    , 163, 
    604 A.2d 73
    , 75 (1992) (“The Crawfords also filed an
    ‘Amended Complaint’ that was identical to the originally filed complaint; both pleadings
    contained allegations of negligence.”).
    7
    Maryland Rule 2-302 contains a similar list of pleadings:
    There shall be a complaint and an answer. There may be a
    counterclaim, a cross-claim, and a third-party complaint.
    There shall be an answer to any counterclaim, cross-claim, or
    third-party complaint. No other pleading shall be allowed
    except that the court may order a reply to an answer.
    Demurrers, pleas, and replications are abolished.
    8
    Scarfield now adopts the reasoning presented by Judge Rodowsky in his dissenting
    opinion. Echoing that opinion, Scarfield contends that the dismissal of Count III for failure
    to state a claim rendered that count not an issue triable by right, and so Maryland Rule 2-
    325 was not “engaged.” He reasons that “[a] claim that is ‘triable of right by a jury’ must
    state a cause of action that can survive a motion to dismiss.”
    Muntjan, responding pro se, discusses a number of issues not before this Court and
    addresses the jury demand issue only briefly, relying on the intermediate appellate court’s
    majority opinion to support his proposition that his Amended Complaint raised a new issue.
    Thus, he reasons, the jury demand filed with his Amended Complaint revived the waiver
    as to all live counts.
    The Circuit Court concluded that a jury demand attached to Muntjan’s Amended
    Complaint could only attach to Count III—the only new count added to the Amended
    Complaint. We do not reach this issue in light of our holding that Muntjan did not revive
    his earlier waived right to a jury trial. Because the Circuit Court dismissed—and the Court
    of Special Appeals affirmed the dismissal of—Count III for failure to state a claim, the
    question before us is whether the new demand for a trial by jury, filed with the Amended
    Complaint containing only a defective new count, is sufficient to revive a previously
    waived jury demand.
    Neither the Rules nor our case law define what it means to be triable of right by a
    jury. Traditionally, this language refers to whether an action was triable by a jury at
    common law. Luppino v. Gray, 
    336 Md. 194
    , 201, 
    647 A.2d 429
    , 432 (1994) (“We have
    held that the reference, in the precursor to Article 23, to jury trial, to which the citizens of
    9
    Maryland are entitled, is to ‘the historical trial by jury, as it existed when the Constitution
    of the State was first adopted.’” (citation omitted)); Paul V. Niemeyer, Linda M. Schuett
    & Joyce E. Smithey, Maryland Rules Commentary, at 287 (4th ed. 2014) (“Courts will
    look to the historical nature of claims or issues to determine whether they will be tried to
    the jury or to the court.”). Notably, this inquiry often reduces to a distinction between
    actions at law—triable by a jury—and actions at equity—triable by a court. Md. Dept. of
    Env’t v. Underwood, 
    368 Md. 160
    , 183, 
    792 A.2d 1130
    , 1143–44 (2002); Kann v. Kann,
    
    344 Md. 689
    , 699, 
    690 A.2d 509
    , 514 (1997).
    Thus, in their Maryland Rules Commentary, Judge Paul Niemeyer, Linda Schuett,
    and Joyce Smithey say that “if no demand for jury trial was made in connection with a
    complaint on which a plaintiff might have been entitled to a jury trial, a demand filed with
    an amended complaint whose only new count is equitable in nature will not be granted.”
    Maryland Rules Commentary, at 290–91.               In State Department of Economic and
    Community Development v. Attman/Glazer P.B. Company, the state agency filed a
    complaint seeking declaratory judgment. 
    323 Md. 592
    , 602, 
    594 A.2d 138
    , 143 (1991).
    Neither party filed a jury demand within the time limit for the original complaint, but along
    with its answer to the State’s amended complaint, Attman/Glazer (“AG”) filed a jury
    demand, which the trial court struck. 
    Id. We affirmed
    this decision, reasoning:
    Although either party in the instant case might have been
    entitled to a jury trial on the legal issues generated in the State’s
    original complaint seeking a declaratory judgment and AG’s
    answer, both waived that right under Md. Rule 2-325(b). Thus,
    AG’s entitlement to the jury trial it demanded depended upon
    whether the State’s amended complaint raised an issue “triable
    of right by a jury.”
    10
    
    Id. at 607,
    594 A.2d at 145 (internal citations omitted). Because “[t]he sole issue raised by
    the State’s amended complaint was whether it was entitled to specific performance,” an
    action “which invokes the equity jurisdiction of the court,” we held that AG was not entitled
    to a jury trial. 
    Id. But in
    determining whether a jury demand filed with a later pleading may revive a
    previously waived demand, we have not limited ourselves to considering whether the new
    count raised was actionable at law or equity. At times, the determining factor is whether
    the new count was only duplicative of previous counts.
    In Luppino, the plaintiffs sued initially for fraud, intentional concealment, and
    negligent 
    misrepresentation. 336 Md. at 197
    , 647 A.2d at 430. The plaintiffs then amended
    the complaint, adding four new counts and filing a jury demand. 
    Id., 647 A.2d
    at 431. The
    circuit court dismissed three of the new counts, but denied the defendants’ motion to
    dismiss the amended count for intentional omission. 
    Id. at 197–98,
    647 A.2d at 431. It
    also denied the defendants’ motion to strike the jury trial demand. 
    Id. at 198,
    210, 647
    A.2d at 431
    , 437. On appeal, we agreed with the intermediate appellate court that the jury
    demand should have been struck because the surviving count in the amended complaint
    was “merely the restatement of a claim for fraud already set forth in two other counts of
    the complaint; it did not add a new substantive issue.” 
    Id. at 198,
    647 A.2d at 431. This
    reasoning demonstrates that even when an additional count is one historically triable by a
    jury, it is insufficient to revive a previously waived jury demand both when it is duplicative,
    and when it is dismissed for failure to state a claim.
    11
    Broadly speaking, “[t]he filing of a demand for jury trial pursuant to [Rule 2-325]
    does not entitle a party to a jury trial in cases where the right does not otherwise exist.”
    Maryland Rules Commentary, at 290. Here, Muntjan’s only new count raised in his
    Amended Complaint—Count III—was dismissed for failure to state a claim. Similar to
    the equitable counts in Attman/Glazer and the dismissed and duplicative counts in Luppino,
    Count III did not present a claim triable of right. “A pleading that sets forth a claim for
    relief . . . shall contain a clear statement of the facts necessary to constitute a cause of
    action.” Md. Rule 2-305. A count that fails to state a claim is deficient and is no longer
    “triable of right by a jury.” It cannot support a jury demand independently much less
    provide the springboard to allow other counts to piggyback on its jury demand. Thus,
    because the only new count raised in the Amended Complaint was dismissed for failure to
    state a claim, as Judge Rodowsky stated in dissent, “the gears of Rule 2-325 were not
    engaged.” Muntjan, at 3 (Rodowsky, J., dissenting).
    To permit parties to revive a waived jury demand with a demand included with an
    amended complaint, even when no new counts state a claim upon which relief could be
    granted, would strip Maryland Rule 2-325 of any causal efficacy. As Judge Rodowsky
    rightly observed, “the right to demand a jury trial that has been waived could be revived
    simply by a plaintiff’s filing anything that purports to be a claim that was not asserted in
    an earlier pleading.” 
    Id. at 5.
    Such a theory is an absurd reading of the Rule. Blandon v.
    State, 
    304 Md. 316
    , 319, 
    498 A.2d 1195
    , 1196 (1985) (“[R]ules of statutory construction
    require us to avoid construing a statute in a way which would lead to absurd results.”). And
    we will not construe Rule 2-325 so as to render it nugatory. Taylor v. NationsBank, N.A.,
    12
    
    365 Md. 166
    , 181, 
    776 A.2d 645
    , 654–55 (2001) (“[W]henever possible, the statute should
    be read so that no word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered superfluous or nugatory.”).
    CONCLUSION
    In conclusion, we hold that because Muntjan’s Amended Complaint, in which he
    timely demanded a jury trial, added only one new count, which was dismissed for failure
    to state a claim, that count is an insufficient basis to revive the waived jury demand for the
    counts first alleged in his original Complaint. This reasoning comports with sound policy
    because a contrary meaning would render Maryland Rule 2-325 meaningless.
    Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals and remand to that
    Court to resolve the discovery issues that are not before this Court and thereafter to remand
    the matter to the Circuit Court for Baltimore City for a bench trial as to Counts I and II.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED.
    CASE REMANDED TO THAT
    COURT       FOR     FURTHER
    PROCEEDINGS      CONSISTENT
    WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS TO
    BE PAID BY RESPONDENTS.
    13