Mayor & Cncl. of Balt. v. Thornton Mellon , 478 Md. 396 ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. Thornton Mellon, LLC, et al., No. 6, September
    Term, 2021, Opinion by Booth, J.
    TAX SALES—FEE SIMPLE TITLE CONVEYED BY DEED. Under the tax sale
    statute, Title 14, Subtitle 8 of the Tax-Property Article of the Maryland Code (1985, 2019
    Rep. Vol., 2021 Supp.) (“TP”), fee simple legal title to real property sold at a tax sale vests
    in the certificate holder upon the collector’s execution and delivery of the deed. Upon the
    entry of the circuit court’s judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the certificate
    holder acquires an equitable title, or the right to acquire legal title, which may be exercised
    by satisfying the statutory conditions necessary for a conveyance of fee simple title by
    deed.
    TAX SALES—ASSIGNMENT OF TAX SALE CERTIFICATE. The tax sale statute
    provides that the certificate is freely assignable under TP § 14-821, and there is nothing in
    the statute that evidences the Legislature’s intent to extinguish the certificate or limit its
    assignment at the time the judgment is entered. Until fee simple title is conveyed by a
    deed, the tax sale certificate is freely assignable.
    JUDGMENTS—ASSIGNABILITY. The judgment foreclosing the right of redemption
    is assignable. The judgment grants the plaintiff, its heirs, successors and assigns, the right
    to acquire legal title to property upon the satisfaction of the payment of the purchase price,
    and post-judgment taxes, penalties, and interest. The judgment is a chose in action, which
    may be validly assigned. There is nothing in the tax sale statute that imposes a prohibition
    on the assignment of the judgment.
    CIRCUIT COURT’S REVISORY POWER OVER ITS JUDGMENT. Even if the
    Court had not concluded that the certificate of sale or judgment were assignable, the Court
    would nonetheless uphold the circuit court’s order in this case, under the circuit court’s
    broad revisory power over its judgment.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No.: 24-C-18-001043
    Argued: October 7, 2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 6
    September Term, 2021
    MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF
    BALTIMORE
    v.
    THORNTON MELLON, LLC, et al.
    *Getty, C.J.
    *McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Booth
    Biran
    Battaglia, Lynne A.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned)
    JJ.
    Opinion by Booth, J.
    Watts, Biran and McDonald, JJ., dissent.
    Filed: April 28, 2022
    *Getty, C.J., and McDonald, J. now Senior
    Judges, participated in the hearing and
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    conference of this case while active members of
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    this Court. After being recalled Pursuant to MD
    2022-04-28 14:22-04:00
    Constitution, Article IV, Section 3A, both
    participated in the decision and adoption of this
    opinion.
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    In this case, we must determine the moment when fee simple legal title vests in real
    property that has been sold at a tax sale under the provisions of the Maryland tax sale
    statute, which is set forth in Title 14, Subtitle 8, of the Tax-Property Article of the Maryland
    Code (“TP”) (1985, 2019 Repl. Vol, 2021 Supp.). The issue arises in the context of the
    Baltimore City Director of Finance’s (“Director”) refusal to issue a tax sale deed to Ty
    Webb, LLC (“Ty Webb”), the assignee of the tax sale purchaser, Thornton Mellon, LLC
    (“Thornton Mellon”) following the entry of a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption
    (“judgment”) in connection with a tax sale proceeding pending in the Circuit Court for
    Baltimore City. On July 11, 2019—one day after the circuit court entered the judgment—
    Thornton Mellon executed an assignment purporting to assign to Ty Webb its interest in
    the tax sale certificate and the judgment. Thornton Mellon prepared a tax deed, and
    presented the deed, and the assignment to the Director, and requested that the deed be
    executed to Ty Webb, as the assignee. The Director refused, asserting that the assignment
    was invalid because it was executed after the entry of the judgment.
    After the Director refused to execute the deed, Thornton Mellon filed a notice of
    substitution of parties in the circuit court proceeding, substituting its interest in the action
    as plaintiff for its assignee, Ty Webb. As the substitute plaintiff, Ty Webb filed a motion
    requesting an order directing the City to issue a tax sale deed to Ty Webb. The Mayor and
    City Council of Baltimore (the “City”) objected to Ty Webb’s motion. The City argued,
    among other things, that under TP § 14-844(b), the circuit court’s entry of a judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption in a tax sale proceeding vests fee simple title in the
    certificate holder, thereby extinguishing the certificate of sale. The City asserted that the
    only way for Thornton Mellon to convey its interest in the property to Ty Webb was for
    Thornton Mellon to first take legal title by deed, and then convey its interest by a second
    deed to Ty Webb. The circuit court rejected the City’s argument, determining that there
    was nothing in the tax sale statute to indicate that the Legislature intended to limit the
    assignment of a certificate of sale to the period prior to the entry of judgment. The circuit
    court concluded that the certificate of sale and the judgment were assignable and granted
    Ty Webb’s motion by directing the City to execute the tax deed in favor of Ty Webb as
    assignee.
    After the City noted an appeal, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgment
    of the circuit court. Mayor and City of Baltimore v. Thornton Mellon, LLC, 
    249 Md. App. 231
     (2021) (“Thornton Mellon”). The City petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari,
    which we granted to consider the following question, which we have consolidated and
    rephrased as follows:1
    1
    The City’s petition requested that we answer the following questions:
    Did the Court of Special Appeals err in affirming an order requiring the City
    to issue a tax sale deed to Ty Webb LLC rather than the tax sale purchaser,
    Thornton Mellon LLC, when Thornton Mellon LLC waited until after the
    circuit court’s final decree to purport to assign its certificate of sale and the
    judgement foreclosing the right of redemption to Ty Webb LLC, and the
    purported assignment was neither docketed as a separate filing nor recorded
    photographically by the clerk but merely attached as an exhibit to a motion
    for an order directing the City to issue a tax sale deed?
    1. Is a tax sale certificate no longer assignable once a court enters
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption?
    2. Assuming, arguendo, that a tax sale certificate is assignable after
    foreclosure, was the purported assignment here nonetheless invalid for
    2
    Did the circuit court err in ordering the City of Baltimore to issue a tax sale
    deed to the tax sale certificate holder’s assignee when the certificate holder
    executed the assignment one day after the entry of the court’s order
    foreclosing the right of redemption?
    For the reasons set forth below, we answer the question in the negative and affirm the
    judgment of the circuit court.
    I
    Factual Background and Procedural History
    On May 15, 2017, Thornton Mellon was the successful bidder at a tax sale involving
    certain property located at 812 Wedgewood Road in Baltimore (“the property”). On that
    same day, the Director issued Thornton Mellon a tax sale certificate (“certificate”), which
    contained the following information pertaining to the sale in question. First, the certificate
    reflected that the total purchase price for the property was $90,309. Of the total price, the
    amount due at the time of the issuance of the certificate was $5,775.28, which was the
    “total amount of taxes and other municipal liens due on the property at the time of the sale,
    together with interest and penalties thereon, and expenses incurred in making the sale.”
    The certificate noted that the property was “subject to redemption,” and described the
    statutory amount that would be refunded to the certificate holder if the property was
    failure to comply with the provisions of law relating to the short
    assignment of mortgages?
    3. Is a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption non-assignable?
    4. Assuming, arguendo, that a foreclosure judgment is assignable, must
    the assignment be filed and docketed in the circuit court, not merely
    attached as an exhibit to a motion, before the assignee can enforce the
    judgment in the assignee’s name?
    3
    redeemed by the owner. The certificate stated that the “balance due on account of the
    purchase price and all taxes, and other municipal liens, together with interest and penalties
    on them accruing subsequent to the date of sale, must be paid to the Collector before a deed
    can be delivered to the purchaser.” The certificate specified that the holder could bring a
    proceeding to foreclose the owner’s right of redemption after the expiration of the owner’s
    statutory period for redeeming the property. Finally, the certificate reflected that it would
    be void unless a proceeding was brought to foreclose the owner’s right of redemption
    within two years of the date of the certificate.
    On February 26, 2018, after the property owner failed to redeem the property within
    the statutory redemption period, Thornton Mellon filed a complaint to foreclose the right
    of redemption. On July 10, 2019, the circuit court entered the judgment, titled “Judgment
    Foreclosing Right of Redemption.” The judgment contained the language required under
    the applicable provisions of the tax sale statute necessary to foreclose the right of
    redemption. See TP §§ 14-844, 14-847(a). First, the judgment recited the circuit court’s
    finding that “all [d]efendants were personally served or were notified in accordance with”
    the applicable provisions of the Tax-Property Article, that the applicable notice of
    publication had been issued, and that no redemption had been made by the property owner.
    Second—and apropos of its title—the document entered judgment in favor of Thornton
    Mellon foreclosing the right of redemption in the property. Third, the judgment:
    ORDERED that Plaintiff is vested with an absolute and indefeasible
    fee simple title, free and clear of all alienations and descents of the property
    occurring before the date of the judgment and encumbrances on the property,
    except taxes and municipal liens that have accrued after the date of the sale
    4
    and easements of record and any other easement to which the property is
    subject that may be observed by an inspection of the property[.]
    Fourth, the judgment included the following directives to the Director and the Supervisor
    of Assessments as required by TP § 14-847(a):
    ORDERED that the Director of Finance shall execute and deliver a
    Deed to the Plaintiff, his successors and assigns, in accordance with the
    provisions of §§ 14-831 and 14-847 of the Tax-Property Article of the
    Maryland Code Annotated; and it is further
    ORDERED that the Supervisor of Assessments of Baltimore City
    shall enroll Plaintiff as the fee simple owner of the above-described property.
    On July 11, 2019—the day after the judgment was entered—Thornton Mellon
    executed a one-page assignment that purported to assign the certificate and judgment to
    Ty Webb. The assignment, titled “Assignment of Certificate of Tax Sale & Order
    Foreclosing Right of Redemption” stated as follows:
    In consideration of the sum of $1.00 dollars, I, for Thornton Mellon LLC
    do hereby sell, assign, transfer and set over to Ty Webb LLC, and their
    heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, the written Certificate of Tax
    Sale with respect to the property at 812 WEDGEWOOD ROAD,
    BALTIMORE, MD 21229-1224, Parcel ID 28-05-7993B-028, attached
    hereto and the Judgment Foreclosing Right of Redemption issued with
    respect to the Property and all my right, title and interest in or to the real
    estate described therein, to have and to hold the same to myself, his heirs,
    executors, administrators and assigns, to his and their sole use, benefit, and
    behoof forever. The Tax Sale Deed with respect to the Property should be
    issued in the name of Ty Webb LLC.
    In accordance with the requirements of TP §14-847(b), Thornton Mellon prepared
    and submitted to the Director a tax sale deed for the property. The tax sale deed reflected
    that the property was being conveyed from the Director to Ty Webb, as assignee of
    Thornton Mellon, and included standard recitals typical in tax sale deeds—describing the
    5
    tax sale proceeding, including the parties’ names and case number, the property
    description, and the tax account number for the property—as well as a recital reflecting
    Thornton Mellon’s assignment of its interest in the property to Ty Webb.
    At this point, the dispute arose between the parties. The City refused to execute the
    tax sale deed because it reflected Thornton Mellon’s assignment of its interest to Ty Webb,
    which the City contended was invalid. Specifically, although the City acknowledges that
    tax sale certificates are generally assignable, the City’s position is that the particular
    assignment to Ty Webb was invalid because it was executed one day after the entry of the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption. Upon the entry of the judgment, the City’s
    view is that the only way that Thornton Mellon can effectuate a transfer of its interest in
    the property to Ty Webb is by a two-deed transaction: first, by taking title to the property
    in a tax sale deed as the grantee; and second, by a deed of conveyance from Thornton
    Mellon, as the grantor, to Ty Webb as the grantee.2 In other words, because Thornton
    Mellon had not completed the assignment to Ty Webb, and Ty Webb had not been
    substituted as a party in the tax sale proceeding prior to the entry of the judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption, the City contended that the assignment was invalid,
    and refused to execute the tax sale deed conveying legal title to the property to Ty Webb.
    2
    The City’s reason for its statutory interpretation is no secret—if the Court agrees
    with the City, the City can collect revenue from transfer and recordation taxes on two deed
    transfers instead of one. In its brief, the City argues that there are “public policy reasons”
    to support its interpretation and points out that if Thornton Mellon were to sell the property
    for the amount it bid at the tax sale—$90,309—that sale would generate $2,259.63 in
    revenue to the City in recordation and transfer taxes. There is no dispute that Ty Webb
    will have to pay these fees in connection with the Director’s conveyance of fee simple title
    to the property by deed. The City wants to collect them on two separate conveyances.
    6
    After the City refused to execute the deed, on July 31, 2019, Thornton Mellon filed a
    notice of substitution in the tax sale case, stating that its interest in the property had been
    assigned to Ty Webb and requesting that Ty Webb be substituted as plaintiff. On that same
    day, Ty Webb, as substitute plaintiff, filed a “Motion for an Order Directing the City to Issue
    a Tax Deed to Assignee.” In the motion, Ty Webb explained that the circuit court had issued
    a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption on July 10, 2019, and that the following day,
    Thornton Mellon had assigned its interest in the property and the judgment to Ty Webb. Ty
    Webb attached to its motion a copy of the assignment and the draft tax sale deed. Ty Webb
    requested that the court enter an order directing the City to comply with the court’s judgment
    by issuing a deed to Ty Webb, as the assignee and substitute plaintiff.
    The City responded by filing two motions: a Motion to Strike, and a Motion to
    Strike, or in the Alternative, Response to Motion for Order Directed to the City of
    Baltimore to Issue a Tax Deed to an Assignee. In the City’s motions, the City argued that
    Thornton Mellon’s attempt to substitute Ty Webb as the plaintiff did not comply with
    Maryland Rule 2-2413 and that Ty Webb lacked standing to file its motion. The City
    asserted that: (1) the tax sale certificate was not assignable after the entry of the judgment;
    3
    Md. Rule 2-241(a) allows a person to be substituted for a party who:
    (1) dies, if the action survives,
    (2) becomes incompetent,
    (3) transfers an interest in an action, whether voluntarily or involuntarily,
    (4) if a corporation, dissolves, forfeits its charter, merges, or consolidates,
    (5) if a public officer, ceases to hold office, or
    (6) if a guardian, personal representative, receiver, or trustee, resigns, is removed,
    or dies.
    7
    (2) the judgment itself is not assignable; and (3) upon the entry of the judgment, the only
    manner by which Thornton Mellon could convey or assign its interest in the property was
    to first take title to the property by a deed, and then to execute a deed conveying its interest
    to Ty Webb.
    After a hearing, the circuit court issued a memorandum opinion and order. The
    circuit court determined that the plain language of TP § 14-821 does not limit the
    assignability of either a tax sale certificate or a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption. The circuit court also concluded that, even if the City was correct that the tax
    sale certificate was only assignable up until the entry of the judgment, the judgment itself
    was assignable as a chose in action.
    The City appealed the circuit court’s decision to the Court of Special Appeals. The
    intermediate appellate court affirmed the decision of the circuit court. Thornton Mellon,
    249 Md. App. at 231. The Court of Special Appeals pointed out that the circuit court has
    general revisory power and control over a judgment for a period of thirty days after its
    entry, including a final judgment foreclosing a right of redemption. Id. at 240. The Court
    of Special Appeals determined that Thornton Mellon’s filings “while not captioned as such,
    were essentially motions to revise the original judgment and may be treated as such despite
    their caption.” Id. at 241.
    The Court of Special Appeals also examined the plain language of the tax sale
    statute and held that it unambiguously and expressly permits the assignment of a certificate
    of tax sale. Id. The court rejected the City’s argument that the judgment foreclosing the
    right of redemption renders the tax sale certificate a “legal nullity” having no value,
    8
    pointing out that after the entry of judgment, “several additional steps are required to
    finalize the delivery of the deed[,]” including the certificate holder’s payment of the
    purchase price, accrued taxes and interest, and penalties. Id. at 243. The intermediate
    appellate court also noted that these additional steps are expressly required under the statute
    to be undertaken by the “holder of the certificate of sale.” Id. at 244 (quoting TP § 14-
    847(b)). The Court of Special Appeals reasoned that the General Assembly’s references
    to the “certificate holder” in the sequence of steps following the entry of judgment is further
    evidence that the General Assembly did not intend to render the certificate of sale a “legal
    nullity” upon the entry of the judgment. Id. The Court of Special Appeals further
    determined that its interpretation of the tax sale statute was consistent with this Court’s
    jurisprudence reflecting the long-standing principle that “legal title to land . . . does not
    pass, other than by operation of law, until a deed is properly executed and recorded.” Id.
    (quoting Kingsley v. Makay, 
    253 Md. 24
    , 27–28 (1969)). The Court of Special Appeals
    concluded that because no deed had been executed and recorded in the name of Thornton
    Mellon, the assignment of the judgment and substitution of the parties was valid. The
    intermediate appellate court also noted that the language in the judgment itself reflected
    the assignability of the certificate and the judgment, pointing to the Director’s authority to
    execute a deed to the Plaintiff, “his successors and assigns,” which, in this case, was Ty
    Webb. Id. at 244. The intermediate appellate court agreed with the circuit court that the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption was also a chose in action, which was
    assignable. Id. at 244–45. Accordingly, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed the circuit
    9
    court’s judgment. As we discuss below, we agree with the Court of Special Appeals’
    analysis in all respects.
    II
    Discussion
    “Where an order involves an interpretation and application of Maryland
    constitutional, statutory or case law, our Court must determine whether the trial court’s
    conclusions are ‘legally correct’ under a de novo standard of review.” Schisler v. State,
    
    394 Md. 519
    , 535 (2006). Inasmuch as the sole issue in this case involves an interpretation
    of the statutes and our case law governing the tax sale process, we conduct a de novo review
    of the matters raised herein.
    As we mentioned above, the fundamental issue in this case turns on the moment
    when fee simple title to real property that is sold at a tax sale vests in a tax sale purchaser
    who holds a certificate of sale to the property. The City contends that, under the plain
    language of the tax sale statute, the circuit court’s judgment that forecloses the right of
    redemption automatically vests fee simple title to the property in the certificate holder by
    operation of law and without any further action by the certificate holder or the tax
    collector. Although the City acknowledges that, under Maryland title conveyance law
    generally, legal title does not pass until a deed is executed and recorded, the City contends
    that the Legislature has created an exception to the general rule, whereby fee simple title
    is passed, as a matter of law, upon the entry of the judgment instead of a conveyance by
    deed. Under the City’s theory, because the judgment transfers fee simple title and
    extinguishes all prior liens and encumbrances, the certificate holder’s tax sale certificate
    10
    is extinguished, and is therefore, no longer assignable. Accordingly, the City posits that
    post-judgment, the tax sale purchaser—in this case, Thornton Mellon—may only convey
    its interest in the property by a fee simple deed under the general Maryland title
    conveyance statute, Md. Code Real Property Article (1974, 2015 Repl. Vol., 2021 Supp.)
    (“RP”) § 3-101.
    Thornton Mellon disagrees with the City’s characterization of the judgment and
    asserts that the tax sale statute does not create a statutory exemption to Maryland’s title
    conveyance law. Thornton Mellon points out that the statute requires that the certificate
    holder satisfy certain post-judgment conditions in order to obtain fee simple title by deed.
    Upon the performance of these conditions, Thornton Mellon notes that the collector is
    required to execute a deed to the certificate holder conveying fee simple title. Because the
    statute describes certain post-judgment conditions that the certificate holder must satisfy
    prior to obtaining fee simple title by deed, Thornton Mellon asserts that the entry of
    judgment creates equitable title, which ripens into legal title only upon the certificate
    holder’s performance of the conditions and delivery of a deed. Thornton Mellon contends
    that its statutory interpretation is consistent with Maryland title conveyance law generally,
    as well as our case law describing the conveyance of legal title in the mortgage foreclosure
    context. According to Thornton Mellon, because legal title to the property does not transfer
    until the conveyance by deed, the certificate of sale—which evidences the certificate
    holder’s lien interest in the property—is not extinguished by the judgment. Thornton
    Mellon points out that the tax sale statute explicitly provides for the assignment of tax sale
    certificates, and there is nothing in the plain language of the statute to indicate that the
    11
    General Assembly intended to restrict the free assignment of the tax sale certificate to the
    point in time prior to the entry of the judgment. Thornton Mellon also asserts that the
    judgment itself is assignable. Finally, Thornton Mellon notes that the circuit court has
    broad revisory power over its judgment, and the circuit court did not err in entering an
    order directing the City to execute the deed under the circumstances.
    To determine the correctness of either party’s position, we must necessarily quantify
    the nature of the certificate holder’s interest in the property upon the entry of the judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption. In other words, we must decide whether the City is
    correct that the judgment itself vests fee simple title to the certificate holder as a matter of
    law (thereby extinguishing all prior liens, including the tax sale certificate), or whether
    Thornton Mellon is correct that the judgment conveys an interest less than fee simple title,
    such as an equitable interest, and that legal title to the property passes by the deed after the
    certificate holder’s performance of statutory conditions.
    Before we turn to the tax sale statute, it is useful to discuss some basic real estate
    title and conveyance nomenclature under Maryland law. This background is helpful
    because some of the terms contained in the tax sale statute—such as “fee simple title” and
    “marketable title”—are defined by common law. Additionally, some of the general
    requirements for conveying legal title to property are contained in other provisions within
    the Maryland Code. As we will discuss later, when interpretating statutes that address the
    same subject matter, we endeavor to read those provisions consistently with one another.
    12
    A. General Real Estate Terms and Concepts Under Maryland Law for Conveying
    Fee Simple Title to Real Property
    We start with the principle that in Maryland, with limited exception,4 the only means
    by which legal title to real property can transfer from one person to another is by recording
    a deed in the land records of the county in which the property is located. See RP § 3-101(a)
    (“[N]o estate of inheritance or freehold, . . . may pass or take effect unless the deed granting
    it is executed and recorded.”); Kingsley, 
    253 Md. at 27
     (observing that “legal title to land,
    of course, does not pass, other than by operation of law, until a deed is properly executed
    and recorded[]”).
    The concept of “legal title” to real property is distinct from “equitable title.” While
    legal title is conveyed by a deed, equitable title arises in circumstances where an individual
    has the right to acquire legal title. See Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining
    4
    RP § 3-101(a) recognizes that, in limited circumstances, legal title may pass “by
    operation of law.” One example of how title passes “by operation of law” is where property
    is held as tenants by the entirety with rights of survivorship, and the decedent’s title in
    property vests in his or her survivor by operation of law without the need for a new deed.
    See RP § 4-109(b) (providing that “[a]ny interest in property held by a husband and wife
    in tenancy by the entirety may be granted” and “[t]hese grants, regardless of when made,
    are ratified, confirmed, and declared valid as having created the type of ownership that the
    grant purports to grant[]”). Another example is an eminent domain proceeding. See Md.
    Rule 12-212(a) (providing that legal title is transferred by recording the trial court’s
    inquisition in the land records); see also RP § 12-108(a) and (b) (stating that “[o]n payment
    of the judgment and costs by the plaintiff pursuant to the provisions of Title 12, Chapter
    200 of the Maryland Rules, the plaintiff immediately shall become vested with the title,
    estate, or interest of the defendant in the condemned property” and “[t]he title acquired in
    a condemnation proceeding shall be an absolute or fee-simple title including the right, title,
    and interest of each of the defendants in the proceeding whose property has been
    condemned unless a different title is specified in the inquisition[]”); and Dunne v. State,
    
    162 Md. 274
    , 284 (1932) (making clear, however, that title in eminent domain proceedings
    does not pass until just compensation is paid or secured to the defendant).
    13
    “equitable title” as “a title that indicates a beneficial interest in property and that gives the
    holder the right to acquire formal legal title[]”). When a purchaser enters into a real estate
    contract to purchase property, the purchaser acquires an equitable title, or the right to
    acquire property. Kingsley, 
    253 Md. at 24
    . The legal title to the property does not pass
    until a deed is properly executed and recorded. 
    Id.
    The Real Property Article of the Maryland Code sets forth the language to be
    included in a deed when a grantor conveys a fee simple interest in property to a grantee.
    RP § 4-202(a). Unless a contrary intention appears by express terms or is necessarily
    implied, every grant of land passes a fee simple estate. 6 Maryland Law Encyclopedia
    (“M.L.E.”), Conveyances § 84; RP § 2-101 (stating that “[t]he word “‘grant’ [] in a deed,
    or any other words purporting to transfer the whole estate of the grantor, passes to the
    grantee the whole interest and estate of the grantor in the land mentioned in the deed unless
    a limitation or reservation shows, by implication or otherwise, a different intent[]”).
    A “fee simple” estate is defined as “being the broadest property interest allowed by
    law[.]” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019); see also 1 Tiffany Real Prop. § 27 (3d ed.
    1939 & Supp. 2021) (“[a]n estate in fee simple absolute is an estate in fee simple which is
    not subject to a special limitation, condition subsequent or an executory limitation.[]”).
    The owner of a fee simple estate has absolute and exclusive control and dominion over the
    property. See Trustees of Sheppard & Enoch Pratt Hosp. v. Swift & Co., 
    178 Md. 200
    , 207
    (1940) (where one holds “absolute and exclusive control over property,” one has an estate
    in fee simple, no matter how acquired); Arnd v. Lerch, 
    162 Md. 318
    , 324 (1932) (“[a]n
    14
    estate in fee simple is one in which the tenant holds absolute and exclusive control and
    dominion over the property[]”).5
    Another real estate term that is useful to discuss is the concept of “marketable
    title” to real property. As we will discuss in more detail, the Legislature has expressly
    directed that the tax sale statute be construed within the context of “the public policy of
    providing marketable title to property that is sold at tax sale[.]” TP § 14-832(2).
    “Whether title is marketable in a given case is a question for the court.” Coe v. Hays,
    
    105 Md. App. 778
    , 789 (1995) (citing Berlin v. Caplan, 
    211 Md. 333
    , 341 (1956)
    (additional citation omitted)). We have defined a “marketable title” as “a title without
    encumbrances and free from reasonable doubt as to any question of law or fact that may
    call it in question in the future and subject the purchase to the hazard of litigation.”
    Garner v. Union Trust Co. of Maryland, 
    185 Md. 386
    , 389 (1945). Or stated another
    way, “marketable title” is
    a title which is free from encumbrances and any reasonable doubt as to its
    validity, and such as a reasonably intelligent person, who is well informed as
    to the facts and their legal bearings, and ready and willing to perform his
    contract, would be willing to accept in the exercise of ordinary business
    prudence. Accordingly[,] a marketable title must be so far free from defects
    as to enable the purchaser not only to hold the land in peace but also, if he
    wishes to sell it, to be reasonably sure that no flaw will appear to disturb its
    market value. However, a title, in order to be marketable, need not be free
    5
    William Blackstone described the owner of a fee simple estate as having
    “absolutum et directum dominion [absolute and direct ownership].” 2 William Blackstone,
    Commentaries on the Laws of England 70 (1769). Or in other words, fee simple title is
    “an estate of [absolute] inheritance; being the highest and most extensive interest that a
    man can have in a feud” that is given to him and his heirs, “clear of any conditions,
    limitations or restrictions[.]” Id. at 71.
    15
    from every conceivable technical criticism, but only from those possibilities
    of defect which are sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt.
    Sinclair v. Weber, 
    204 Md. 324
    , 334 (1954).
    We have “recognized that the term ‘merchantable title’ is synonymous with
    ‘marketable title.’” Garner, 
    185 Md. at 389
    . Notably, “‘a good and merchantable title’
    ordinarily means a title in fee simple[.]” Arnd, 
    162 Md. at 323
    . In contrast to fee simple
    title, we have also made it “clear that equitable title is not marketable, for in reality it is not
    a title at all, but merely a right to the legal title.” Garner, 
    185 Md. at 390
    . At the opposite
    end of the spectrum from a property having “good record title” or “marketable title,” is a
    property that has a cloud on its title. A “cloud on title” is defined as “[a] defect or potential
    defect in the owner’s title to a piece of land arising from some claim or encumbrance such
    as a lien, an easement, or a court order.” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    Of course, some transfers of property are not undertaken willingly by the owner,
    such as in the case of a mortgage foreclosure or a tax sale—where the owner loses title to
    property arising from the nonpayment of a valid debt that constitutes a lien on the property.
    In the case of a tax sale, the Legislature has created an in rem process to transfer legal title
    to property via the tax sale statute that balances the due process rights of the property owner
    against the public policy of ensuring clear and marketable title to property that has been
    sold and transferred in connection with a tax sale proceeding. TP § 14-832.
    B. The Tax Sale Process
    The tax sale process is set forth in Title 14, Subtitle 8, of the Maryland Tax-Property
    Article, and provides for the sale of real property by a local taxing authority when an owner
    16
    has failed to pay his or her property taxes. The unpaid property taxes become liens on the
    property until they are paid, and the county’s tax collector is authorized to sell the property
    “in the county in which the collector[6] is elected or appointed on which the tax is in
    arrears.” TP § 14-804(a)(1); TP § 14-808(a)(1).
    The Public Sale
    Notice of the proposed sale must be given to the owner at least 30 days before the
    property is advertised for sale, and it must state that if the owner does not pay the taxes
    within 30 days, the property will be sold. TP § 14-812. After the sale is properly
    advertised, the property is sold at public auction. TP § 14-817.
    At the public sale, the purchaser pays the delinquent taxes due on the property and
    in exchange, is “given a certificate of sale which includes a description of the property, the
    amount for which the property was sold, and information as to the time in which an action
    to foreclose the owner’s right of redemption must be brought.” Scheve v. Shudder, 
    328 Md. 363
    , 370 (1992); TP § 14-820. It is important to note that, at the time of the tax sale,
    the tax sale purchaser does not pay the entire bid price. The purchaser pays the back taxes,
    and the rest of the bid remains on credit. TP § 14-818(a)(1)(i).7 The purchaser then
    6
    “A ‘collector’ is an ‘officer of a county or municipal corporation who has a duty
    to collect or remit taxes.’” Kona Properties, LLC v. W.D.B. Corp., Inc., 
    224 Md. App. 517
    n.4 (2015) (quoting TP § 1-101(e)). “The Director of Finance is the collector for Baltimore
    City.” Id.
    7
    In this case, at the tax sale, Thornton Mellon’s bid price was $90,309. At the time
    of the issuance of the certificate, it paid $5,775.28, leaving a balance of $84,533.72, which
    remained on credit. TP § 14-818(a)(1)(i). As explained in more detail herein, the balance
    is not required to be paid prior to the entry of the judgment foreclosing the owner’s right
    of redemption but is required to be paid prior to the issuance of the deed from the collector.
    17
    receives a certificate of sale, which is freely assignable.           TP §§ 14-820, 14-821.
    Specifically, TP § 14-821(a) provides that:
    Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,[8] any certificate of sale
    executed and delivered by the collector to the purchaser is assignable and an
    assignment of the certificate of sale vests in the assignee, or the legal
    representative of the assignee, all the right, title and interest of the original
    purchaser. The assignment of certificate of sale may be made in accordance
    with the provisions of law relating to the short assignment of mortgages.
    The certificate of sale issued to the certificate holder is the documentary evidence
    of the certificate holder’s lien on the property. See TP § 14-823 (stating that the “certificate
    of sale or assignment of the certificate of sale is presumptive evidence . . . of the title of the
    purchaser to the property described in the certificate of sale or assignment . . . .”); Magraw
    v. Dillow, 
    341 Md. 492
    , 505 (1996) (explaining that “the interest of a tax sale purchaser is
    that of a lien against the property, which, through the process of foreclosure, ripens into
    title[]”) (cleaned up). In other words, the certificate is the presumptive evidence of the
    certificate holder’s lien, or “inchoate right of ownership,” Magraw, 
    341 Md. at 505
    . This
    gives the certificate holder the right to later institute a tax sale foreclosure proceeding to
    convert the holder’s inchoate equitable interest into legal title.
    TP § 14-818(a)(2) (“After the final decree has been passed foreclosing the right of
    redemption in any property, the collector may not execute or deliver a deed to any
    purchaser other than the governing body of a county until the balance of the purchase price
    has been paid in full, together with all taxes and interest and penalties accruing after the
    date of the sale.”).
    8
    The sole exception in TP § 14-821(b) relates to limited auctions that are permitted
    by statute in Prince George’s County pursuant to TP § 14-817(d), which are not applicable
    here.
    18
    Property Owner’s Right of Redemption
    After the tax sale, the property owner has a right of redemption, which lasts until it
    is foreclosed in a court proceeding. TP § 14-827. To redeem the property, the owner must
    pay the collector, among other things, the amount already paid by the purchaser at the tax
    sale, plus interest at the applicable rate provided in TP § 14-820(b) from the date of the tax
    sale to the date of redemption. TP § 14-828. If the property is redeemed, the certificate
    holder, upon surrendering the certificate, receives the redemption amount paid to the
    collector, excluding the taxes. Id.
    TP § 14-820(b) sets the statutory redemption interest rate for each county and
    Baltimore City, unless the local subdivision sets something different. As Chief Judge
    Murphy noted in Fish Market Nominee Corp. v. G.A.A., Inc., “[l]ocal subdivisions often
    set the rate higher than rates given on ordinary investments.” 
    337 Md. 1
    , 5 (1994) (“Fish
    Market”). For example, Baltimore City has set the redemption interest rate at 18% per
    year. Baltimore City Code Art. 28, § 16. “This high rate of return encourages potential
    tax sale purchasers to invest in property despite the fact that the property is subject to a
    right of redemption.” Fish Market, 337 Md. at 5.
    After waiting six months from the date of sale, the certificate holder can file a
    complaint to foreclose the owner’s right of redemption. TP § 14-833(a).9 The certificate
    is “void unless a proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption is filed within 2 years of
    9
    For owner-occupied properties in Baltimore City, unless a statutory exception
    applies, the holder must wait nine months prior to filing a complaint to foreclose the
    property owner’s right of redemption. TP § 14-833.
    19
    the date of the certificate of sale.” TP § 14-833(c)(1). We have described the two-year
    time frame for filing a complaint as “effectively placing a statute of limitations on actions
    to foreclose the right of redemption.” Fish Market, 337 Md. at 5.
    In Rem Proceeding to Foreclose Right of Redemption and to Transfer Fee Simple
    Title to the Certificate Holder
    Because the transfer of legal title to the property from the owner to the certificate
    holder is not a voluntary one, the tax sale statute sets forth an in rem proceeding by which
    the interests of the owner and any other persons having an interest in the property are
    extinguished, and a deed conveying fee simple title is issued by the collector to the
    certificate holder upon the successful completion of all the statutory steps in the process.
    The General Assembly has recognized the importance of ensuring that properties that are
    sold at a tax sale emerge from the process with marketable title, by directing that the statute
    “shall be construed to ensure a balance between: (1) the due process and redemption rights
    of persons that own or have an interest in property sold at a tax sale; and (2) the public
    policy of providing marketable title to property that is sold at a tax sale through the
    foreclosure of the right to redemption.” TP § 14-832.10
    The Legislature has conferred upon the circuit court equitable “jurisdiction to give
    complete relief under this subtitle,” over property located within its county, “to bar all
    10
    The Legislature’s directive to construe tax sale statutes in a manner that ensures
    marketable title to properties subject to tax sale proceedings has been around for many
    decades. See 1943 Md. Laws ch. 761 § 89G (stating that the applicable provisions of the
    tax sale statute “shall be liberally construed as remedial legislation to encourage the
    foreclosure of rights of redemption by suits in the equity courts and for the decreeing of
    marketable titles to property sold by the Collector[]”).
    20
    rights of redemption and to foreclose all alienations and descents of the property occurring
    before the judgment of the court[,]” including “all liens and encumbrances on the
    property,” with the exception of “property taxes that arise after the date of the sale,”
    including the authority “to order an absolute and indefeasible estate in fee simple or
    leasehold to be vested in the holder of the certificate of sale.” TP § 14-834.
    The statute provides that the “plaintiff in any action to foreclose the right of
    redemption shall be the holder of the certificate of sale.” TP §14-836. The defendants are
    the record title holder, the owner of any leasehold title (if the property is subject to a ground
    rent),11 any mortgagee or assignee of a mortgagee, the trustee under any deed of trust, the
    county where the property is located, and if appropriate, the State. TP § 14-836(b)(1).
    After the certificate holder files a complaint, the court issues summonses to all defendants
    and issues an order to publicize the foreclosure proceeding. TP §§ 14-839(a)(3), 14-840.
    Both the summonses and the publication state a date, no sooner than 60 days from the date
    of the publication order, by which anyone having an interest in the property must redeem
    it. TP § 14-840. The right of redemption continues throughout the proceeding until the
    court issues a final decree foreclosing the right of redemption. TP § 14-827. The complaint
    alleges an amount necessary for redemption; however, the court fixes the amount if it is
    disputed. TP §§ 14-829, 14-835(a)(7). If the owner or interested person entitled to redeem
    11
    To ascertain the record title holder and any record title holder of a leasehold title
    if the property is subject to a ground rent, the certificate holder is required to perform a title
    search “in accordance with generally accepted standards of title examination of the land
    records of the county, of the records of the register of wills of the county, and of the records
    of the circuit court of the county.” TP § 14-836(b)(i) and (ii).
    21
    the property does not do so by the dates stated in the summons and in the publication, the
    court issues a final judgment foreclosing the right of redemption. TP § 14-844(a).
    The Legislature has set forth certain statutory requirements for the final judgment
    entered by the circuit court, which are contained in two sections of the tax sale statute. TP
    §§ 14-844, 14-847(a). First, in TP § 14-844(a), the judgment extinguishes the rights of the
    defendants and other persons who have an interest in the property: the judgment is final
    and “conclusive on the defendants, their heirs, devisees, and personal representatives and
    they or any of their heirs, devisees, executors, administrators, assigns, or successors in
    right, title, or interest, and all defendants are bound by the judgment as if they had been
    named in the proceeding and personally served with process.” Id. Second, in subsection
    TP § 14-844(b), if the court finds for the plaintiff:
    the judgment vests in the plaintiff an absolute and indefeasible title in fee
    simple in the property, free and clear of all alienations and descents of the
    property occurring before the date of the judgment and encumbrances on the
    property, except taxes that accrue after the date of sale and easements of
    record and any other easement that may be observed by an inspection of the
    property to which the property is subject.
    However, the statutory requirements pertaining to the circuit court’s entry of a
    judgment do not end there. The statute also requires that the circuit court judgment include
    two additional directives, which are set forth in TP §14-847(a). First, the statute requires
    that, “the judgment of the court shall direct the collector to execute a deed to the holder of
    the certificate of sale in fee simple” upon “payment to the collector of the balance of the
    purchase price, due on account of the purchase price of the property, together with all taxes
    and interest and penalties on the property that accrue after the date of sale.” TP § 14-847(a)
    22
    (emphasis added). Second, the statute specifies that “[t]he judgment shall direct the
    supervisor to enroll the holder of the certificate of sale in fee simple . . . as the owner of
    the property.” Id.12
    12
    As we noted in Lippert v. Jung, 
    366 Md. 221
    , 238–240 (2001), the taxing
    authority’s power to sell property for non-payment of taxes has existed since the original
    grants from the Kings of England to the Lord Proprietors. The early tax sale statutes did
    not require court approval prior to the tax collector’s conveyance following a sale. The
    power of sale vested in a collector was described as a “naked power, specially conferred
    by statute, to be exercised under a proceeding ex parte in its character, . . . the effect of
    which [was] to divest a citizen of his property without his consent[.]” McMahon v. Crean,
    
    109 Md. 652
    , 665 (1909).
    With the passage of the Acts of 1872, ch. 384, the General Assembly required the
    “collector to report the sale, together with all the proceedings had in relation therefore to
    the courts for confirmation[.]” The early statutes conferred upon the court a special and
    limited jurisdiction, to ratify the sale. Upon the final ratification of the sale, the Legislature
    gave the tax collector the authority to convey title to the property by executing a deed to
    the purchaser. See e.g., Md. Code Art. 81 § 79 (1929).
    Although there have been various revisions to the tax sale statutes since the Acts of
    1872, the substance of the statutory provisions pertaining to the requirements of the
    judgment of foreclosure have remained unchanged. For example, the tax sale statute
    enacted by Chapter 761 of the 1943 Maryland Laws contained provisions that are
    substantively the same as Sections 14-844 and 14-846 of the current Tax-Property Article.
    Specifically, the Annotated Code of the Public General Laws of Maryland (1943), Article
    81, § 90L provided as follows:
    At the expiration of the time limited in the order of publication, and in the
    subpoena, the court shall pass its decree in the proceedings, in accordance
    with the general equity jurisdiction and practice of said court. The decree
    shall be final and conclusive upon the defendants, their heirs, devisees, and
    personal representatives and their or any of their heirs, devisees, executors,
    administrators, assigns or successors in right, title or interest, and all
    defendants shall be bound by the said decrees as if they had been named in
    the proceedings and personally served with process. If the Court shall find
    for the plaintiff, the decree shall vest in the plaintiff an absolute and
    indefeasible title in fee simple in the property, free and clear of all alienations
    and descents of the property occurring prior to the decree of Court as herein
    23
    Following entry of the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the tax sale
    statute imposes additional obligations on both the certificate holder and the tax collector.
    With respect to the certificate holder, once the court enters final judgment, the holder of
    the tax sale certificate “immediately becomes liable for the payment of all taxes due and
    payable after the judgment . . . . On the entry of judgment, the plaintiff shall pay the
    collector any surplus bid and all taxes together with interest and penalties on the taxes due
    on the property.” TP § 14-844(d).13 Second, the statute requires that the certificate holder
    prepare a deed. See TP § 14-847(b) (“[t]he deed shall be prepared by the holder of the
    certificate of sale or the attorney for the holder of the certificate of sale and all expenses
    provided and encumbrances thereon, except taxes accruing subsequent to the
    date of sale and public easements to which the property is subject . . . .
    The language in Article 81, § 90O provided that:
    The final decree of the court shall direct the Collector to prepare and execute
    a deed to the holder of the certificate of sale, in fee simple, or in leasehold,
    as the case may be, upon payment to the Collector of the balance of the
    purchase price, due on account of the purchase price of the property,
    together with all taxes and interest and penalties thereon accruing
    subsequent to the date of sale. The Clerk of the Court in which the suit is
    instituted shall issue a certified copy of the decree of said Court and the
    Collector shall not be obligated to execute the deed provided for in this
    section until such certified copy of the decree is served upon him.
    (Emphasis added). Similar language was included in the tax sale statute up through 1985,
    when the General Assembly implemented a general recodification of the tax sale statute,
    formerly Maryland Code Article 81, §§ 70 through 127. Compare Md. Code Art. 81 §§
    112, 115 (1957, 1980 Repl. Vol., 1985 Supp.) with TP §§ 14-844, 14-847.
    13
    Because the certificate holder has two years to file a complaint to foreclose the
    right of redemption—during which time taxes continue to accrue—it is not uncommon for
    the property to have accumulated post-sale taxes, interest, and penalties.
    24
    incident to the preparation and execution of the deed shall be paid by the holder of the
    certificate of sale[]”). Once the certificate holder fulfills these post-judgment statutory
    obligations—paying the balance of the purchase price, along with taxes that have accrued
    post-sale, and preparing the deed—the tax collector’s obligation to complete the transfer is
    triggered.
    The statute sets forth the mechanics of the completion of the transfer of legal title
    via the execution of a fee simple deed from the collector to the certificate holder. Under
    the statute, the “clerk of the court in which the suit is instituted shall issue a certified copy
    of the judgment of the court to the collector and supervisor and the collector is not obligated
    to execute the deed provided for in this section until that certified copy of the judgment is
    delivered to the collector.” TP § 14-847(c). Upon receipt of the balance of the purchase
    price, together with all post-sale interest and penalties that have accrued on the property
    (TP § 14-847(a)), the preparation of the deed by the certificate holder (TP § 14-847(b)),
    and the delivery by the clerk of the court of the certified copy of the judgment to the
    collector and supervisor (TP § 14-847(c)), the collector is required to execute the deed “to
    the holder of the certificate of sale in fee simple” as directed by the court in the final
    judgment (TP § 14-847(a)), and the supervisor is required to enroll the holder of the
    certificate of the sale “in fee simple . . . as the owner of the property.” TP § 14-847(a); see
    also TP § 14-818(a)(3) (“[o]n receiving the balance [of the purchase price] and after
    accrued taxes and interest and penalties on the taxes, the collector shall execute and deliver
    a proper deed to the purchaser[]”); see also Hardisty v. Kay, 268 Md 202, 213 (1973)
    (observing that “upon proof of satisfaction of [the] judgment and payment of any
    25
    subsequent taxes, interest and penalties owed, the collector is required to execute a proper
    deed when one is presented by the certificate holder[]”) (emphasis added).
    Once a deed is executed, the purchaser—who is now the new legal title owner—is
    entitled to possession of the property. See TP § 14-850 (“[a]ny person who acquires a deed
    to property under this subtitle is entitled to issuance of a writ for possession of the property
    under the Maryland Rules as if the person had obtained a judgment awarding possession
    of the property[]”) (emphasis added).14
    Remedies Where Certificate Holder Does Not Follow Through on the Post-
    Judgment Statutory Obligations
    Before we examine the parties’ competing statutory interpretations of the tax sale
    statute in this case, it is useful to not only consider the statutory provisions that apply when
    the certificate holder fulfills the obligations that entitle the holder to a fee simple deed, but
    also the statutory provisions that apply when the certificate holder doesn’t comply. In other
    words, what are the statutory remedies available to the tax collector and the property owner
    when the certificate holder does not follow through with the performance of the post-
    judgment obligations that would entitle the holder to a conveyance of fee simple title by
    deed?    Such a circumstance is not uncommon—the Court of Special Appeals aptly
    14
    TP § 14-836(b)(7) sets forth the statutory notice that must be given prior to taking
    possession. After the “issuance of the judgment foreclosing right of redemption and at
    least 30 days before taking possession of the property, the plaintiff shall give any tenant of
    the property written notice of the plaintiff’s intention to obtain possession of the property
    and that the tenant must vacate the property within 30 days after notice.” TP § 14-
    836(b)(7)(i). “During the 30-day period immediately following issuance of the judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption, the plaintiff may apply for, process, and obtain, but
    not execute upon, a writ of possession for the property.” TP § 14-836(b)(7)(ii).
    26
    described this situation in an opinion involving three separate properties in Baltimore City
    in which the certificate holders failed to consummate the property transfers after the
    respective judgments were entered foreclosing the rights to redemption:
    If the certificate holder does not pay the taxes in full, the property is left in
    limbo: the prior owner may not sell the property and knows that, as soon as
    the certificate holder pays the collector, it will no longer have title to the
    property, however, the certificate holder also does not have full rights to the
    property because the collector has not issued a deed to the certificate holder.
    Kona Properties, LLC v. W.D.B. Corp., Inc., 
    224 Md. App. 517
    , 531 (2015) (“Kona
    Properties”) (emphasis added). In such cases, if the certificate holder does not pay the
    balance of the purchase price and the post-sale taxes, interests and penalties, the statute
    prohibits the certificate holder from obtaining legal title by deed. See TP § 14-818(a)(2).15
    In addition, where the certificate holder does not comply with the terms of the final
    judgment within 90 days by paying the amounts required for the execution and delivery of
    the deed, the statute permits the judgment to be stricken on motion of an interested party
    for good cause shown. TP § 14-847(d).16 The collector and the owner each have the right
    15
    TP § 14-818(a)(2) provides:
    After the final decree has been passed foreclosing the right of redemption in
    any property, the collector may not execute or deliver a deed to any purchaser
    other than the governing body of a county until the balance of the purchase
    price has been paid in full, together with all taxes and interest and penalties
    on the taxes accruing after the date of sale.
    16
    Specifically, TP § 14-847(d)(1) provides:
    If the holder of the certificate of sale does not comply with the terms of the
    final judgment of the court within 90 days as to payments to the collector of
    the balance of the purchase price due on account of the purchase price of the
    property and of all taxes, interest, and penalties that accrue after the date of
    27
    to request that the judgment be stricken if the certificate holder fails to pay. See Hardisty
    v. Kay, 268 Md. at 211 (agreeing that the “interested party” mentioned in the predecessor
    statute, Article 81, § 115, “refers to the owner of the land at the time of the sale or anyone
    claiming rights through him[]”); Slattery v. Friedman, 
    99 Md. App. 106
    , 122 (1994); cert.
    denied, 
    335 Md. 81
     (1994) (observing that TP § 14-847(b) permits the collector “to have a
    judgment set aside if payment is not made as required[]”). As the Court of Special Appeals
    observed in Friedman, TP § 14-847(d) provides a distinct method “for the owners of the
    property to have the judgment foreclosing their right of redemption reopened.” 99 Md.
    App. at 122. The court further explained that “during the time that the holder of the
    certificate has not complied with [TP] § 14-847(d), that is, between 90 days after the
    judgment of foreclosure was entered and payment of the balance due, the owner may
    petition the court under [TP] § 14-847(d) to reopen the judgment, so long as the balance
    remains unpaid.” Id. at 123. After the purchase price is paid, the judgment may only be
    reopened on the ground of fraud or lack of jurisdiction. Id.; TP § 14-845.17
    sale, that judgment may be stricken by the court on the motion of an
    interested party for good cause shown.
    This section was initially enacted in 1972 and was previously codified as §115 in Article
    81 of the Maryland Code. See 
    1972 Md. Laws 1766
    , 1766–67 (Ch. 691); see also Hardisty
    v. Kay, 
    268 Md. 202
    , 210 (1973).
    17
    TP § 14-845(a) provides that:
    A court in the State may not reopen a judgment rendered in a tax sale
    foreclosure proceeding except on the ground of lack of jurisdiction or fraud
    in the conduct of the proceedings to foreclose; however, no reopening of any
    judgment on the ground of constructive fraud in the conduct of the
    proceedings to foreclose shall be entertained by any court unless an
    28
    In addition to the statutory provision which permits the judgment to be stricken, the
    owner and tax collector each have additional remedies against a certificate holder for non-
    compliance with post-judgment statutory obligations. The owner may file suit against the
    certificate holder to compel the payment of the bid surplus that was to be paid to the owner
    upon the entry of judgment. See Hardisty v. Kay, 
    268 Md. 202
     (1973).18 The government
    entity that is owed the taxes may sue the certificate holder in an action under TP § 14-864
    to collect all taxes due and payable within 7 years from the date that the taxes were due. 19
    application to reopen a judgment rendered is filed within 1 year from the date
    of the judgment.
    In Slattery v. Friedman, 
    99 Md. App. 106
    , 123 (1994), cert. denied, 
    335 Md. 81
    (1994), the Court of Special Appeals held that TP §§ 14-845 and 14-847(d) “must be read
    in conjunction with one another.” Accordingly, “during the time that the holder of the
    certificate has not complied with [TP] § 14-847(d), that is, between 90 days after the
    judgment of foreclosure was entered and payment of the balance due, the owner may
    petition the court under [TP] § 14-847(d) to reopen the judgment, so long as the balance
    due remains unpaid.” Id. However, “[a]fter payment of the balance due, . . . the judgment
    may be reopened only pursuant to [TP] § 14-845, i.e., on the grounds of fraud or lack of
    jurisdiction, regardless of whether the payment was made after the petition was filed.” Id.
    (footnote omitted).
    18
    Where the certificate holder’s bid price at the tax sale exceeds the “amount
    required for the payment of taxes, interest, penalties and costs of [the] sale[,]” the collector
    is required to pay the surplus bid price to “the person entitled to the balance[,]” TP § 14-
    818(a)(4), which of course, in many instances, is the title owner. See Hardisty, 
    268 Md. at 206
     (in which the owners filed a petition in the foreclosure case to compel payment of the
    purchase price after the tax sale purchaser did not follow through with paying the balance
    owed and obtaining title to the property by deed after the foreclosure judgment was
    entered).
    19
    TP 14-844(d)(1) states:
    Once a judgment is granted, the plaintiff becomes immediately liable for the
    payment of all taxes due and payable after the judgment. The plaintiff may
    be sued in an action under § 14-864 of this subtitle to collect all taxes due
    29
    And the taxing authority may subject the property to a second tax sale for the delinquent
    taxes that accrued but remain unpaid after the first sale. See Prince George’s Homes, Inc.
    v. Cahn, 
    283 Md. 76
    , 79–80 (1978); Kona Properties, 244 Md. App. at 531.
    Notably absent from the remedies available to the legal title owner or the tax
    collector where the certificate holder fails to follow through on the holder’s post-judgment
    obligations is any statutory provision that compels specific performance of the obligations
    thereby entitling the certificate holder to a conveyance of legal title by deed. In other
    words, if the certificate holder fails to comply with the post-judgment obligations, fee
    simple title is never transferred by deed.
    C. Fee Simple Title to a Property Sold at Tax Sale Is Conveyed by a Deed from
    the Collector
    In considering the parties’ competing interpretations of the tax sale statute, we apply
    the following principles of statutory interpretation.      “The cardinal rule of statutory
    interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the real and actual intent of the Legislature.”
    Lockshin v. Semsker, 
    412 Md. 257
    , 274 (2010). “We begin with an examination of the text
    of a statute within the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs.” Nationstar
    and payable after the judgment and it is not a defense that a deed to the
    property has not been recorded.
    TP § 14-864 provides:
    On or before 7 years from the date the tax is due, the State, a county, or a
    municipal corporation may initiate an action in a court of appropriate
    jurisdiction to collect any tax imposed under this article and within the time
    frame provided by law. If a person owes State and county or municipal
    corporation taxes to the same collector, the action may combine the claims
    of the State, county, and municipal corporation.
    30
    Mortgage LLC v. Kemp, 
    476 Md. 149
    , 169 (2021). “We neither add nor delete language
    so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain and unambiguous language of the statute,
    and we do not construe a statute with forced or subtle interpretations that limit or extend
    its application.” Lockshin, 
    412 Md. at 275
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Rather, we construe the statute “as a whole so that no word, clause, sentence, or phrase is
    rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory.” Koste v. Town of Oxford, 
    431 Md. 14
    , 25–26 (2013) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). We “do not read
    statutory language in a vacuum, nor do we confine strictly our interpretation of a statute’s
    plain language to the isolated section alone.” Lockshin, 
    412 Md. at 275
    . In other words,
    “[r]eview of the text does not merely entail putting the words under the microscope by
    themselves with a dictionary at hand, because words that appear clear and unambiguous
    when viewed in isolation may become ambiguous when read as part of a larger statutory
    scheme.” Kemp, 476 Md. at 169 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); Johnson
    v. State, 
    360 Md. 250
    , 265 (2000) (the Court must analyze the statute “in its entirety, rather
    than independently construing its subparts[]”). “We presume that the Legislature intends
    its enactments to operate together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and, thus,
    we seek to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the extent possible consistent
    with the statute’s object and scope.” Lockshin, 
    412 Md. at 276
    . “We also review the
    legislative history of the statute to confirm conclusions drawn from the text or to resolve
    ambiguities. In addition, we examine prior case law construing the statute in question.”
    Kemp, 476 Md. at 170. “Finally, we check our interpretation against the consequences of
    alternative readings of the text.” Bell v. Chance, 
    460 Md. 28
    , 53 (2018). Doing so ensures
    31
    that we adopt an interpretation that avoids a construction that is “illogical, unreasonable,
    or inconsistent with common sense.” Reier v. State Dept of Assessments and Taxation, 
    397 Md. 2
    , 33 (2007) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Indeed, “it has been
    called a golden rule of statutory interpretation that, when one of several possible
    interpretations produces an unreasonable result, that is a reason for rejecting that
    interpretation in favor of another which would produce a reasonable result.” 
    Id.
     (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Kemp, 476 Md. at 170 (explaining that “it
    is important to consider the consequences of alternative interpretations of the statute, in
    order to avoid constructions that are illogical or nonsensical, or that render a statute
    meaningless.”) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    With these canons of statutory interpretation in mind, we first turn to the City’s
    interpretation.
    The City’s Isolated Interpretation of TP § 14-844(b) Ignores the Plain Language of
    TP § 14-847(a) Requiring the Collector to Execute a Deed Conveying Fee Simple
    Title, and is Inconsistent with the Definition of Fee Simple Title and Marketable Title
    Starting with the statutory text, when one reads the plain language of TP § 14-844(b)
    in isolation and on the surface, the City’s interpretation—that the judgment itself vests fee
    simple title in the certificate holder—sounds plausible. Specifically, the plain language of
    that subsection provides that:
    If the court finds for the plaintiff, the judgment vests in the plaintiff an
    absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple in the property, free and clear of
    all alienations and descents of the property occurring before the date of
    judgment and encumbrances on the property, except taxes that accrue after
    the date of sale and easements of record and any other easement that may be
    observed by an inspection of the property to which the property is subject.
    32
    TP § 14-844(b). However, when one retracts the lens of the microscope and reads the
    language not in a vacuum, but within the larger statutory scheme, taking into account the
    statute’s object and scope, as well as the legislative history and the legislative directive that
    we construe the statute consistent with the public policy of providing marketable title to
    property that is sold at a tax sale, applying common law definitions to terms used in statute
    and in a manner consistent with our case law related to tax sales, the City’s interpretation
    falls short and leads to an illogical or nonsensical interpretation.
    The City’s isolated reading of TP § 14-844(b)—whereby the judgment itself vests
    fee simple title to real property—ignores the plain language set forth in TP § 18-847(a) that
    the circuit court’s judgment also “direct[s] the collector to execute a deed to the holder of
    the certificate of sale in fee simple” upon the payment of the balance of the purchase price
    and post-judgment taxes, interest, and penalties. (Emphasis added). Reading TP § 14-
    844(b) together with TP § 14-847(a)—both of which pertain to a circuit court’s judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption—it is clear the Legislature expressly provides for the
    conveyance of fee simple title by a deed from the collector upon the payment of the surplus
    bid price, post-sale taxes, interest, and penalties, and upon the presentation of a certified
    copy of the judgment. If the City’s interpretation were correct—that the judgment itself
    conveys fee simple title—there would be no reason for the Legislature to require that the
    judgment also direct the conveyance of fee simple title by deed from the collector to the
    certificate holder. In other words, if we construe the statute to say that the judgment itself
    vests fee simple title in the certificate holder, such an interpretation renders the statutory
    requirement that a deed be issued conveying fee simple title as meaningless, superfluous
    33
    or nugatory. “Our canons of statutory interpretation forbid us to construe a statute so that
    a word, clause, sentence or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless, or
    nugatory.” Reier v. State Dept. of Assessments and Taxation, 
    397 Md. 2
    , 28 (2007)
    (cleaned up).
    The City’s interpretation is also untenable because it is inconsistent with the
    common law definition of “fee simple title.” Our explanation is perhaps best understood
    if one considers the City’s interpretation as if viewing it through a still-frame photograph
    that freezes the judicial proceeding at a point in time immediately after the entry of the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption but prior to the execution of a deed. As
    discussed in part II.A., supra, fee simple title is the broadest property interest allowed by
    law. The owner of fee simple title holds “absolute and exclusive control and dominion
    over the property.” Arnd, 
    162 Md. at 324
    . If, as the City asserts, the judgment itself
    conveys fee simple title by operation of law—instead of the tax deed—such an
    interpretation would mean that the certificate holder acquires legal title to property even if
    the certificate holder has not paid the balance of the purchase price, post-sale taxes,
    penalties and interest, and at a time when the judgment can be stricken by the record title
    owner or the tax collector if payment is not made within 90 days of the date of the entry of
    the judgment.20 Such an interpretation is antithetical with our common law definition of
    20
    Like the City, the Dissent chooses to read TP § 14-844(b) in isolation—with no
    discussion whatsoever of the statutory provisions that: (1) require that the judgment
    expressly direct the collector to execute a deed conveying fee simple title (TP § 14-847(a))
    only upon the certificate holder’s satisfaction of the post-judgment statutory obligations
    (TP § 14-818(a)(2)); and (2) permit the record owner to request that judgment can be
    stricken if the certificate holder does not comply with the terms of the judgment, which
    34
    fee simple ownership. Interpreting the statute in such a manner leads to an absurd result.
    We have stated that “absurd results in the interpretive analysis of a statute are to be
    shunned.” Mayor & Council of Rockville v. Rylyns Enterprises, Inc., 
    372 Md. 514
    , 550
    (2002).
    The City’s interpretation is also inconsistent with the Legislature’s directive that the
    tax sale statute provisions “shall be construed” to ensure a balance between the due process
    and redemption rights of the owner and “the public policy of providing marketable title to
    property that is sold at a tax sale.” TP § 14-832(1) and (2). As we previously explained,
    “marketable title” is “a title without encumbrances and free from any reasonable doubt as
    to any question of law or fact that may call it in question in the future and subject the
    purchase to the hazard of litigation.” Garner, 
    185 Md. at 389
    . In the context of equitable
    title arising from a purchase contract of sale, we have stated that “equitable title is not
    marketable, for in reality, it is not a title at all, but merely a right to the legal title.” 
    Id.
     at
    would in turn, permit the owner’s right of redemption to be reopened, see TP § 14-847(d);
    Slattery, 99 Md. App. at 122 (observing that TP § 14-847(d) provides a distinct method for
    “the owners of the property to have the judgment foreclosing their right of redemption
    reopened.”). Moreover, the Dissent’s opinion is devoid of any discussion of the definition
    of “fee simple title,” the very label that the Dissent seeks to affix to the judgment—a
    definition that is not defined by statute, but by common law dating back to William
    Blackstone. See part II.A. of this opinion and note 5 herein. A certificate holder who has
    the right to obtain a fee simple title by a deed if and only if the certificate holder complies
    with the statutory post-judgment obligation—a right that may be stricken for non-
    performance—is directly at odds with the common law definition of fee simple title. It is
    not a title in which the certificate holder has absolute and exclusive dominion and control
    over the property and is not subject to any conditions or limitations. Indeed, we are not
    aware of any circumstances under Maryland law where “fee simple title” can be “stricken”
    for failure to comply with post-judgment conditions, and for good reason—such a concept
    would be at odds with the very definition of fee simple title.
    35
    390 (emphasis added). No reasonable third-party purchaser would buy a property from a
    certificate holder based solely upon the circuit court’s entry of a judgment and without a
    deed from the collector conveying fee simple title to the certificate holder. Again, if one
    considers the proceeding during the period immediately after the entry of judgment, if a
    certificate holder does not fulfill his or her statutory obligations within 90 days, the
    judgment may be reopened and stricken by the record title owner or tax collector. Indeed,
    the face of the judgment evidences the certificate holder’s inchoate interest vis-à-vis legal
    title to the property. Without a deed, the legislative directive required to be included in the
    judgment under TP § 14-847(a)—that the collector “execute a deed to the holder of the
    certificate in fee simple”—has not been satisfied.
    The Correct Statutory Interpretation—The Judgment Creates Equitable Title; the
    Deed Conveys Legal Title
    We contrast the City’s interpretation against an alternative interpretation—that the
    certificate holder acquires equitable title upon the entry of the judgment—that is, the right
    to acquire legal title, upon the performance by the certificate holder of the holder’s post-
    judgment statutory obligations and the collector’s conveyance of fee simple title by deed.
    When one reads all the applicable provisions of the statute in a comprehensive and
    harmonious fashion, and against the statute’s purpose and scope, and within the context of
    the definitions supplied by common law, it leads to a clear reading of the statute that results
    in the conveyance of fee simple title by the execution of a deed from the collector to the
    certificate holder upon the holder satisfying all the statutory requirements.
    36
    First, we start with TP § 14-834, which confers equitable jurisdiction on the circuit
    court to “give complete relief” with respect to properties within the circuit that are subject
    to a tax sale, including the authority “to order an absolute and indefeasible estate in fee
    simple [] to be vested in the holder of the certificate of sale.” TP § 14-834 (emphasis
    added). Notably, the statutory provision establishing the circuit court’s jurisdiction in tax
    sale proceedings does not say that the court itself vests fee simple title, but rather, gives the
    court the authority to order it.
    When one reads the statutory provisions that pertain to the circuit court’s order or
    judgment together, the statute requires that the judgment contain language that: (1)
    “foreclose[s] the right of redemption[,]” which is “final and conclusive” on all defendants,
    including their heirs, devisees, personal representatives, and successors in right, title or
    interest (TP § 14-844(a)); (2) “vests in the plaintiff an absolute and indefeasible title in fee
    simple in the property, free and clear of all alienations and descents of the property
    occurring before the date of the judgment” (TP § 14-844(b)); (3) directs the “collector to
    execute a deed to the holder of the certificate of sale in fee simple . . . on payment to the
    collector of the balance of the purchase price, due on account of the purchase price, together
    with all [post-sale] taxes and interest and penalties” (TP § 14-847(a)); and (4) “direct[s]
    the supervisor to enroll the holder of the certificate of sale in fee simple . . . as the owner
    of the property” (Id.).
    The language in the judgment required under (1) and (2) above are necessary to
    confer authority upon the collector to undertake the requirement in (3)—the execution of a
    deed conveying fee simple title. Stated another way, upon receipt of the certified copy of
    37
    the judgment containing the statutory language required by TP §14-844(a) and (b), the
    collector has assurance that the circuit court has determined, through the entry of a final
    judgment, that the certificate holder has satisfied the statutory requirements pertaining to
    the due process and redemption rights of persons who own or have an interest in the
    property sold at a tax sale.
    Reading TP § 14-844(a) and (b) together with TP § 14-847(a), not only does the
    judgment provide the collector with the authority to execute a deed conveying fee simple
    title, but the collector is directed to do so upon the payment of the purchase price, and post-
    sale taxes, interest and penalties. Upon the certificate holder’s performance of these post-
    judgment conditions, the collector is required to convey fee simple title by deed. TP §§
    14-818(a)(3), 14-847(a).21 Once the deed is conveyed, the tax sale purchaser has full legal
    21
    Curiously, the Dissent attempts to distinguish the 1880’s laws—which required
    the tax collector to convey fee simple title by deed—with the modern iteration of the tax
    sale provisions beginning in the 1940’s to suggest that the General Assembly removed the
    requirement that fee simple title be transferred by deed. Dissent Slip Op. at 2–3.
    Referencing 
    1943 Md. Laws 1354
    , the Dissent states that “[i]f the General Assembly had
    intended to require that a deed be executed by a tax collector to vest fee simple title in a
    tax sale buyer, the General Assembly would have done so.” Dissent Slip Op. at 3–4. As
    reflected by our discussion of the legislative history in note 12, we agree with the Dissent
    that, dating back to the 1872 Act—the point at which the Legislature required judicial
    ratification of tax sales—the tax sale laws have consistently required the conveyance of
    property that has been sold at tax sale by a deed. Respectfully, the Dissent is simply wrong
    that the General Assembly’s modern enactments of the tax sale statutes eliminated the
    requirement from the earlier tax sale statutes that fee simple title be conveyed from the tax
    collector by deed. As we pointed out in note 12, since 1943, the statutory requirement that
    the judgment “direct the Collector to prepare and execute a deed to the holder of the
    certificate of sale, in fee simple” upon the payment of the balance of the purchase price,
    taxes, interest and penalties, has remained unchanged. Article 81, § 90O (1943). In
    addition to ignoring the legislative history that reflects that prior versions of the statute
    have consistently required the conveyance of fee simple title by deed, the Dissent fails to
    discuss or even mention the current statutory requirement that “the judgment of the court
    38
    title in fee simple. All conditions in the judgment have been satisfied, the judgment may
    not be opened and stricken for good cause under TP § 14-847(d), and the foreclosure
    proceeding is concluded. This interpretation is consistent with the Legislature’s express
    instruction that we construe the statute to ensure a balance between the due process and
    redemption rights of the property owner and interested persons and the public policy of
    providing marketable title to properties sold at tax sales. See TP § 14-832. It is also
    consistent with the common law definitions of “fee simple” title and “marketable title.”
    Specifically, fee simple, marketable title to the property has been conclusively conveyed
    from the collector to the purchaser by deed, which clothes the purchaser with title clear of
    any limitations or restrictions, and “free from encumbrances and any reasonable doubt as
    to its validity[.]” Sinclair, 
    204 Md. at 334
    .
    As we describe below, this interpretation is also consistent with: our tax sale case
    law establishing the principle that the delivery of the tax sale deed creates a new title
    granted by the sovereign authority; Maryland’s general title conveyance law; and our
    holdings in the context of mortgage foreclosure law describing the progression of a
    mortgagee’s rights in a foreclosure proceeding.
    Our Case Law Describing the New Tax Title that Arises from a Tax Deed
    As described in note 12, since the enactment of the very early tax sale statutes and
    continuing to the present tax sale statute, the Legislature has consistently required the
    shall direct the collector to execute a deed to the holder of the certificate of sale in fee
    simple” upon “payment to the collector of the balance of the purchase price of the property,
    together with all taxes and interest and penalties on the property that accrue after the date
    of sale.” TP § 14-847(a) (emphasis added).
    39
    conveyance of legal title by tax deed from the collector to the purchaser. Our case law has
    similarly described the new title to property that emerges from a tax sale upon the delivery
    of a tax deed.
    For more than a century, we have recognized that the issuance of a tax deed to a
    grantee after a tax sale and a proceeding to foreclose the property owner’s right of redemption
    creates a new and complete title in land, under an independent grant from the sovereign
    taxing authority. In McMahon v. Crean, we embraced the United States Supreme Court’s
    articulation of the notion that a tax deed clothes the purchaser with a new title:
    If the tax deed is valid, then from the time of its delivery it clothes the
    purchaser, not merely with the title of the person who had been assessed for
    the taxes and had neglected to pay them, but with a new and complete title
    in the land, under an independent grant from the sovereign authority, which
    bars and extinguishes all prior titles and incumbrances of private persons,
    and all equities arising out of them.
    
    109 Md. 652
    , 652 (1909) (quoting Hefner v. Northwestern Ins. Co., 
    123 U.S. 747
    , 751
    (1887)) (emphasis added). We have restated this principle over the years in our discussion
    of tax sale deeds and titles arising therefrom. See Wagner v. Goodrich, 
    148 Md. 318
    , 323
    (1925) (observing that title “derived from [a] ratified tax sale” is “a title which includes,
    not merely the interest of the persons to whom the property had been assessed for the taxes
    on account of which it was sold, but as the sale appears to have been valid, the grantee in
    the tax deed became invested with ‘a new and complete title in the land, under an
    independent grant from the sovereign authority[]’”) (emphasis added). In Winter v.
    O’Neill, 
    155 Md. 624
    , 631 (1928), the Court, speaking through Judge Digges, stated that:
    The title derived from a tax sale is statutory, and it being in derogation of a
    common right, all of the requirements as set out in the statute must be
    40
    complied with, in order to acquire good title from such a sale; yet if the tax
    deed and the proceedings upon which it is based are valid, then from the time
    of its delivery it clothes the purchaser not merely with the title of the person
    who had been assessed for the taxes and had neglected to pay them, but with
    a new and complete title in the land, under an independent grant from the
    sovereign authority, which bars or extinguishes all prior titles and
    encumbrances of private persons, and all equities arising out of them.
    (Emphasis added).
    And most recently in Lippert v. Jung, 
    366 Md. 221
    , 232–36 (2001), we summarized
    these cases with approval. We noted that these cases “are a line of older, but still viable
    cases,” which we proceeded to “discuss more at length.” 
    Id. at 229
    . In Lippert, the plaintiffs
    filed a complaint to quiet title to property that abutted property they owned, based upon
    their claim of adverse possession. 
    Id. at 223
    . The plaintiffs asserted that they had possessed
    property for 19 years in a manner to satisfy the requisite elements for adverse possession
    prior to a tax sale of the property and the entry of a final order foreclosing the right of
    redemption. 
    Id.
     Under the adverse possession statute, a person seeking to claim title by
    adverse possession must satisfy the statutory requirements for an uninterrupted period of 20
    years.    The plaintiffs asserted that the tax sale and order foreclosing the right of
    redemption—which was entered during their nineteenth year of occupancy—did not cause
    the statutory period to begin to run anew. 
    Id. at 225
    . We disagreed and held that the
    plaintiffs’ adverse possession period was extinguished by the successfully completed tax
    sale, and accordingly, they had no claim to the property. 
    Id. at 245
    . In so holding, we
    reaffirmed the principle expressed by this Court for more than 100 years that “properly
    acquired tax titles are new grants of title by the sovereign entity.” 
    Id.
     (Emphasis added).
    41
    Writing for the Court, Judge Cathell explained that title to property in Maryland was
    originally granted by the English Kings to the Lord Proprietors who, in turn, had the right
    to grant the lands to others. 
    Id.
     at 238–39. The Lord Proprietor’s successors—the colonial
    states such as Maryland—“became vested with the right to grant and patent titles to land
    to the citizens, a process that continues.” 
    Id.
     at 239–40. We observed that, since the
    inception of grants of title in the colonial era, land grants and patents have been
    subject to the requirement that the created title to property be subject to
    charges on the land and that the title owners, and their successors, pay such
    taxes or charges on the land so granted, as the states, from time to time, deem
    necessary for the proper functioning of government. The land itself is subject
    to taxes. If taxes are not paid, the title to the land through the tax sale process
    is granted and titled anew to the tax sale purchaser.
    
    Id. at 240
    . We pointed out that the tax collector’s statutory authority to undertake a tax
    sale has been around since the inception of land grants of title and the colonial days of
    taxing hogsheads of tobacco. 
    Id. at 239
    .
    We examined our case law, dating back over 100 years, which reflects the principle
    that a tax deed issued by the collector after a successful tax sale and foreclosure of
    redemption creates a new title under an independent grant from the sovereign authority.
    
    Id.
     at 232–236 (citing Winter, 
    155 Md. at 631
    ; Hill v. Williams, 
    104 Md. 595
    , 604 (1906);
    Cooper v. Holmes, 
    71 Md. 20
    , 30 (1889); McMahon, 
    109 Md. at 665
    ; Wagner, 
    148 Md. at 323
    ). After reviewing the history of these cases, as well as the similar cases from other
    jurisdictions, we reaffirmed the principle under Maryland law—consistent with the
    majority view in the cases across the country—that “properly acquired tax titles are new
    grants of title by the sovereign entity.” Lippert, 
    366 Md. at 245
    . Accordingly, we
    42
    concluded that the plaintiffs’ adverse possession claims did not survive the judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption. 
    Id.
     The Legislature’s requirement that the tax
    collector execute and deliver a deed conveying fee simple title to the certificate holder upon
    the successful conclusion of the foreclosure proceeding, thereby creating a new title, is
    consistent with our jurisprudence spanning more than a century.22
    Our Statutory Interpretation that the Deed Conveys Fee Simple Title is Consistent
    with Maryland’s Title Conveyance Law
    We further observe that our interpretation of the tax sale statute is also consistent
    with the Maryland general title conveyance statute providing that, with limited exception,
    the only means by which legal title to real property is transferred is by recording a deed in
    the land records of the county in which the property is located. See RP § 3-101(a);
    Kingsley, 
    253 Md. at 27
     (“legal title to land, of course, does not pass, other than by
    operation of law, until a deed is properly executed and recorded[]”). By requiring that the
    judgment direct the collector to execute a deed conveying fee simple title to the certificate
    holder upon the performance of the post-judgment conditions, the Legislature created a
    process for conveying fee simple title to property sold at a tax sale that is consistent with
    (instead of an exception to) Maryland’s title conveyance law.
    22
    The Dissent’s plain language interpretation—that the judgment itself vests fee
    simple title—is inconsistent with our longstanding jurisprudence that we summarized in
    Lippert, which reflects that new title to property that is subject to a tax sale arises from the
    tax collector’s conveyance of title by a tax deed. 
    366 Md. 229
    , 232–36. We decline to
    interpret the tax sale statute in a manner inconsistent with 100 years of case law,
    particularly where the statute, on its face, requires the collector to convey fee simple title
    by deed.
    43
    Our Statutory Interpretation of the Tax Sale Statute is Consistent with Our Case
    Law Concerning Mortgage Foreclosures
    Our interpretation of the tax sale statute is also consistent with our case law
    concerning the mortgage foreclosures. For more than 70 years, we have analogized the in
    rem proceeding established by the tax sale statute to a mortgage foreclosure. See, e.g.,
    Thomas v. Kolker, 
    195 Md. 470
    , 474 (1950). We have specifically recognized that the
    “position of a certificate holder in a proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption is
    analogous to that of a mortgagee in foreclosure proceedings.” Hardisty, 
    268 Md. at 212
    (emphasis added);23 see also Magraw v. Dillow, 
    341 Md. 492
    , 505 (1996) (noting that “we
    have [] analogized the rights of a tax sale holder to a mortgagee[]”) (citing Hardisty, 
    268 Md. 212
    ); Kona Properties, 224 Md. App. at 554 (observing that the “the Hardisty Court
    analogized the position of a tax sale certificate holder in a proceeding to foreclose the right
    of redemption to that of a mortgagee, an analogy the Court of Appeals cited with approval
    as recently as 1996[]”) (citing Magraw, 
    341 Md. at 492
    ) (additional citations omitted).
    In the context of the judicial foreclosures involving mortgages, our case law has
    articulated the progression of the mortgagee purchaser’s interest from an inchoate equitable
    23
    In Hardisty, 
    268 Md. at 212
    , we held that a property owner could sue the
    certificate holder for failing to pay the bid surplus price where the certificate holder did not
    pay it following the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption and had not obtained fee
    simple title by deed. We analogized the certificate holder to that of a mortgagee in a
    foreclosure proceeding. 
    Id.
     We noted that, in a foreclosure proceeding, “the order of final
    ratification is to be respected and obeyed,” and where the balance of the funds is not paid,
    “the remedy may be by petition by the injured party asking that the payment be
    compelled[.]” 
    Id.
     By analogy, we concluded that the property owners were entitled to have
    the certificate holder compelled, through the entry of a money judgment, to make the
    payment contemplated by the final judgment. 
    Id. at 213
    .
    44
    interest in the property prior to the court’s ratification of the sale, to equitable title upon the
    court’s order ratifying the sale, which ripens into legal title only after the purchase price is
    paid and other terms of the sale, if any, are met and a deed of conveyance delivered.
    In Empire Properties v. Hardy, 
    386 Md. 628
    , 650 (2005), we reiterated this
    progression of the mortgagee’s interest in deciding when a purchaser in a mortgage
    foreclosure sale acquires a legal right to possess property, as opposed to a right to request
    possession of property. We noted that our case law established that, “prior to ratification in
    the circuit court, a purchaser at a foreclosure sale has an inchoate equitable title to the
    property.” Hardy, 
    386 Md. at
    650 (citing Union Trust Co. v. Biggs, 
    153 Md. 50
     (1927);
    Merryman v. Bremmer, 
    250 Md. 1
     (1968); and Simard v. White, 
    383 Md. 257
     (2004)). We
    stated that “[t]his inchoate equitable title becomes a complete equitable title when the
    foreclosure sale is ratified by the court.” Id. at 646 (quoting Simard, 
    383 Md. at 313
     (stating
    that “once the court ratifies the sale, complete equitable title passes to the purchaser”)
    (brackets omitted)). Although complete equitable title passes upon the court’s ratification
    of the sale, we have stated that legal title does not pass until the purchase price and conditions
    of the foreclosure sale are met, and a deed of conveyance is delivered. Hardy, 
    386 Md. at 650
     (in a foreclosure proceeding, “[t]he legal title to the property is not conveyed, however,
    until the purchase price is paid and other terms of the sale, if any, are met and a deed is
    delivered[]”); see also Legacy Funding LLC v. Cohn, 
    396 Md. 511
    , 515 (2007) (reiterating
    our holding in Hardy that the “purchaser at a foreclosure sale is not actually entitled to
    possession until the purchase price is paid and, through delivery of a deed of conveyance,
    45
    legal title passes[]”) (emphasis in original)24; Simard, 
    383 Md. at 325
     (noting that “the legal
    title of the purchaser does not vest until the deed to him is delivered[]”) (citations omitted);
    Union Tr. Co. v. Biggs, 
    153 Md. 50
    , 55 (1927) (stating that “[a]fter the foreclosure sale the
    purchaser had the equitable interest in the land commensurate with that conveyed by the
    mortgage deed, and he was entitled to the legal title upon the final ratification of the sale by
    the court and the payment of the purchase money[]”).
    To support its argument that the judgment vests fee simple title in the certificate
    holder, the City isolates one sentence in Magraw, 
    341 Md. at 505
    , in which we stated that
    “the tax sale purchaser holds an inchoate right of ownership, which vests upon the
    successful foreclosure.”    We agree with the statement in Magraw—just not for the
    proposition advanced by the City. The City equates the phrase in Magraw referring to a
    24
    Empire Properties, LLC v. Hardy, 
    386 Md. 628
    , 650 (2005) and Legacy Funding
    LLC v. Cohn, 
    396 Md. 511
    , 515 (2007) involved the issue of when a foreclosure purchaser
    is entitled to possession, as opposed to when a foreclosure purchaser may permissively seek
    possession. These cases recognized that “the purchaser at a foreclosure sale is not actually
    entitled to possession until the purchase price is paid and, through delivery of a deed of
    conveyance, legal title passes.” Legacy Funding, 
    396 Md. at 515
    ; Empire Properties, 
    386 Md. at 650
    . Upon ratification of the sale, but before a deed is executed, we held that a
    purchaser “may seek possession of the property” and that “an equity court, on a case-by-case
    basis, and upon proper notice, has the discretion, unless the circumstances warrant otherwise,
    to grant possession.” Legacy Funding, 
    396 Md. at 515
    . In Legacy Funding, we stated that
    “the current view of this Court, is that the purchaser becomes entitled to possession only
    when it has either paid the full purchase price in conformance with the terms of the sale and
    received a conveyance of legal title to the property, or, following ratification of the sale but
    prior to settlement, has received an order for possession from the court.” 
    396 Md. at 516
    .
    The principles articulated in Legacy Funding concerning the right of possession arising from
    the delivery of a deed of conveyance are consistent with the right to possession under the tax
    sale statute, which also arises from the deed. See TP § 14-850 (stating that “[a]ny person
    who acquires a deed to property under this subtitle is entitled to issuance of a writ for
    possession of the property under the Maryland Rules as if the person had obtained a judgment
    awarding possession of the property[]”) (emphasis added).
    46
    “successful foreclosure” with the entry of judgment. As discussed above, the statutory
    process for conveying legal title to property sold at a tax sale does not end with the entry
    of judgment. A successful foreclosure occurs when the conditions required in the judgment
    are satisfied, and the judgment may no longer be stricken for non-performance. Upon the
    satisfactory completion of those conditions—which culminate in the collector’s execution
    and delivery of a deed conveying fee simple title to the certificate holder—the judgment
    may not be reopened other than on grounds of fraud or lack of jurisdiction.
    We reaffirm the principle articulated in Hardisty, 
    268 Md. at 212
    , and Magraw, 341,
    Md. at 505, which was recently acknowledged by the Court of Special Appeals in Kona
    Properties, 224 Md. App. at 554, that the position of a certificate holder in a tax sale
    proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption is analogous to that of a mortgagee in a
    foreclosure proceeding. This analogy is entirely consistent with the equitable and legal
    title benchmarks established by the tax sale statute. Specifically, during the period
    commencing with the issuance of the certificate of sale, until the entry of the judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption, “the tax sale purchaser holds an inchoate right of
    ownership[.]” Magraw, 
    341 Md. at 505
    . The inchoate right or lien is embodied in the
    certificate of sale. TP § 14-823. It is an inchoate right because, at any time prior to the
    entry of the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the title owner may redeem the
    property by paying, among other things, the amount paid by the certificate holder, plus the
    applicable rate of interest. TP § 14-828. If the property is redeemed, the certificate holder
    surrenders the certificate and receives the redemption amount paid to the collector,
    excluding taxes. Id. Just as a court’s order ratifying a mortgage foreclosure sale passes
    47
    complete equitable title to the purchaser, we determine that the judgment foreclosing the
    right of redemption similarly passes equitable title to the certificate holder. The interest is
    transformed from an inchoate right to a choate one upon the entry of the judgment because
    the record title owner no longer has the right to redeem it by paying the taxes. Upon the
    entry of the judgment, the certificate holder has equitable title, or stated otherwise, the right
    to acquire legal title by deed, which may be exercised by paying the balance of the purchase
    price, and post-sale taxes,25 penalties, and interest, within 90 days following the entry of
    25
    In support of its position that the judgment itself vests fee simple title in the
    certificate holder, the City points to the fact that, upon the entry of the judgment, the
    certificate holder becomes “immediately” liable for the payment of all taxes due and
    payable, as well as any assessments and fees of a homeowner or condominium association.
    TP § 14-844(d)(1) and (2). We reject the City’s assertion that the tax obligation reflects
    the Legislature’s intent to vest fee simple title upon the entry of judgment. There is a very
    logical alternative explanation for the Legislature’s imposition of liability for taxes upon
    the certificate holder upon the entry of judgment that has no relation to title conveyance
    law. We explain.
    When a property has been sold at a tax sale, during the two-year period in which the
    certificate holder may initiate proceedings to foreclose the owner’s right of redemption
    under TP § 14-833, post-sale taxes, penalties and interest continue to accrue. Despite their
    accrual, however, the collector may not put the property into a second sale for these unpaid
    taxes during such two-year period. See Prince George’s Homes, Inc. v. Cahn, 
    283 Md. 76
    ,
    82 (1978) (explaining that during the two-year period in which a complaint to foreclose the
    right of redemption may be filed, “there could be no other tax sale, and that subsequent
    taxes shall continue to accrue until the purchaser or holder of the certificate of sale has an
    opportunity to file his [complaint] and to secure a deed from the collector[]”) (internal
    quotations omitted). When the right of redemption is finally foreclosed by the entry of
    judgment, there is often a significant, additional tax liability that is owed to the taxing
    authority. The provision of TP § 14-844(d), which creates immediate liability for the
    payment of these taxes, ensures the prompt payment thereby avoiding the expense and
    delay of second sale if they are not paid. Additionally, the provisions of TP § 14-844(d)
    and TP § 14-864, when read together, create an in personam cause of action against the
    certificate holder for the post-judgment taxes, which may be filed within seven years from
    the date of the sale. In other words, by making the certificate holder personally liable for
    these taxes, the taxing authority has an additional enforcement tool against a certificate
    48
    the judgment. Upon the satisfaction of these post-judgment conditions within the 90-day
    period, the certificate holder is entitled to a deed from the collector which conveys fee
    simple title to the property. TP § 14-847; § 14-818(a)(3).
    In conclusion, we hold that the circuit court’s entry of a judgment foreclosing the
    owner’s right of redemption in a tax sale proceeding does not vest fee simple title in the
    certificate holder. It grants equitable title to the certificate holder, or the right to acquire
    legal title upon the performance of certain statutory conditions. Legal title does not pass
    until the certificate holder pays the balance of the purchase price, post-sale taxes, interest
    and penalties, and the collector executes a deed conveying fee simple title.
    D. The Judgment Does Not Extinguish the Tax Certificate—The Certificate is
    Extinguished Upon the Execution and Delivery of the Deed
    Having determined that the certificate holder acquires an equitable interest in the
    property upon the entry of judgment, which ripens into legal title upon the performance of
    the statutory conditions—i.e., paying the balance of the purchase price, taxes, penalties and
    holder who does not fulfill the post-judgment obligations. Without the ability to pursue an
    in personam cause of action against the certificate holder who defaults on the holder’s post-
    judgment obligation, a taxing authority’s only remedy would be to sell the property at a
    second tax sale.
    Given the logical reason for the Legislature’s imposition of personal liability for the
    unpaid taxes at this juncture in the process, we decline to interpret this requirement as
    evidence that the Legislature intended to alter the general requirement that fee simple title
    is transferred by deed—which the General Assembly specifically incorporated into the tax
    sale statute. See TP § 14-847(a). Additionally, we further observe that there are other
    instances where an equitable title holder is liable for taxes or fees such as homeowner’s
    fees prior to taking legal title. See e.g., Campbell v. Council of Unit Owners of Bayside
    Condominium, 
    202 Md. App. 241
    , 251 (2011) (holding that the purchaser at a foreclosure
    proceeding who has obtained equitable title becomes immediately liable for condominium
    assessments and fees).
    49
    interest, and the execution of a deed conveying fee simple title—we next consider whether
    the certificate of sale survives the entry of judgment, and whether the certificate holder
    may continue to freely assign it consistent with the provisions of TP § 14-821. We
    determine that there is nothing in the statute that even hints at the notion that the certificate
    is somehow extinguished by the judgment or that its assignment is affected.
    Starting with the language in the statute, we observe that the General Assembly
    specifically refers to the “holder of the certificate of sale” when describing the post-
    judgment steps that either lead to the conveyance of fee simple title by deed, or the motion
    to strike that may be filed if the certificate holder fails to comply with the statutory
    obligations. See, e.g., TP § 14-847(a)(1) (requiring the circuit court judgment to direct the
    “collector to execute a deed to the holder of the certificate of sale in fee simple[])”; TP §
    14-847(b) (requiring the “holder of the certificate of sale” to prepare the deed); TP § 14-
    847(d) (providing an interested person with the right to file a motion to strike the judgment
    “[i]f the holder of the certificate of sale does not comply with the terms of the final
    judgment of the court within 90 days[]”). We agree with the Court of Special Appeals’
    conclusion that these statutory references to the “holder of the certificate of sale”
    demonstrate that “the certificate of sale is not a legal nullity and retains its value until the
    deed is executed and delivered.” Thornton Mellon, 249 Md. App. at 243.
    We also observe that the tax sale statute expressly states that the certificate is freely
    assignable and does not contain any provision limiting the assignability only to that period
    prior to the entry of judgment. See TP § 14-821(a) (providing that “any certificate of sale
    executed and delivered by the collector to the purchaser is assignable and an assignment of
    50
    the certificate of sale vests in the assignee, or the legal representative of the assignee, all the
    right, title, and interest of the original purchaser[]”).26 We agree with the Court of Special
    Appeals that, “if the [L]egislature had intended to . . . limit the assignment of a certificate of
    sale, post judgment, it would have done so expressly.” Thornton Mellon, 249 Md. App. at
    243. “This Court has been most reluctant to recognize exceptions in a statute when there is
    no basis for the exceptions in the statutory language.” Lee v. Cline, 
    384 Md. 245
    , 256 (2004);
    see also Wheeling v. Selene Fin. LP, 
    473 Md. 356
    , 384 n.9 (2021) (“[w]e will not divine a
    legislative intention contrary to the plain language of a statute or judicially insert language
    to impose exceptions, limitations or restrictions not set forth by the [L]egislature[]”).27
    26
    As we mentioned in note 8 herein, TP § 14-821(b) contains an exception that is
    not applicable here, pertaining to a limited auction arising in Prince George’s County under
    TP § 14-817.
    27
    To support their argument that the tax sale certificate issued to a private purchaser
    is extinguished by the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the Dissent and the City
    point to statutory provisions that apply when the governing body of a county or other taxing
    agency buys property at a tax sale, TP §§ 14-824, 14-825. Dissent Slip Op. at 5–7. This
    circumstance arises where, at the public sale, there is no private purchaser. In such instances,
    the governmental taxing authority is required to “buy in and hold any property . . . offered
    for sale for nonpayment of any taxes for which there is no private purchaser[,]” see TP § 14-
    824(a), unless the property is abandoned, in which case, the statute makes the governmental
    taxing authority’s purchase permissive, see TP § 14-824(b). In either instance, the governing
    body (or land bank established by the governing body by statute) or other taxing agency
    “[has] the same rights and remedies with regard to the property as other purchasers, including
    the right to foreclose the right of redemption.” TP § 18-824(c). Where the governing body
    or taxing authority purchases the property under this section, the collector issues a certificate
    of sale. TP § 14-824(d). TP § 14-825 provides that “[w]hen the governing body of a county
    or other taxing agency has purchased any property at a tax sale, it may sell and assign the
    certificate of sale relating to the property or after foreclosure sell the property.”
    The Dissent and the City interpret TP § 14-825 to suggest that a governing body’s
    certificate of sale may only be assigned up until the judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption, and therefore, a private purchaser’s assignment similarly may not be assigned
    51
    Our reading of the statute—that the certificate of sale is assignable after the
    judgment—is consistent with the public policy of ensuring that the tax sale process creates
    marketable title for properties sold at a tax sale. The public policy of creating marketable
    title is served by encouraging the completion of the transfer of interests once a certificate
    holder undertakes to foreclose the right of redemption. We explain. If, for whatever reason
    following the entry of the judgment, the certificate holder is unable to complete the post-
    judgment obligations—i.e., by paying the surplus bid price, and post-sale taxes, interest and
    after the entry of judgment. Dissent Slip Op. at 5–7. We disagree with the Dissent and the
    City’s overly simplistic reading of TP § 14-825. The language in TP § 14-825 pertaining
    to a governing body’s sale of real property following a tax sale is entirely consistent with
    the process established by the tax sale statute for private purchasers. TP § 14-825 draws
    the same distinction between the equitable or lien interest reflected in a tax sale certificate
    (which is assignable) and legal title to the property, which may not be sold unless and until
    the record title owner’s right of redemption has been judicially foreclosed. Stated another
    way, neither the governing body nor a private purchaser may “sell the property” until after
    a judicial proceeding that forecloses the right of redemption. This applies to all certificate
    holders, whether they are public or private entities. TP § 14-825 simply reiterates the
    requirement under the statute—which applies to all certificate holders—that a property
    may not be sold until the record title owner’s right of redemption has been foreclosed.
    The language in TP § 14-825 must also be read with other statutory provisions that
    address a governing body’s acquisition of tax sale property. For example, while the statute
    prohibits the collector from executing a deed to the private certificate holder until the
    balance of the purchase price and post-sale taxes, interest and penalties are paid, the same
    prohibition does not apply to the tax collector’s conveyance by deed to a governing body.
    See TP § 14-818(a)(2) (providing that “[a]fter the final decree has passed foreclosing the
    right of redemption in any property, the collector may not execute or deliver a deed to any
    purchaser other than the governing body of a county, until the balance of the purchase price
    has been paid in full, together with all taxes and interest and penalties on the taxes accruing
    after the date of sale[]”) (emphasis added). In other words, reading TP § 14-818(a)(2)
    together with TP § 14-825, the provisions make clear that the governing body (unlike the
    private purchaser certificate holder) may take title to the property by deed without paying
    the taxes owed and other charges, however, neither the private purchaser nor the governing
    body may sell the property until the record owner’s right of redemption has been
    foreclosed.
    52
    penalties—the holder will not be entitled to a deed conveying fee simple title. See TP § 14-
    818(a)(2). If the record title owner does not successfully move to strike the judgment and
    pay all amounts due to redeem the property, then the property will be placed into a second
    tax sale, and the cycle will be repeated. See Cahn, 
    283 Md. at 78
    ; Kona Properties, 224 Md.
    App. at 532. During the second tax sale, the taxing authority will continue to carry the unpaid
    taxes, and the property will continue to be encumbered with a cloud on its title unless and
    until a successive sale is completed, including the time-period necessary to foreclose the
    right of redemption and a successful transfer of the property by a deed conveying fee simple
    title. As discussed above, completion of this statutory process can take years. If, on the other
    hand, following the first tax sale and the entry of the judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption, the certificate holder assigns its interest in the certificate to an assignee, who
    satisfies the post-judgment conditions and receives a deed conveying fee simple title, the tax
    sale foreclosure proceeding is concluded, and the property now has clear and marketable
    title—one of the express policy objectives of the tax sale statute.28
    28
    The Dissent’s view that the judgment vests fee simple title does not consider or
    analyze the consequences under the statute when the certificate holder fails to perform its
    statutory obligation. The Dissent fails to acknowledge the statutory references that refer
    to a “certificate holder’s” post-judgment obligations. See TP § 14-847(b) and(d). Under
    the Dissent’s interpretation, we query what happens to the status of title—or its
    marketability—if the certificate holder fails to pay the purchase price or outstanding tax
    obligations—a rather common occurrence in tax sales. See Kona Properties, 224 Md. App.
    at 531. Notably, although the statute permits the judgment to be stricken where the
    certificate holder fails to comply with the post-judgment conditions, there is no statutory
    provision that compels performance. In other words, if the certificate holder fails to comply
    with the post-judgment conditions, the statute precludes the conveyance of fee simple title
    by deed. TP § 14-818(a)(2). The Dissent’s interpretation—whereby the judgment vests
    absolute fee simple title in the certificate holder as a matter of law and extinguishing the
    53
    To summarize, we hold that the judgment does not extinguish the certificate of sale,
    nor does the judgment affect the assignability of the certificate. There is nothing in the
    plain language of the statute that supports this notion—quite the opposite, to read the statute
    in this manner could frustrate the policy of encouraging “participation in the [Maryland]
    tax sale program and in decreeing marketable title.” Royal Plaza Ass’n v. Bonds, 
    389 Md. 187
    , 204 (2005) (quoting Sallie v. Tax Sale Investors, Inc., 
    998 F. Supp. 612
    , 618 (D. Md.
    assignability of the tax sale certificate—is at odds with the very definition of marketable
    title.
    Moreover, the Dissent’s doomsday predictions arising from a certificate holder’s
    ability to assign the certificate post-judgment—specifically, that it will create problems
    with title searches, “exacerbate the issue of vacant buildings in Baltimore City” and result
    in the City’s loss of tax revenue—are unfounded. Dissent Slip. Op. at 16–18. First, the
    assignment of a tax sale certificate—either before or after judgment—creates no adverse
    consequences in connection with a title search. The tax deed in this case, like any other
    tax deed involving an assignment of a tax sale certificate, will reflect in its recitals, the case
    number of the foreclosure proceeding, the former record title owner, and the assignment of
    the tax sale certificate from the tax sale purchaser to the assignee. Additionally, from a
    marketability standpoint, the deed provides clear title—evidence that the post-judgment
    conditions have been satisfied. Second, the status of legal title to a property sold at tax sale
    does not create or contribute to dangerous conditions associated with vacant buildings. The
    owner of property sold at tax sale retains his or her status as the owner until a certificate
    holder pays for the property and obtains a deed—which is no different from the status of
    an owner of vacant property that is subject to a mortgage foreclosure proceeding. Third,
    the assignment of a tax sale certificate, either before or after the entry of a judgment, does
    not create any “tax avoidance scheme.” When the deed is recorded, the assignee taking
    title to the property—Ty Webb in this case—will have to pay recordation tax after paying
    the remaining bid surplus price, and any outstanding taxes, penalties, and interest. See TP
    §§ 12-102, 12-105.
    Contrary to the “serious problems” foreshadowed by the Dissent, we see more
    opportunities for “mischief” if the tax sale statute provided for the vesting of fee simple
    title in a tax sale certificate holder upon the entry of a judgment alone—without
    conditioning the transfer of legal title upon the payment of the surplus bid purchase price
    to the owner, or the payment of post-judgment taxes, penalties, and interest to the tax
    collector.
    54
    1998)). Like the Court of Special Appeals, we determine that the certificate retains its
    value until the deed is executed and delivered. The tax deed creates a new and complete
    title in the property, “which bars or extinguishes all prior titles and encumbrances of private
    persons, and all equities arising out of them.” Lippert, 
    366 Md. at 232
     (quoting Winter,
    
    155 Md. at 631
    ). Until such time as the deed is executed and delivered, the tax sale
    certificate is not extinguished and is assignable pursuant to TP § 14-821(a).
    E. The Judgment Foreclosing the Right of Redemption Was Assignable
    We similarly agree with the circuit court and the Court of Special Appeals that the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption was assignable. Again, the City’s position is
    that, because the judgment vested fee simple title to real property in the certificate holder,
    it cannot be assigned because any subsequent transfer to fee simple title of property must
    occur via a deed. As discussed above, we reject the City’s argument that the judgment
    vests fee simple title by operation of law since, upon the entry of the judgment, the
    certificate holder obtains equitable title to the property, or the legal right to obtain title.
    We agree with the Court of Special Appeals that the certificate holder’s equitable interest
    in the property, which is evidenced by the judgment, is a chose in action. See Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining “chose in action” as “1. A proprietary right in
    personam, such as a debt owed by another person, a share in a joint-stock company, or a
    claim for damages in tort. 2. The right to bring an action to recover a debt, money or thing.
    3. Personal property that one person owns but another person possesses, the owner being
    able to regain possession through a lawsuit[]”). Here, the judgment does not vest legal title
    to real property—it grants an equitable interest or the right to acquire legal title upon the
    55
    payment of the purchase price. “In Maryland[,] it has long been held that a chose in action
    may be validly assigned.” Medical Mut. Liability Inc. Soc. of Maryland v. Evans, 
    330 Md. 1
    , 29 (1993) (citing Adair v. Winchester, 
    7 G. & J. 114
    , 117–18 (1835)). We restated this
    principle in Summers v. Freishtat, 
    274 Md. 404
    , 407 (1975), noting that “a chose in action,
    whether arising in tort or ex contractu, is generally assignable[;]” and           “[t]he only
    limitation, in the absence of a contrary statutory provision, is that the right of action be of
    a sort which would survive the death of the assignor and pass to his personal
    representatives.”29 We agree with the circuit court and the intermediate appellate court that
    the tax sale statute imposes no prohibition on the assignment of the judgment, and we
    decline to judicially supply a prohibition.
    F. The Circuit Court Did Not Err in Entering its Order Directing the City to
    Execute A Deed to the Assignee
    For the reasons stated above, we hold that the circuit court correctly determined that
    the judgment did not extinguish the tax sale certificate, and that it was freely assignable.
    We similarly hold that the circuit court did not err in concluding that the judgment was
    assignable. Here, Thornton Mellon executed a valid assignment, which assigned its interest
    in the certificate of sale and the judgment to Ty Webb. Ty Webb, as the assignee of
    29
    The Legislature has set forth the actions that survive the death of a party, including
    an “action in equity” where “the court can grant effective relief in spite of the death.”
    Maryland Code Courts and Judicial Proceedings (“CJ”) (1973, 2020 Repl. Vol., 2021
    Supp.) § 6-401(c). A circuit court has broad equitable jurisdiction in a tax sale proceeding
    “to give complete relief” under the statute “in accordance with the general jurisdiction and
    practice of the court[.]” TP § 14-834. The relief that could be granted by the circuit court
    in the context of a tax sale would survive the death of a party—a situation, which of course,
    has no application here as we are dealing with government and business entities.
    56
    Thornton Mellon, prepared a tax deed containing all the necessary recitals reflecting the
    tax sale proceeding, tax account number, circuit court case number, and assignment in
    accordance with the requirements of the Tax-Property Article. When the City refused to
    accept the assignment, Thornton Mellon filed a notice of substitution of parties, and Ty
    Webb, as the substitute plaintiff filed a motion for an order directing the City to issue a tax
    deed to Ty Webb, as the assignee.
    Even if we had not concluded that the certificate of sale and judgment were
    assignable, we would nonetheless uphold the circuit court’s entry of the order in this case.
    We agree with the Court of Special Appeals that the circuit court had revisory power over
    its judgment. See Maryland Code Courts and Judicial Proceedings (1973, 2020 Repl. Vol.,
    2021 Supp.) (“CJ”) § 6-408 (“[f]or a period of 30 days after the entry of a judgment, or
    thereafter pursuant to a motion filed within that period, the court has revisory power and
    control over the judgment[]”); Maryland Rule 2-535(a) (“[o]n motion of any party filed
    within 30 days after entry of judgment, the court may exercise revisory power and control
    over the judgment[]”); Maryland Bd. of Nursing v. Nechay, 
    347 Md. 396
    , 408 (1997)
    (noting that it is “well settled in this State that, ‘read together, the rules, the statute, and our
    decisions boil down to a dictate that for a period of thirty days from the entry of a law or
    equity judgment, a circuit court shall have unrestricted discretion to revise it’”) (cleaned
    up). “[T]he discretion reposed in the trial court is a discretion which must be exercised
    liberally, lest technicality triumph over justice.”        Nechay, 
    347 Md. at 408
     (internal
    57
    quotation marks and citations omitted).30 “The exercise of the court’s discretion is not
    triggered exclusively, our cases make clear, by a motion filed by one of the parties. The
    court may act to revise its judgment sua sponte.” 
    Id. at 409
    . Here, the circuit court was
    well within its discretion, under its revisory power over its judgment, to permit the assignee
    to be substituted as a party, to consider the substituted plaintiff’s motion filed within 30
    days of the date of the judgment, and to order the City to issue a tax deed.
    30
    In arguments that were not presented to the circuit court, the City argues that,
    even if the tax sale certificate or judgment were assignable, Thornton Mellon’s purported
    assignment was procedurally defective. The City contends that the assignment was
    required to be recorded in the land records in the same manner as a mortgage assignment.
    In support of this position, the City relies upon TP § 14-821(a), which states that “[t]he
    assignment of [a] certificate of sale may be made in accordance with the provisions of law
    relating to the short assignment of mortgages.” (Emphasis added). With respect to the
    assignment of judgments, the City directs us to Maryland Rule 2-624, which states:
    When a judgment has been assigned in writing by the judgment holder, the
    assignment may be filed in the court where the judgment was entered and in
    any court where it has been recorded. When an assignment is filed, the
    judgment may thereafter be enforced in the name of the assignee to the extent
    of the assigned interest.
    The City contends that the assignment was not filed in the land records, and the judgment
    was not filed in the circuit court in accordance with Maryland Rule 1-322(a) (stating that
    “filing” means “filing [] with the clerk of the court” or a judgment of the court, in the latter
    case, however, the judgment must “note on the item the date the judge accepted it for filing
    and forthwith transmit the item to the office of the clerk[]”). To the extent that the
    assignment of the certificate of sale or judgment suffered from any procedural technicality
    related to Ty Webb’s attaching the assignment as an exhibit to its pleading (as opposed to
    filing it as a separate document), we reject such a technicality here as negating the circuit
    court’s authority to exercise its revisory power of the judgment and direct the City to
    execute the tax deed. The circuit court had a copy of the assignment, which was attached
    to Ty Webb’s motion. The City had notice of the assignment and was not prejudiced by
    the assignment being attached to a pleading as opposed to being filed as a separate
    document. The circuit court clearly accepted Ty Webb’s substitution in the case,
    considered the assignment, and entered an order consistent with its revisory power over the
    judgment. The circuit court acted within its authority.
    58
    III
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, we hold that the circuit court did not err in ordering
    the City to execute a tax sale deed conveying legal title to the property to Thornton
    Mellon’s assignee, Ty Webb.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS
    IN THIS COURT TO BE PAID BY
    PETITIONER, MAYOR & CITY COUNCIL
    OF BALTIMORE.
    59
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 24-C-18-001043
    Argued: October 7, 2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 6
    September Term, 2021
    ______________________________________
    MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF
    BALTIMORE
    v.
    THORNTON MELLON, LLC, ET AL.
    ______________________________________
    *Getty, C.J.
    *McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Booth
    Biran
    Battaglia, Lynne A. (Senior
    Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Dissenting Opinion by Watts, J., which Biran
    and McDonald, JJ., join.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: April 28, 2022
    *Getty, C.J., and McDonald, J., now Senior
    Judges, participated in the hearing and
    conference of this case while active members of
    this Court. After being recalled pursuant to Md.
    Const., Art. IV, § 3A, they also participated in
    the decision and adoption of this opinion.
    Respectfully, I dissent.        This case involves a basic question of statutory
    interpretation and the need to not disregard the plain language of statutes. Md. Code Ann.,
    Tax-Prop. (1986, 2019 Repl. Vol.) (“TP”) § 14-844(b) applies to tax sale cases and states
    that, “[i]f the court finds for the plaintiff, the judgment vests in the plaintiff an absolute and
    indefeasible title in fee simple in the property[.]” Under the plain language of the statute,
    as soon as a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the tax sale
    buyer becomes the fee simple owner of the property by operation of TP § 14-844(b) even
    though the tax collector has not yet executed a deed for the tax sale buyer.
    In other words, once a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption, title immediately passes to the tax sale buyer by operation of law—i.e., by
    operation of TP § 14-844(b)—and the only method for the tax sale buyer to transfer the
    property afterward is for the tax sale buyer to execute a deed for the transferee and have it
    recorded pursuant to Md. Code Ann., Real Prop. (1974, 2015 Repl. Vol.) (“RP”) § 3-
    101(a).     It would render the plain language of TP § 14-844(b) and RP § 3-101(a)
    meaningless to allow a tax sale buyer, after the circuit court has issued a judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption, to transfer the property by assigning the judgment and
    the tax sale certificate.1 Simply put, after a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the
    1
    TP § 14-844(b) provides in its entirety:
    If the court finds for the plaintiff, the judgment vests in the plaintiff an
    absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple in the property, free and clear of
    all alienations and descents of the property occurring before the date of the
    judgment and encumbrances on the property, except taxes that accrue after
    right of redemption, the judgment and the tax sale certificate are not assignable.
    This conclusion is supported by both the plain language and the legislative history
    of TP § 14-844(b). Under the plain language of TP § 14-844(b), a judgment foreclosing
    the right of redemption vests fee simple title in the tax sale buyer. To read into the language
    of TP § 14-844(b) that, upon entry of judgment, the tax sale buyer (or tax sale certificate
    holder) obtains only equitable title to the property and not legal fee simple title would be
    to add language to the statute and contravene the intent of the General Assembly.2
    It was not always the case that a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption vested
    fee simple title in the tax sale buyer. Instead, statutes that existed before TP § 14-844(b),
    which applied to tax sales of properties in jurisdictions other than Baltimore City, set forth
    different methods of determining when fee simple title vested in a tax sale buyer. In some
    instances, prior to TP § 14-844(b), a deed executed by a tax collector for a tax sale buyer
    the date of sale and easements of record and any other easement that may be
    observed by an inspection of the property to which the property is subject.
    RP § 3-101(a) provides: “Except as otherwise provided in this section, no estate of
    inheritance or freehold, declaration or limitation of use, estate above seven years, or deed
    may pass or take effect unless the deed granting it is executed and recorded.”
    2
    According to Black’s Law Dictionary, the terms “fee simple,” “fee-simple title,”
    and “estate in fee simple” all mean “[a]n interest in land that, being the broadest property
    interest allowed by law, endures until the current holder dies without heirs[.]” Fee Simple,
    Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). Consistently, we have stated that one definition
    of “a fee simple estate” is “the greatest estate which one may enjoy in property and is in
    common language an absolute and unqualified ownership of the interests involved.” State
    Roads Comm’n v. Johnson, 
    222 Md. 493
    , 497-98, 
    161 A.2d 444
    , 447 (1960) (cleaned
    up). We have also stated that one definition of “[a] fee-simple estate” is “an absolute title
    or estate in lands wholly unqualified by any reversion, reservation, condition, or limitation
    or possibility of any such thing.” New Cathedral Cemetery v. Browning, 
    153 Md. 408
    ,
    
    138 A. 258
    , 260 (1927) (cleaned up).
    -2-
    vested fee simple title in the tax sale buyer. See, e.g., 
    1898 Md. Laws 1234
     (Ch. 526). By
    contrast, in other instances before TP § 14-844(b), a tax sale buyer’s payment of the
    purchase money vested fee simple title in a tax sale buyer. See, e.g., 
    1880 Md. Laws 330
    (Ch. 2.7). Still other precursors of TP § 14-844(b) stated that fee simple title vested in the
    tax sale buyer unless the original owner redeemed the property within the limitations
    period. See, e.g., 
    1888 Md. Laws 580
    -81 (Ch. 339).
    In 1941, the General Assembly adopted the current method of determining when fee
    simple title vests in a tax sale buyer as to tax sales of properties in Baltimore City by
    enacting a predecessor of TP § 14-844(b) that stated: “If the court shall find for the plaintiff,
    the decree shall vest in the plaintiff an absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple in the
    property[.]” 
    1941 Md. Laws 923
    , 940-41 (Ch. 540, S.B. 428). In 1943, the General
    Assembly included the same language in the statute that applied to tax sales of properties
    everywhere in Maryland. See 
    1943 Md. Laws 1338
    , 1354 (Ch. 761, S.B. 89). The General
    Assembly eventually moved this language to Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. (1986) § 14-844
    with only stylistic changes so that it read as TP § 14-844(b) does: “If the court finds for the
    plaintiff, the judgment vests in the plaintiff an absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple
    in the property[.]” 
    1985 Md. Laws 559
     (Pt. 1, Ch. 8, S.B. 1) (some capitalization omitted).
    In 1943, the General Assembly could have, as it had done before, made it so that the
    deed executed by a tax collector for the tax sale buyer vested fee simple title in a tax sale
    buyer. See, e.g., 
    1898 Md. Laws 1234
    . Instead, however, the General Assembly made it
    the law of Maryland that the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption vests fee simple
    title in the tax sale buyer. See 
    1943 Md. Laws 1354
    . If the General Assembly had intended
    -3-
    to require that a deed be executed by a tax collector to vest fee simple title in a tax sale
    buyer, the General Assembly would have done so. The circumstance that the General
    Assembly deliberately chose not to do so demonstrates that the General Assembly intended
    for TP § 14-844(b) to mean exactly what it says—the judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption, not a deed executed by a tax collector, vests fee simple title in the tax sale
    buyer.3 Under the plain language of TP § 14-844(b), as soon as the circuit court issues the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, fee simple title immediately vests in the tax
    sale buyer even though the tax collector has not yet executed a deed to that effect.
    If a tax sale buyer wants to transfer the property after the circuit court issues a
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the tax sale buyer must use the usual method
    of doing so—i.e., execute a deed for the transferee and have the deed recorded pursuant to
    RP § 3-101(a). The legislative history of TP § 14-844(b) makes clear that the General
    Assembly never contemplated allowing a tax sale buyer, after the circuit court has issued
    a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, to transfer the property by assigning the
    judgment and the tax sale certificate.
    Allowing such an assignment would be inconsistent with not only the plain language
    and legislative history of TP § 14-844(b), but also the general design of the statute. Despite
    3
    Just as, under TP § 14-844(b), the judgment of foreclosure vests in a plaintiff an
    absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple to a property, its predecessor in 1943 did the
    same. In both versions of the statutory scheme, another provision sets forth the requirement
    of a deed to memorialize the passage of title. In the 1943 version of the statute, and in TP
    § 14-844(b), the General Assembly used clear and distinct language stating that the
    judgment or decree shall vest in the plaintiff an absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple
    in the property. See 
    1943 Md. Laws 1338
    , 1354 (Ch. 761, S.B. 89).
    -4-
    the general principle that a judgment is assignable, a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption is not. In a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the tax sale buyer is
    the only entity that the circuit court orders to be vested with fee simple title to the property.
    The tax sale buyer is the only entity that the circuit court orders the supervisor of
    assessments to enroll as the fee simple owner of the property. And, the tax sale buyer is
    the only entity that the circuit court orders the tax collector to execute a deed for. Once the
    circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the tax sale certificate
    can no longer be assigned because it no longer has any value, as it has served its only
    purpose—i.e., memorializing the tax sale buyer’s inchoate interest in the property until the
    tax sale buyer became the fee simple owner of the property. Nor can the judgment be
    assigned, as, by operation of law, the tax sale buyer has become the fee simple owner of
    the property.
    Other parts of the statutory scheme to which TP § 14-844(b) belongs support the
    conclusion that, after a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption,
    the judgment and the tax sale certificate are not assignable. TP § 14-824(a) states that,
    generally, where no private entity buys a property at a tax sale, the governing body of the
    county or other taxing agency must do so. TP § 14-824(c) states that “[t]he governing body
    of the county . . . and other taxing agency have the same rights and remedies with regard
    to the property as other purchasers, including the right to foreclose the right of redemption.”
    And, TP § 14-825 states that, “[w]hen the governing body of a county or other taxing
    agency has purchased any property at a tax sale, it may sell and assign the certificate of
    sale relating to the property or after foreclosure sell the property.”
    -5-
    The General Assembly’s choice of words in the plain language of TP § 14-825 is
    telling. Under the language of TP § 14-825, a county or taxing agency that has purchased
    a property at tax sale may sell and assign the certificate of sale relating to the property.
    This language clearly applies to actions that the county or taxing agency may take before
    foreclosure. Under TP § 14-825, “after foreclosure[,]” the county or taxing agency may
    sell the property. The plain language of TP § 14-825 makes no mention of the ability of a
    county or taxing agency to sell or assign a certificate of sale after foreclosure, or of the
    ability to assign a judgment of foreclosure.
    The plain language of TP § 14-825 leads to the conclusion that the General
    Assembly intended for a tax sale certificate to be sold or assigned before the entry of a
    judgment of foreclosure, not after. At that point, the tax sale buyer immediately becomes
    the fee simple owner of the property by operation of TP § 14-844(b), the tax sale certificate
    becomes no longer assignable, and the only way for the tax sale buyer to transfer the
    property is to “sell the property[,]”—which requires executing a deed for the transferee and
    having it recorded pursuant to RP § 3-101(a). TP § 14-825. Given that under TP § 14-
    824(c) a taxing agency has “the same rights and remedies” as any other tax sale buyer, the
    principle confirmed by the plain language of TP § 14-825—i.e., that a tax sale certificate
    is not assignable after a trial court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption—
    applies with equal force where the tax sale buyer is a private entity rather than a taxing
    agency. Concluding otherwise would give a private entity greater rights as a tax sale buyer
    than a taxing agency, which would be inconsistent with the plain language of TP § 14-
    -6-
    824(c).4
    TP § 14-825 is not the only part of the statutory scheme that reinforces the
    conclusion that, after a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption,
    the judgment and the tax sale certificate are not assignable. TP § 14-833(c)(1) sets forth a
    two-year limitations period for tax sale cases, stating that “[t]he certificate is void unless a
    proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption is filed within 2 years of the date of the
    certificate of sale.” In other words, under TP § 14-833(c)(1), where no tax sale case is
    initiated within two years of the tax collector’s issuance of the tax sale certificate, the tax
    sale certificate becomes void. TP § 14-833(c)(1) makes clear that the only purpose of
    holding a tax sale certificate is to ultimately obtain a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption. Just as a tax sale certificate becomes void by operation of TP § 14-833(c)(1)
    where no tax sale case is timely initiated, a tax sale certificate loses its value by operation
    of TP § 14-844(b) where the circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption. In both instances, the tax sale certificate no longer serves any purpose, no
    longer has any value, and can no longer be assigned. Simply put, once there is a judgment
    4
    Whether TP § 14-825 applies only where, under TP § 14-824(a), a taxing agency
    was required to buy a property at a tax sale because no private entity did so (which was not
    the case here) is of no moment. Regardless of the circumstances of any particular case, TP
    § 14-825 confirms what the plain language and legislative history of TP § 14-844(b) make
    clear—i.e., that, after a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption,
    the county or taxing agency may sell the property. TP § 14-825 does not authorize the tax
    sale certificate or judgment to be assigned after foreclosure. There is no rational
    explanation for the proposition that the General Assembly intended to not authorize the
    assignment of a tax sale certificate by a taxing agency after foreclosure while allowing such
    an assignment by a private entity. The creation of such a double standard would violate
    TP § 14-824(c), which states that a taxing agency has “the same rights and remedies” as
    any other tax sale buyer.
    -7-
    foreclosing the right of redemption, there is nothing left to assign.
    This conclusion is consistent with TP § 14-821(a), which provides that, generally,
    “any certificate of sale executed and delivered by the collector to the purchaser is
    assignable and an assignment of the certificate of sale vests in the assignee, or the legal
    representative of the assignee, all the right, title, and interest of the original purchaser.”
    Respondents are mistaken in reasoning that a tax sale certificate can be assigned after a
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption on the ground that TP § 14-821(a) does not
    include an express prohibition of such an assignment. This is not persuasive because the
    plain language of TP § 14-844(b), its legislative history, and TP §§ 14-825 and 14-
    833(c)(1) demonstrate that the General Assembly intended for a tax sale certificate not to
    be assignable after the circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption.
    The silence of TP § 14-821 as to a post-judgment assignment of tax sale certificates does
    not indicate that such an assignment is permissible. If the General Assembly had intended
    to allow such an unorthodox procedure for transferring property, it would have said so in
    TP § 14-821. Likewise, if the General Assembly had intended to allow a tax sale buyer to
    assign a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, it would have said so in TP § 14-
    821 or another part of the statutory scheme.
    In Fish Market Nominee Corp. v. G.A.A., Inc., 
    337 Md. 1
    , 7, 13, 
    650 A.2d 705
    ,
    707-08, 711 (1994), a case in which assignments of tax sale certificates occurred before,
    not after, the circuit court issued a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, we stated
    that TP § 14-821 “freely permits assignments of tax sale certificates.” Fish Market does
    not support the notion that TP § 14-821(a) means that, after a circuit court has issued a
    -8-
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the tax sale buyer can assign the judgment
    and the tax sale certificate. Fish Market undermines that thought by providing an
    illustration of the proper way for a tax sale buyer to transfer the property—namely, by
    assigning the tax sale certificate before, not after, the circuit court issues a judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption. Assigning a tax sale certificate before a tax sale
    foreclosure action has been initiated in a circuit court (as was done in Fish Market) does
    not necessitate any court filing. See id. at 7, 650 A.2d at 707.
    Where a tax sale certificate is assigned after a tax sale action has been initiated in a
    circuit court, the assignor must file a motion to substitute the assignee for itself as the
    plaintiff (as was also done in Fish Market). See id. at 7, 650 A.2d at 708. The bottom line
    is that a tax sale certificate can be assigned any number of times, whether before or after a
    tax sale foreclosure action has been initiated in a circuit court—up until the circuit court
    issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption. At that point, the plaintiff (i.e., the
    holder of the tax sale certificate at the time) becomes the fee simple owner of the property
    by operation of TP § 14-844(b), and the tax sale certificate becomes unassignable. Nothing
    in TP § 14-821 states or implies that tax sale certificates can always be assigned under
    every conceivable circumstance in perpetuity, and in particular, nothing states that tax sale
    certificates may be assigned after entry of a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption.
    The record shows that Thornton Mellon had ample opportunity to assign the tax sale
    certificate to Ty Webb and move to substitute Ty Webb for itself as the plaintiff before the
    circuit court issued the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, as was done in Fish
    Market. See id. at 7, 650 A.2d at 708. According to the docket entries, in the more-than-
    -9-
    sixteen-month span between the filing of the complaint and the circuit court’s issuance of
    the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, Thornton Mellon requested a judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption three times—once in the complaint, another time in a
    motion for an order foreclosing the right of redemption, and a third time in a renewal of
    that motion. The circuit court denied the first two requests before ultimately issuing the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption. In addition to repeatedly requesting a
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, Thornton Mellon filed motions at various
    times, including a motion for waiver of alternative service, a motion for the circuit court to
    take action in the matter, and a motion to dismiss a party.
    Yet, Thornton Mellon did not attempt to assign to Ty Webb the judgment
    foreclosing the right of redemption and the tax sale certificate until one day after the circuit
    court issued the judgment. These circumstances contradict any view that Thornton Mellon
    was paying little attention to the case and was caught off-guard by the judgment foreclosing
    the right of redemption. To the contrary, Thornton Mellon was actively involved in the
    case from start to finish and repeatedly sought a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption. Thornton Mellon had the chance, but failed, to assign the tax sale certificate
    and move to substitute Ty Webb as the plaintiff in the action before, not after, the circuit
    court issued the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption.
    In the circuit court, Thornton Mellon’s counsel stated that Thornton Mellon did not
    assign the tax sale certificate and move to substitute Ty Webb as the plaintiff because it
    was uncertain when the circuit court would issue the judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption. This explanation is not an excuse for Thornton Mellon’s failure to assign the
    - 10 -
    tax sale certificate and move to substitute Ty Webb as the plaintiff before, not after, the
    circuit court issued the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption. Far from being
    burdensome or onerous, doing so would have been a simple matter, as demonstrated by the
    circumstances in Fish Market, and doing so was required under the plain language of TP §
    14-844(b).
    Similarly, there is little weight to be given to the reasoning that a tax sale certificate
    and a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption can be assigned after the judgment
    because, even after the judgment, there remain steps that a tax sale buyer must take before
    the tax collector can execute a deed for the buyer—namely, paying any remaining sums
    due, including any balance of the purchase price, taxes, interest, and penalties, as required
    under TP §§ 14-818(a)(2) and 14-847(a)(1). The circumstance that the tax sale buyer must
    make certain payments before the tax collector executes a deed for the plaintiff does not
    negate the tax sale buyer’s status as the new owner of the property. By way of analogy, up
    until the circuit court issues the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the original
    owner of the property remains exactly that—the owner of the property, even though the
    original owner has not kept current with tax payments for the property. This is made clear
    by TP § 14-827, which states that “[t]he owner or other person that has an estate or interest
    in the property sold by the collector may redeem the property at any time until the right of
    redemption has been finally foreclosed under the provisions of this subtitle.” Any money
    that the original property owner owes, the tax lien on the property, and the tax sale do not
    deprive the original owner of ownership of the property. It is not until the circuit court
    issues the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption that the original owner loses
    - 11 -
    ownership. At that point, by operation of TP § 14-844(b), title passes from the original
    owner to the tax sale buyer. The circumstance that the tax sale buyer may need to make
    payments to the local jurisdiction does not deprive the owner of fee simple title.
    In this case, Respondents relied, in part, on RP § 3-101(a) and Lippert v. Jung, 
    366 Md. 221
    , 242, 
    783 A.2d 206
    , 218 (2001), a tax sale case in which we stated: “[T]here has
    been a foreclosure of the right of redemption, and title has been conveyed to [the tax sale
    buyer]s by proper deed.” But, neither RP § 3-101(a) nor Lippert is of help to the
    Respondents. Like Fish Market, Lippert did not involve a tax sale buyer that, like Thornton
    Mellon, purported to assign a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption and a tax sale
    certificate after the circuit court issued the judgment. Nor did Lippert involve the question
    of when fee simple title vests in a tax sale buyer.
    Instead, Lippert involved individuals who claimed to be entitled to a property by
    virtue of adverse possession even though, during the relevant time period, the property was
    sold at a tax sale and a trial court issued a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption.
    See Lippert, 
    366 Md. at 223-24
    , 
    783 A.2d at 207
    . In Lippert, we concluded that the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption was fatal to the individuals’ claim for adverse
    possession. See 
    id. at 245
    , 
    783 A.2d at 220
    . We did not mention TP § 14-844 in Lippert,
    let alone discuss the principle that, under TP § 14-844(b), the judgment foreclosing the
    right of redemption vests fee simple title in the tax sale buyer.5
    5
    In Lippert, this Court concluded that the judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption was fatal to the individuals’ claim for adverse possession. See 
    366 Md. at 245
    ,
    
    783 A.2d at 220
    . In Lippert, in discussing the applicable law, the Court cited cases in
    - 12 -
    In addition to relying on Fish Market and Lippert, Respondents cite cases involving
    mortgage foreclosure sales. These cases are distinguishable because there is no statutory
    counterpart to TP § 14-844(b) that applies to mortgage foreclosure sales. That a purchaser
    at a mortgage foreclosure sale may have an equitable interest in the property prior to the
    court’s ratification of the sale and the passing of title at the time of the recording of a
    mortgage or deed of trust is not analogous to the manner in which title passes in a tax sale
    under TP § 14-844(b). RP § 7-105(c) provides that a mortgage foreclosure sale, “after final
    ratification by the court and grant of the property to the purchaser on payment of the
    purchase money, . . . operates to pass all the title which the borrower had in the property at
    the time of the recording of the mortgage or deed of trust.” By contrast, TP § 14-844(b)
    specifically provides that a tax sale foreclosure judgment “vests in the plaintiff an absolute
    and indefeasible title in fee simple in the property[.]”
    Insofar as RP § 3-101(a) is concerned, there is no conflict or inconsistency between
    TP § 14-844(b) and the language of RP § 3-101(a), which we have interpreted to mean
    that “legal title to land . . . does not pass, other than by operation of law, until a deed is
    properly executed and recorded.” Standard Fire Ins. Co. v. Berrett, 
    395 Md. 439
    , 455, 910
    which we stated that a tax deed conveys fee simple title to the tax sale buyer. See id. at
    232, 
    783 A.2d at 212
     (quoting Winter v. O’Neill, 
    155 Md. 624
    , 631, 
    142 A. 263
    , 266
    (1928)); Lippert, 
    366 Md. at 234-35
    , 
    783 A.2d at
    213-14 (citing Cooper v. Holmes, 
    71 Md. 20
    , 30, 
    17 A. 711
    , 713 (1889) and quoting McMahon v. Crean, 
    109 Md. 652
    , 665, 
    71 A. 995
    , 997 (1909) and Wagner v. Goodrich, 
    148 Md. 318
    , 323, 
    129 A. 364
    , 365
    (1925)). Notably, all of the above cases were decided before 1943, when the General
    Assembly stated that “[i]f the court shall find for the plaintiff, the decree shall vest in the
    plaintiff an absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple in the property[.]” 
    1943 Md. Laws 1354
    .
    - 13 -
    A.2d 1072, 1082 (2006) (cleaned up). With respect to tax sale cases, as soon as a circuit
    court issues a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, legal title to the property
    immediately passes to the tax sale buyer by operation of law—specifically, by operation of
    TP § 14-844(b). To the extent that there is any question about whether TP § 14-844(b) or
    RP § 3-101(a) prevails, the former does because it is more specific than the latter. There
    is a “long-recognized principle of statutory construction that a specific statutory provision
    governs over a general one.” Andrews & Lawrence Pro. Servs., LLC v. Mills, 
    467 Md. 126
    , 155, 
    223 A.3d 947
    , 964 (2020) (cleaned up).
    Next, the circumstance that the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption vests
    fee simple title in the tax sale buyer does not make the deed executed by the tax collector
    for the tax sale buyer under TP § 14-847(a) superfluous. In other words, that TP § 14-
    847(a) provides that the tax collector must execute a deed for the tax sale buyer does not
    negate the tax sale buyer’s status as the owner of the property. The deed executed by the
    tax collector for the tax sale buyer serves multiple purposes. One of the obvious purposes
    is that there must be a deed so that it can be recorded among the land records of the
    jurisdiction. This allows any interested party to see who owns the property. The deed
    serves as an additional method of proving that the tax sale buyer owns the property.
    In addition, Respondents are incorrect in asserting that a judgment foreclosing the
    right of redemption is an assignable chose in action. This argument is based on the faulty
    assumption that the tax sale buyer acquires only an equitable interest in the property upon
    entry of a judgment of foreclosure, not fee simple title. Black’s Law Dictionary provides
    three definitions of “chose in action”: “[a] proprietary right in personam, such as a debt
    - 14 -
    owed by another person, a share in a joint-stock company, or a claim for damages in tort”;
    “[t]he right to bring an action to recover a debt, money, or thing”; and “[p]ersonal property
    that one person owns but another person possesses, the owner being able to regain
    possession through a lawsuit.” Chose in Action, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    A judgment foreclosing the right of redemption vests legal title, i.e., fee simple title, in the
    tax sale buyer and, as such, does not create an interest that would fall within any of the
    definitions of a chose in action.
    Respondents are also mistaken in reasoning that, after the circuit court issued the
    judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, Thornton Mellon could assign the judgment
    and the tax sale certificate to Ty Webb because, in the judgment, the circuit court
    “ORDERED that the Director of Finance shall execute and deliver Deed to the Plaintiff,
    his successors and assigns[.]” This language simply meant that, after the Director of
    Finance executed a deed for Thornton Mellon and delivered it, Thornton Mellon, just like
    any other property owner, could transfer the property to a successor or an assignee. This
    language means that Thornton Mellon could transfer the property by executing a deed for
    a transferee pursuant to RP § 3-101(a). Significantly, the circuit court did not order that
    the Director of Finance would execute and deliver Deed to the “Plaintiff, or his successors
    or assigns.” In the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the circuit court simply
    referred to the plaintiff’s potential future successors and assigns in the interest of
    completeness, as multiple legal documents and statutes do. For instance, TP § 14-844(a)
    states that a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption “is final and conclusive on the
    defendants”—i.e., the original property owners—“their heirs, devisees, and personal
    - 15 -
    representatives and they or any of their heirs, devisees, executors, administrators, assigns,
    or successors in right, title, or interest are bound by the judgment as if they had been named
    in the proceedings and personally served with process.” In referring to Thornton Mellon’s
    “successors and assigns” in the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, the circuit
    court did not purport to—and, indeed, could not—override the plain language of TP § 14-
    844(b), under which Thornton Mellon, after the circuit court issued the judgment, could
    not assign the judgment or the tax sale certificate.
    As the City points out, it would cause serious problems to allow a tax sale buyer,
    after a circuit court has issued a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, to transfer
    property by assigning the judgment and the tax sale certificate. One problem would be
    causing land records to be inaccurate and making it difficult, if not impossible, to determine
    who owns a particular property. An assignment of a judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption and a tax sale certificate would not be required to be recorded among the land
    records of the jurisdiction, and the assignor would not be required to execute a deed for the
    assignee. This would lead to inconsistent property records and title searches that would
    yield incorrect results. The difficulty in identifying owners of property would inhibit both
    taxing agencies seeking to collect property taxes and private individuals and organizations
    seeking to buy properties.6 More importantly, the difficulty in identifying owners of
    6
    Respondents argued that the land records of a jurisdiction might also become
    inaccurate if the circuit court issued a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption but the
    tax sale buyer neither assigned the judgment and the tax sale certificate nor made the
    payments necessary for the tax collector to execute a deed for the tax sale buyer. In such
    an instance, though, the name of the fee simple owner of the property—i.e., the tax sale
    - 16 -
    property would undoubtedly, as pointed out by the City before the circuit court, exacerbate
    the issue of vacant buildings in Baltimore City, leading to blight and dangerous conditions
    for firefighters and people in the community.
    Loss of tax revenue is another problem that would result from allowing a tax sale
    buyer, after a circuit court has issued a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption, to
    transfer the property by assigning the judgment and the tax sale certificate. As the City’s
    counsel observed before the circuit court, a tax sale buyer may have second thoughts and
    no longer want the property for any number of reasons. Perhaps the property is damaged
    and loses value due to a flood or fire, possibly resulting in the property becoming
    underwater—i.e., worth less than the money owed on the property. Whatever the reason
    for the tax sale buyer’s cold feet, the tax sale buyer could walk away from its obligations
    as a property owner and avoid the recordation and transfer taxes that it would have
    otherwise owed by simply passing the property to an assignee. The assignee would owe
    little in taxes if the amount of consideration was nominal—as was the case here, where
    Thornton Mellon purported to assign to Ty Webb the judgment foreclosing the right of
    redemption and the tax sale certificate for just $1. The City is correct in noting that
    allowing assignments like the one in this case would be ripe for mischief and could be
    buyer—would remain on the judgment foreclosing the right of redemption and the tax sale
    certificate. A taxing agency could easily determine who owns the property by briefly
    reviewing records and seeing that the tax sale buyer bought the property at the tax sale. By
    contrast, if the circuit court issued a judgment foreclosing the right of redemption and the
    tax sale buyer not only failed to make the payments necessary for the tax collector to
    execute a deed for the tax sale buyer but also assigned the judgment and the tax sale
    certificate, neither the taxing agency nor an interested party would necessarily be able to
    determine who owns the property or find out about the assignment.
    - 17 -
    misused as a tax-avoidance scheme.
    Far from engaging in a money-making tax scheme or trying “to get double taxes out
    of Respondents[,]” as they allege, the City is simply attempting to adhere to the plain
    language of TP § 14-844(b) as written. Doing so would help to ensure that land records
    remain accurate and that there are no loopholes as to tax sale cases and would serve as a
    safeguard against an increase in vacant properties in the community. Because the Majority
    has decided to allow assignments like the one in this case, it may be that the General
    Assembly will want to review the issue of whether tax sale certificates and judgments are
    assignable after foreclosure. Such a review could serve to protect local jurisdictions from
    the numerous risks of danger associated with an increased number of vacant buildings by
    making explicit what the plain language of TP § 14-844(b), its legislative history, and TP
    §§ 14-825 and 14-833(c)(1) already demonstrate—i.e., that a judgment foreclosing the
    right of redemption is not assignable and that a tax sale certificate is no longer assignable
    after a circuit court issues the judgment.
    The use of a trial court’s revisory power under Maryland Rule 2-535(a) to
    theoretically permit the substitution of a party, i.e., the assignee, after the entry of a
    judgment of foreclosure is not a basis on which to affirm the circuit court’s order in this
    case. First of all, even though it was a theory espoused by the Court of Special Appeals,
    that did not happen in this case. Maryland Rule 2-535(a) was not used to revise the
    judgment of foreclosure by adding Ty Webb as a party nor would it have been an
    appropriate use of the Rule.
    Maryland Rule 2-535(a) states in relevant part that, “[o]n motion of any party filed
    - 18 -
    within 30 days after entry of judgment, the court may exercise revisory power and control
    over the judgment and, if the action was tried before the court, may take any action that it
    could have taken under Rule 2-534.” Maryland Rule 2-534 provides:
    In an action decided by the court, on motion of any party filed within ten
    days after entry of judgment, the court may open the judgment to receive
    additional evidence, may amend its findings or its statement of reasons for
    the decision, may set forth additional findings or reasons, may enter new
    findings or new reasons, may amend the judgment, or may enter a new
    judgment. A motion to alter or amend a judgment may be joined with a
    motion for new trial. A motion to alter or amend a judgment filed after the
    announcement or signing by the trial court of a judgment but before entry of
    the judgment on the docket shall be treated as filed on the same day as, but
    after, the entry on the docket.
    A trial court’s discretion under Maryland Rule 2-535(a) “to revise an unenrolled
    judgment is broad[,]” but subject to appellate review. Dixon v. Ford Motor Co., 
    433 Md. 137
    , 157, 
    70 A.3d 328
    , 339-40 (2013) (citation omitted). “The purpose of allowing that
    discretion, which informs any limits to it, is to ensure that technicality does not triumph
    over justice.” Id. at 157, 70 A.3d at 157 (cleaned up). Although a trial court’s discretion
    under the Rule has been described as broad, it does not appear that Maryland Rule 2-535(a)
    has ever been used in Maryland to revise a judgment to substitute a party. At any rate,
    using Maryland Rule 2-535(a) in this manner would be a band-aid remedy that would not
    work in every case as there is no guarantee that each and every tax sale buyer would seek
    to revise a judgment to substitute an assignee as a party (which was not done in this case)
    nor is there any guarantee that, if sought, a trial court would ever grant such a motion.
    Equally important, the principle that, after a judgment of foreclosure, tax sale
    certificates and judgments are not assignable under TP § 14-844(b) is not affected by
    - 19 -
    Maryland Rule 2-535(a). In other words, the potential use of Maryland Rule 2-535(a) does
    not negate the operation of TP § 14-844(b) and is not a universal remedy. From my
    perspective, it is not reasonable to conclude that assignments of tax sale certificates and
    judgments should be permitted after entry of a judgment of foreclosure because the tax sale
    buyer could potentially request that the judgment be revised to substitute an assignee as a
    party to a case. The use of the circuit court’s revisory power under Maryland Rule 2-535(a)
    for this purpose would be nothing more than a way for the tax sale buyer to cut out the
    aspect of having to transfer the property by deed to an assignee after the judgment of
    foreclosure is issued. In other words, using a trial court’s revisory power under Maryland
    Rule 2-535(a) in this manner would allow tax sale buyers to work an end run around the
    requirements of selling a property and paying the costs associated with executing and
    recording a deed and would still contribute to the risks of danger associated with an
    increase in vacant properties.7
    In sum, I would hold that, after a circuit court issues a judgment foreclosing the right
    of redemption, the tax sale buyer cannot assign the judgment or the tax sale certificate. As
    such, I would reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
    For the above reasons, respectfully, I dissent.
    7
    It would not do to make light of the view that allowing the assignment of tax sale
    certificates and judgments foreclosing the right of redemption may result in unclear chains
    of title and an increase in vacant properties in Baltimore City. The circumstance that there
    is no requirement that, if permitted, such assignments be recorded through any filing with
    the circuit court or the City indicates that there would be no way to keep track of the
    assignments and the purported owners of property in Baltimore City. It is not prudent to
    minimize the serious problems that could develop as a result of such assignments.
    - 20 -
    Judge Biran and Judge McDonald have authorized me to state that they join in this
    opinion.
    - 21 -