Allstate Lien & Recovery v. Stansbury , 445 Md. 187 ( 2015 )


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  • Allstate Lien and Recovery Corporation, et al. v. Cedric Stansbury, No. 7, Sept. Term,
    2015 Opinion by Battaglia, J.
    COMMERCIAL LAW – MOTOR VEHICLE – CREATION OF GARAGEMAN’S
    LIEN
    The plain language of the statute that provides for the creation of a garageman’s lien
    includes charges incurred for “repair or rebuilding, storage, or tires or other parts or
    accessories” but does not include charges for lien enforcement costs or expenses or cost
    of process fees when the owner redeems or attempts to redeem the vehicle prior to sale.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore County,
    Maryland
    Case No. C-11-10572
    Argued: September 10, 2015
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 7
    September Term, 2015
    ALLSTATE LIEN AND RECOVERY
    CORPORATION, et al.
    v.
    CEDRIC STANSBURY
    Barbera, C.J.
    Battaglia
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr.
    (Retired, Specially
    Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Battaglia, J.
    Harrell, J., concurs
    Filed: November 23, 2015
    In the present case, Cedric Stansbury, Respondent, was informed by Allstate Lien,
    Jeremy Martin, and Russel Collision, Petitioners, that he would have to pay $1,000
    representing “lien enforcement costs” or “cost of process” fees1 in order to redeem his
    Mazda RX-8 prior to its sale.2 It is undisputed that the $1,000 was not actually incurred
    by Russel Collision but, rather, was the amount agreed upon between Russel Collision
    and Allstate Lien to conduct the sale. Mr. Stansbury unquestionably received notice of
    the sale; it is not the efficacy of the sale that is before us. Rather, it is the fact that Russel
    Collision and Allstate Lien argue that they were entitled, without Mr. Stansbury’s
    consent,3 to keep his car and eventually sell it, unless Mr. Stansbury paid, in order to
    1
    We understand that “lien enforcement costs” or “cost of process” are those amounts
    incurred or accrued by a garageman related to the sale at auction of a vehicle for which
    repair costs have not been paid. Lien enforcement costs are referenced in Sections 16-
    206, 16-207, and 16-208 of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.). Section 16-206(b)(3)(iii) refers to “[a]ll cost and expenses which result
    from the enforcement of the lien and are incurred before the lienor was notified that the
    bond was filed.” Section 16-207(e)(1)(i) speaks of “[t]he expenses of giving notice and
    holding the sale, including reasonable attorney’s fees[.]” Section 16-208(b)(1)(ii) refers
    to “any expenses properly incurred or accrued before the trial, including storage and
    advertising.” All references to Sections 16-201 et seq. of the Commercial Law Article of
    the Maryland Code (1975, 2005 Repl. Vol.) are to the provisions which were applicable
    at the time the complaint was filed.
    2
    We granted certiorari in this case to consider the following question:
    Whether the Circuit Court for Baltimore County and the Court of Special
    Appeals misinterpreted COMMERCIAL LAW ARTICLE §§ 16-201 through 16-
    209 in their conclusion that a lien and recovery company hired to execute a
    garageman’s lien cannot include its lien enforcement costs and expenses for
    executing the lien as part of the amount necessary to redeem the vehicle.
    
    441 Md. 217
    , 
    107 A.3d 1141
     (2015).
    3
    The repair authorization letter presented to Mr. Stansbury by Russel Collision, which
    Mr. Stansbury signed, reflected the following:
    (continued . . . )
    ( . . . continued)
    RUSSEL AUTOMOTIVE COLLISION CENTER
    6624 BALTIMORE NATIONAL PIKE
    BALTIMORE, MD 21228
    PHONE: (410) 818-2271 FAX: (410) 818-2019
    DEAR CUSTOMER,
    Thank you for choosing Russel Automotive Collision Center. We would
    like for you to take a moment to the [sic] read the following information
    concerning our policies.
    1. We offer lifetime warranty on the repair work made to your vehicle. We
    offer a 1 yr warranty on all parts unless more or less based on manufacturer
    warranty. Should any problem occur from the repairs, we will take care of
    them at the owners convenience. Alternate transportation will be customer
    responsibility. We do offer shuttle service to your home or place of
    employment.
    2. All payments must be made before picking up vehicle is released [sic].
    We accept insurance checks, personal checks, credit cards, certified blank
    checks, cash, and money orders. We do not accept third party payments.
    3. Russel Automotive Collision Center will not be responsible for personal
    items left in vehicle. Please remove all items such as baby seats, gps
    systems, cd’s or any other personal belongings you may have.
    4. We will do our best to estimate length of time for repair. However we
    can not promise a due date or guarantee one due to unknown delays with
    repairs or insurance companies.
    5. We will negotiate all supplement amounts with the insurance companies.
    We can not be responsible for insurance company delays. When vehicle is
    complete we will contact you immediately. Feel free to call anytime to
    check the status of your vehicle.
    We will do our very best to work with you and your insurance company to
    return your vehicle to pre accident condition.
    Thank you,
    Russel Automotive Collision Center
    I AUTHORIZE RUSSEL AUTOMOTIVE COLLISION CENTER TO
    REPAIR MY VEHICLE AND ORDER ANY NECESSARY PARTS
    NEEDED FOR REPAIR.
    Mr. Stansbury signed the repair authorization agreement on April 7, 2011.
    2
    redeem his vehicle, the costs related to the sale of the car that was scheduled to occur in
    the future, in addition to the repair costs associated with the Mazda RX-8.
    In the present case, Mr. Stansbury filed suit in the Circuit Court for Baltimore
    County in June of 2011 alleging violations of the Maryland Consumer Protection Act, 4
    4
    The Maryland Consumer Protection Act, in effect at the time these proceedings were
    instituted, was codified at Title 13, Subtitle 3 of the Commercial Law Article (1975, 2005
    Repl. Vol.). Section 13-301 of the Act provided, in pertinent part:
    Unfair or deceptive trade practices include any:
    (1) False, falsely disparaging, or misleading oral or written
    statement, visual description, or other representation of any kind which has
    the capacity, tendency, or effect of deceiving or misleading consumers;
    (2) Representation that:
    (i) Consumer goods, consumer realty, or consumer services
    have a sponsorship, approval, accessory, characteristic, ingredient, use,
    benefit, or quantity which they do not have;
    ***
    (3) Failure to state a material fact if the failure deceives or tends to
    deceive;
    ***
    (9)     Deception,      fraud,    false      pretense,  false  premise,
    misrepresentation, or knowing concealment, suppression, or omission of
    any material fact with the intent that a consumer rely on the same in
    connection with:
    (i) The promotion or sale of any consumer goods, consumer
    realty, or consumer service;
    ***
    (14) Violation of a provision of:
    ***
    (iii) Title 14, Subtitle 2 of this article, the Maryland Consumer Debt
    Collection Act.
    3
    the Automotive Repair Facilities Act,5 and the Consumer Debt Collection Statute,6
    5
    The Automotive Repair Facilities Act, in effect at the time these proceedings were
    instituted, was codified at Title 14, Subtitle 10 of the Commercial Law Article (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.). Section 14-1008(a) of the Act provided that:
    (a) Customer given copy. – Except as provided in subsection (c) of this
    section, before beginning any repair work on a motor vehicle, an
    automotive repair facility shall give the customer a copy of a form used for
    authorization of repairs which shall inform the customer of the following
    rights:
    (1) That a customer:
    (i) May request a written estimate for repairs which cost in
    excess of $50; and
    (ii) May not be charged for any amount ten percent in excess
    of the written estimate without the customer’s consent;
    (2) That the customer is entitled to the return of any replaced parts
    except when parts are required to be returned to the manufacturer under a
    warranty agreement; and
    (3) That repairs not originally authorized by the customer may not be
    charged to the customer without the customer’s consent.
    (b) Customer’s rights. – The customer’s rights provided in subsection (a) of
    this section shall be:
    (1) Displayed immediately before the space for the signature of the
    customer conspicuously in easily readable type;
    (2) Physically separated from the other terms of the form used for
    authorization of repairs; and
    (3) Listed under the printed heading “Customers’ Rights”.
    The Automotive Repair Facilities Act claim was later dismissed.
    6
    The Consumer Debt Collection Statute, in effect at the time these proceedings began,
    was codified at Title 14, Subtitle 2 of the Commercial Law Article (1975, 2005 Repl.
    Vol.). Section 14-202 of the Act provided, in relevant part, that:
    In collecting or attempting to collect an alleged debt a collector may
    not:
    ***
    (8) Claim, attempt, or threaten to enforce a right with knowledge that
    the right does not exist[.]
    4
    as well as one count of unjust enrichment7, another count of malfeasance,8 and another
    count of breach of the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing9, as a result of Russel
    Collision having placed a lien on his 2009 Mazda RX-8 and the subsequent sale of the
    vehicle. Initially, Mr. Stansbury sued Russel Collision Center, Inc., located in Baltimore
    County, Maryland, Jeremy Martin, the manager of Russel Collision, and Allstate Lien
    and Recovery Corporation, of Baltimore, Maryland, as well as Owings Mills Motor Cars,
    Inc., Paul Martin, the alleged buyer of the vehicle who was employed by Owings Mills
    7
    In order to prove a claim of unjust enrichment, a party must establish:
    1. A benefit conferred upon the defendant by the plaintiff;
    2. An appreciation or knowledge by the defendant of the benefit; and
    3. The acceptance or retention by the defendant of the benefit under such
    circumstances as to make it inequitable for the defendant to retain the
    benefit without payment of its value.
    Hill v. Cross Country Settlements, LLC, 
    402 Md. 281
    , 295, 
    936 A.2d 343
    , 351 (2007),
    quoting Berry & Gould, P.A. v. Berry, 
    360 Md. 142
    , 151-52, 
    757 A.2d 108
    , 113 (2000).
    8
    Black’s Law Dictionary defines malfeasance as, “A wrongful, unlawful, or dishonest
    act; especially, wrongdoing or misconduct by a public official.” Black’s Law Dictionary
    1100 (10th ed. 2014). The claim of malfeasance was later dismissed.
    9
    In Questar Builders, Inc. v. CB Flooring, LLC, we stated, in dicta, that:
    Maryland contract law generally implies an obligation to act in good faith
    and deal fairly with the other party or parties to a contract. That implied
    obligation governs the manner in which a party may exercise the discretion
    accorded to it by the terms of the agreement. Thus, a party with discretion
    is limited to exercising that discretion in good faith and in accordance with
    fair dealing.
    
    410 Md. 241
    , 273, 
    978 A.2d 651
    , 670 (2009) (internal citations omitted). The count
    alleging breach of the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing was not included in any
    subsequent complaint filed by Mr. Stansbury.
    5
    Motor Cars, Inc., and Josephine Keehner, the office manager of Allstate Lien, who
    notarized various documents.10 After filing an Amended Complaint as well as a Second
    Amended Complaint, Mr. Stansbury finally settled upon a Third Amended Complaint, in
    which he alleged that he, in 2010, had his Mazda RX-8 serviced at Russel Collision but
    later experienced an engine seizure that led to his car being struck by another vehicle:
    13. In late November 2008, Plaintiff purchased the new Mazda RX-8
    for $31,648, not including title, tax, and fees. He paid cash for his vehicle.
    14. In late 2010, Plaintiff got an oil change from Defendant Russel.
    Shortly after that, on or about December 2010, Plaintiff’s engine seized,
    most likely from Defendant Russel’s failure to properly change the oil.
    When the engine seized the vehicle stopped in the middle of the road. As
    Plaintiff went to get help, an unidentified driver struck the Mazda RX-8,
    causing body damage.
    Mr. Stansbury further averred that four months into the repair, he was asked to
    sign, on April 7, 2011, a document which evaluated the work to be done:
    15. The vehicle was towed to Defendant Russel’s shop where the
    engine was replaced. This was paid for under Plaintiff’s warranty.
    16. Plaintiff had repeated direct dealings with Defendant Jeremy
    Martin regarding the repairs and later lien on the subject vehicle.
    17. Plaintiff’s insurer, the Maryland Automobile Insurance Fund
    (“MAIF” or “the insurer”), evaluated the body damage. Defendants Jeremy
    Martin and Russel knew that the vehicle was insured and dealt directly with
    representatives from MAIF regarding the work that needed to be done and
    the amount MAIF would pay.
    18. Although the vehicle was taken to Russel in December 2010,
    representatives from Russel did not begin working on the vehicle for
    approximately four (4) months, telling Plaintiff that, due to the earthquake
    in Japan, the parts for the body work were not available.
    19. On April 7, 2011, Defendant Russel asked that Plaintiff sign a
    document concerning its repair policies (see “Dear Customer” letter,
    Exhibit 1). Prior to that time no documents were signed by Plaintiff
    10
    Owings Mills Motor, Inc. Paul Martin and Josephine Keehner were later dismissed as
    parties.
    6
    regarding approval for repairs, and no repair invoices were ever signed by
    Plaintiff.
    20. On or about May 7, 2011, Defendant Russel and/or MAIF
    supplemented its evaluation of the work needed to be done to the Mazda
    and the total repair amount came to $7,134.83. According to Defendant
    Russel’s handwritten notes, the insurer paid Russel $804.46 directly,
    bringing the amount owed to $6,330.37 (apparently comprising the
    insurance amount of $6,080.37 and a $250 deductible).
    According to the complaint, Mr. Stansbury was notified that his vehicle was
    finished on May 17, 2011; he was presented a bill in the amount of $6,330.37 for
    the repairs:
    21. According to the Defendant Russel’s handwritten notes
    submitted to the MVA [Motor Vehicle Administration], the first time
    Russel notified the Plaintiff that his vehicle was done and that he owed
    $6,330.37 was on May 17, 2011 (see Defendant Russel’s notes, Exhibit 2).
    Over the next month, according to the complaint, Mr. Stansbury attempted to
    retrieve his Mazda RX-8 but the amount charged by Russel Collision to redeem
    the car changed from $6,330.37 to $6,630.37 and then to $7,630.37:
    22. Plaintiff made several attempts to make arrangements to pay for
    the repairs and discussed with Defendant Jeremy Martin shortly after May
    17, 2011, that he could have payment by mid-June. Since Russel had held
    the car for over four (4) months, Plaintiff reasonably believed that it would
    not be a problem if he paid for the car in mid-June, and Defendant Jeremy
    Martin gave no indication that this would be a problem.
    23. During this time, however, the price demanded to retrieve the car
    kept changing, rising from $6,330.37 to $6,630.37 to $7,630.37.
    The complaint also alleged that a Notice of Sale at auction on June 23, 2011 of the
    Mazda RX-8, resulting from the enforcement of a lien, listed the repair charges as
    $6,630.37 plus cost of process fees of $1,000, for a total of $7,630.37:
    24. Sometime in early June 2011, Defendant Jeremy Martin, as
    manager of Defendant Russel and Owen Douglas Cooper and as auctioneer
    7
    for Defendant Allstate, signed a “Notice of Sale of Motor Vehicle to Satisfy
    a Lien” for the Mazda RX and listed the ‘process start date’ as June 2,
    2011. According to the notice, the ‘repair order charges’ were $6,630.37,
    $300 more than the amount quoted to Plaintiff (see Notice of Sale, Exhibit
    3).[11]
    25. In addition, this document dated June 2, 2011 listed ‘cost of
    process’ at $1,000, although no explanation was given as to this amount.
    The total now demanded for return of the subject vehicle was $7,630.37,
    $1,300 more than the quote given to Plaintiff less than two weeks before
    (see Notice of Sale, Exhibit 3).
    26. The Notice of Sale stated that the subject vehicle would be
    auctioned on June 23 (see Notice of Sale, Exhibit 3).
    27. Although Defendants Russel and Allstate had Plaintiff’s correct
    address (it is listed on the MAIF repair documents), this Notice, dated June
    2, was sent to his old address and Plaintiff did not receive it until mid-June.
    According to Mr. Stansbury’s complaint, although he attempted to redeem his
    vehicle before the sale, he was rebuffed, and the Mazda RX-8 was sold at auction:
    28. After receipt of the Notice of Sale, Plaintiff immediately called
    Defendant Allstate and asked why it was demanding so much more money.
    Defendant Allstate’s employee, Defendant Josephine Keehner, would not
    give Plaintiff any information about this.
    29. Plaintiff then called Defendant Jeremy Martin at Russel and
    asked him why he put a lien on the car when they had an agreement that
    payment would be made the second week in June and he had the money.
    Defendant Jeremy Martin would not provide any explanation and falsely
    told Plaintiff that the situation was out of his hands and he must deal
    directly with the lien company, Defendant Allstate.
    30. Plaintiff then scrambled to get the additional $1,000 and
    contacted Defendant Allstate to inform them that he had the money but was
    told, falsely, that the car was “no longer his car.”
    11
    The Notice of Sale was introduced in evidence at trial and contained the following:
    WE HEREBY DEMAND FULL PAYMENT
    YOUR REPAIR ORDER CHARGES:………………..$ 6630.37
    COSTS OF SAID PROCESS:…………………………$ 1000.00
    TOTAL LIEN TO BE PAID:………………………….$ 7630.37
    8
    31. Despite this, Plaintiff called Defendant Allstate the day before
    the sale to repeat that he had the money. The car was auctioned on June 23,
    2011 anyway.
    After discovery ensued and preliminary motions occurred, the case proceeded to a
    three-day trial before a jury in June of 2013. At the close of all of the evidence, all of the
    parties moved for judgment, with Mr. Stansbury essentially arguing that Section 16-
    202(c) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code, which provided Russel
    Collision a lien for the Mazda RX-8, only permitted recovery of charges for “repair or
    rebuilding, storage or tires or other parts or accessories”, not lien recovery costs of
    $1,000, when he attempted to redeem the Mazda RX-8 prior to sale. Allstate Lien,
    Jeremy Martin and Russel Collision, conversely, argued that the entire statutory scheme
    entitled them to collect the $1,000 as fees prior to the sale of the car and that they,
    therefore, violated neither the Debt Collection Act nor the Consumer Protection Act.
    Judge Judith C. Ensor, the presiding judge, concluded that Section 16-202(c) was
    to be “strictly construed”, such that the cost of process fees could not have been assessed
    as part of the lien for redemption prior to sale of the vehicle. Judge Ensor explained, “I
    also believe that the law essentially says the Legislature is presumed to know what it’s
    doing and to do what it wants to do. There’s absolutely nothing that would have
    prevented the Legislature from putting into Section 202(c) any anticipated fees.” She
    9
    instructed the jury that the $1,000 “cost of process” fee was not an appropriate part of the
    lien.12
    A special verdict sheet was submitted to the jury, which contained the following:
    1. Do you find by a preponderance of the evidence that Russel Auto
    Imports, LLC and/or Jeremy Martin violated the Maryland Consumer
    Protection Act?
    2. Do you find by a preponderance of the evidence that Russel Auto
    Imports, LLC and/or Jeremy Martin violated the Maryland Consumer Debt
    Collection Act?
    3. Do you find by a preponderance of the evidence that Allstate Lien
    and Recovery Corp. violated the Maryland Consumer Protection Act?
    4. Do you find by a preponderance of the evidence that Allstate Lien
    and Recovery Corp. violated the Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act?
    If your answer is yes to either Question #1, #2, #3, or #4, go on to
    answer Question #5. If your answer to Questions #1, #2, #3, and #4 is no,
    your deliberations are complete. Sign the verdict sheet and notify the Court
    that you have concluded your deliberations.
    5. What damages, if any, do you award to the Plaintiff, Cedric Stansbury?
    Economic: ___________________
    Emotional without physical manifestations: ___________________
    Emotional with physical manifestations: ___________________
    Other non-economic damages: ___________________
    TOTAL: ___________________
    12
    Judge Ensor instructed the jury, in relevant part: “I want to tell you that I did make a
    decision as a matter of law, and that is I have determined that the $1,000 processing fee is
    not an appropriate part of the lien, that should have been an upfront cost, you know,
    added to the lien in advance.” The instruction pertaining to Section 16-202(c) that was
    provided to the jury stated:
    Any person who, with the consent of the owner, has custody of a motor
    vehicle and who, at the request of the owner, provides a service to or
    materials for the motor vehicle, has a lien on the motor vehicle for any
    charge incurred for any:
    (i) Repair or rebuilding;
    (ii) Storage; or
    (iii) Tires or other parts or accessories.
    The lien is created when any of these charges are incurred.
    10
    The jury returned the attendant sheet upon which it awarded Mr. Stansbury $16,500 in
    economic damages, after answering “yes” to all of the questions, with also a handwritten
    notation that attorney’s fees should be awarded to Mr. Stansbury.
    Allstate Lien, Jeremy Martin, and Russel Collision appealed, and in a reported
    opinion, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed.13 Allstate Lien & Recovery Corp., et al.
    v. Stansbury, 
    219 Md. App. 575
    , 
    101 A.3d 520
     (2014). Utilizing a plain meaning
    approach to interpret Section 16-202(c), Judge Kathryn Graeff, writing on behalf of our
    intermediate appellate court, held that:
    Based on our review of Title 16 of the Commercial Law Article, and the
    plain language of CL § 16-202(c), we hold that a motor vehicle lien is
    based solely on charges incurred for repair or rebuilding, storage, or tires or
    other parts or accessories. The lien does not encompass ‘cost of process’
    fees, and such fees should not be included in the amount the customer must
    pay to redeem the vehicle.
    Id. at 589-90, 101 A.3d at 529. With respect to the second question, which is not before
    us, the Court of Special Appeals reasoned that, “the jury could properly find that
    appellants violated the MCDCA [Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act] by including
    those costs in the amount of the lien that Mr. Stansbury was required to pay to redeem the
    vehicle.” Id. at 591, 101 A.3d at 530.
    13
    Before the Court of Special Appeals, Allstate Lien, Jeremy Martin, Russel Collision
    presented the following questions:
    1. Did the circuit court err in finding that a processing fee is not part of a
    garageman’s lien and cannot be included in the amount necessary to redeem
    the vehicle?
    2. Does including the processing fee in the amount needed to redeem a
    vehicle violate the Maryland Debt Collection Act’s prohibition against
    enforcing a “right” that does not exist?
    11
    We have had occasion to address the nature of a garageman’s lien in Friendly
    Finance Corporation v. Orbit Chrysler Plymouth Dodge Truck, Inc., 
    378 Md. 337
    , 
    835 A.2d 1197
     (2003). Although the facts which gave rise to the present case involve a
    dispute regarding redemption of the car, rather than its sale, which was challenged in
    Friendly Finance, a review of the statutory scheme as described in that case is,
    nonetheless, helpful to understand the establishment and enforcement of a garageman’s
    lien.14 In Friendly Finance, Judge Glenn Harrell, writing for the Court, succinctly
    explained:
    The Maryland General Assembly, when it enacted the provisions relating to
    garageman’s liens, envisioned that the statute would operate according to
    the following sequence of events:
    (1) The owner in possession of the motor vehicle takes it (or has it
    towed) to the garage and requests that it be repaired. § 16-202(c)(1).[15]
    (2) The garage performs the requested repairs, creating a lien in
    favor of [the] garage for the repair bill, and bills the owner. § 16-
    202(c)(2)(i).[16]
    14
    Of all the provisions of the statutory scheme discussed in Friendly Finance, only
    Sections 16-202(c) and 16-207 of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code are
    pertinent to the present case.
    15
    Section 16-202(c)(1) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (c) Motor vehicle lien – (1) Any person who, with the consent of the owner,
    has custody of a motor vehicle and who, at the request of the owner,
    provides a service to or materials for the motor vehicle, has a lien on the
    motor vehicle for any charge incurred for any:
    (i) Repair or rebuilding;
    (ii) Storage; or
    (iii) Tires or other parts or accessories.
    16
    Section 16-202(c)(2) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (continued . . . )
    12
    (3) The owner fails to pay the bill.
    (4) The garage stores the vehicle, creating a lien in favor of the
    garage for storage costs. § 16-202(c)(1)(ii).
    (5) The garage retains possession of the vehicle until either the
    charges are paid or the lien is otherwise discharged. § 16-203(a).[17]
    (6) The garage, within 30 days of the creation of the lien, sends
    notice of the lien to all holders of perfected security interests. § 16-
    203(b)(1)(i).[18]
    (7) If the bill remains unpaid for 30 days, the garage, at its option,
    may initiate a public sale of the vehicle. § 16-207(a).[19]
    ( . . . continued)
    ***
    (2) A lien is created under this subsection when any charges set out under
    paragraph (1) of this subsection giving rise to the lien are incurred.
    17
    Section 16-203(a) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided: “(a) Retention of possession. — The lienor may retain
    possession of the property subject to the lien until: (1) The charges which give rise
    to the lien are paid; or (2) The lien is otherwise discharged in accordance with this
    subtitle.”
    18
    Section 16-203(b)(1)(i) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (b) Notice of lien. — (1)(i) Except as provided in subparagraph (ii) of this
    paragraph, within 30 days after the creation of the lien under this subtitle,
    including a lien created under § 16-207(c) of this subtitle, the lienor shall
    send notice of the lien by registered or certified mail to all holders of
    perfected security interests in the property who: 1. Are known to the lienor;
    or 2. Can be identified through a search of the public records where filings
    are made to perfect security interests in the property.
    19
    Section 16-207(a) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975, 2005
    Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (a) Sale of property. — If the charges which give rise to a lien are due and
    unpaid for 30 days and the lienor is in possession of the property subject to
    the lien, the lienor may sell the property to which the lien attaches at public
    sale. The sale shall be in a location convenient and accessible to the public
    and shall be held between the hours of 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
    13
    (8) The garage sends notice, at least 10 days prior to sale, to the
    owner, all holders of perfected security interests, and the Motor Vehicle
    Administration. § 16-207(b)(2).[20]
    (9) The garage publishes notice once a week for the two weeks
    immediately preceding the sale in one or more newspapers of general
    circulation in the county where the sale is to be held. § 16-207(b)(1).[21]
    (10) The garage sells the vehicle. § 16-207.
    (11) Proceeds of sale are applied as follows: § 16-207(e)(1)(i).[22]
    i. Expenses of the sale. § 16-207(e)(1)(ii).
    ii. Third-party storage fees. § 16-207(e)(1)(ii).
    20
    Section 16-207(b)(2) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (b) Notice of sale. —
    ***
    (2) In addition, the lienor shall send the notice by registered or certified
    mail at least 10 days before the sale to: (i) The owner of the property, all
    holders of perfected security interests in the property and, in the case of a
    sale of a motor vehicle or mobile home, the Motor Vehicle Administration.
    21
    Section 16-207(b)(1) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (b) Notice of sale. — (1) The lienor shall publish notice of the time, place,
    and terms of the sale and a full description of the property to be sold once a
    week for the two weeks immediately preceding the sale in one or more
    newspapers of general circulation in the county where the sale is to be held.
    22
    Section 16-207(e)(1) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided:
    (e) Application of proceeds generally. — (1) If notice required under §16-
    203 (b) of this subtitle was sent, the proceeds of a sale under this section
    shall be applied, in the following order, to:
    (i) The expenses of giving notice and holding the sale, including reasonable
    attorney’s fees;
    (ii) Subject to subsection (f) of this section, storage fees of the third party
    holder;
    (iii) The amount of the lien claimed exclusive of any storage fees except as
    provided in subsection (f) (2) of this section;
    (iv) A purchase money security interest; and
    (v) Any remaining secured parties of record who shall divide the remaining
    balance equally if there are insufficient funds to complete satisfy their
    respective interests, but not to exceed the amount of a security interest.
    14
    iii. The lien claim for garage repair and storage bills. § 16-
    207(e)(1)(iii).
    iv. Any purchase money security interest. § 16-107(e)(1)(iv).
    v. Any remaining secured parties of record. § 16-207(e)(1)(v).
    vi. Any remaining balance to the owner. § 16-207(e)(4).23
    Friendly Finance, 
    378 Md. at 345-47
    , 
    835 A.2d at 1202-03
     (internal footnotes omitted).
    In the present case, steps eight through ten provide the immediate context for Mr.
    Stansbury’s attempts to redeem his Mazda RX-8.
    The lien in question in the present case has been commonly referred to as a
    garageman’s lien, which is “an ex parte, prejudgment creditor’s remedy.” George W.
    Chesrow, Garageman’s Lien: Application of Procedural Due Process Safeguards, 28 U.
    Miami L. R. 458, 459 (1974). As early as 1849, we had occasion to discuss liens upon
    personal property at common law, and opined, in dicta, “The doctrine of lien is more
    favored now than formerly; and it is now recognized as a general principle, that wherever
    the party has, by his labor or skill, improved the value of property placed in his
    possession, he has a lien upon it until paid.” Wilson v. Guyton, 
    8 Gill 213
    , 214-15 (Md.
    1849). We recognized the efficacy of a garageman’s lien for repairs in Winton Co. v.
    Meister, 
    133 Md. 318
    , 320, 
    105 A. 301
    , 302 (1918), when we validated such a lien and
    stated, “While there is no statute in this state creating a repairman’s lien for repairs to an
    23
    Section 16-207(e)(4) of the Commercial Law Article of the Maryland Code (1975,
    2005 Repl. Vol.) provided: “After application of the proceeds in accordance with
    paragraph (1) or (2) of this subsection, any remaining balance shall be paid to the owner
    of the property.
    15
    automobile, it is clear that a common-law lien would exist on such property until the
    charges for the labor and expenses are paid.”
    The first garageman’s lien statute was enacted in 1918 and provided that:
    Whenever a motor vehicle or any part thereof is left by the owner
    thereof or by any person with his authority, express or legally implied, in
    the custody of any corporation, firm or individual for storage, or for the
    purpose of having furnished for or on account of the same any accessories,
    or tires, the corporation, firm or individual in whose custody said
    automobile or part thereof is left for all or any of the purposes aforesaid,
    shall have a lien on said motor vehicle or part thereof for all charges so
    incurred, and may lawfully retain the same until said charges have been
    paid, or until said lien is extinguished or discharged as hereinafter provided.
    Said lien shall be superior to the rights of the holders of conditional sale
    contracts, bills of sale, chattel mortgages or other liens or claims of any
    kind which are not executed and recorded as required by law, but shall be
    subordinate to the rights of holders of such conditional sale contracts, bills
    of sale, chattel mortgages or liens or claims where the same have been
    executed and recorded as required by law. Surrender or delivery of any
    motor vehicle subject to the lien aforesaid shall operate as a waiver or
    extinguishment of the same as against third persons without notice thereof,
    but shall not operate as such waiver or extinguishment as against the owner,
    or as against third persons with notice.
    In the case of a dispute as to the amount of the charge of such garage
    keeper or other custodian as aforesaid, such dispute shall be determined by
    appropriate legal proceedings, and the lien of such custodian shall continue
    until the final determination of such action, whereupon execution may issue
    and the property be sold under the same.
    The remedies for enforcing the aforesaid lien herein provided shall
    not be taken to preclude any other remedies allowed by law for the
    enforcement of a lien against personal property, nor bar the right to recover
    so much of the custodian’s claim as shall not be paid by the proceeds of the
    sale of the property.
    1918 Maryland Laws, Chapter 403. In 1924, the garageman’s lien statute was re-enacted
    to include the costs for repair and rebuilding of a vehicle, in addition to storage, tires, or
    accessories:
    16
    Whenever a motor vehicle or any part thereof is left by the owner or by any
    other person with his authority, express or implied, in the custody of any
    corporation, firm or individual, association, or person for repair, rebuilding,
    storage, or for the purpose of having furnished for or on account of the
    same any parts, accessories, or tires, the corporation, firm, individual,
    association or person in whose custody said motor vehicle or part thereof is
    left for all or any of the purposes aforesaid, shall have a lien on said motor
    vehicle or part thereof for all charges so incurred, and may lawfully retain
    the same until said charges have been paid, or until said lien is extinguished
    or discharged as hereinafter provided. Said lien shall be superior to the
    rights of the holders of conditional sale contracts, bills of sale, chattel
    mortgages or other liens or claims of any kind which are not theretofore
    executed and recorded or filed for record as required by law, but shall be
    subordinate thereto where the same have been theretofore executed and
    recorded as required by law. Surrender or delivery of any motor vehicle
    subject to the lien aforesaid shall operate as a waiver or extinguishment, of
    the same as against third persons without notice thereof, but shall not
    operate as such waiver or extinguishment as against the owner or as against
    third persons with notice.
    1924 Maryland Laws, Chapter 417.
    The statute was codified in 1924 as Section 54 of Article 63, Maryland Code
    (1924), renumbered in 1939 as Section 41 of Article 63 (1939), before it was re-codified
    in 1975 as Section 16-202(c) of the Commercial Law Article (1975, 2005 Repl. Vol.),
    which, at the time of the events in issue in the present case as well as now states:
    (c) Motor vehicle lien – (1) Any person who, with the consent of the
    owner, has custody of a motor vehicle and who, at the request of the owner,
    provides a service to or materials for the motor vehicle, has a lien on the
    motor vehicle for any charge incurred for any:
    (i) Repair or rebuilding;
    (ii) Storage; or
    (iii) Tires or other parts or accessories.
    (2) A lien is created under this subsection when any charges set out
    under paragraph (1) of this subsection giving rise to the lien are incurred.
    17
    Mr. Stansbury, as well as each of the Petitioners agrees, that, by its express
    language, Section 16-202(c) only provides for costs for repairs, rebuilding, storage, and
    tires or accessories to be included in a garageman’s lien. We concur, as did the Court of
    Special Appeals, when it stated that:
    The plain language of CL § 16-202 is clear and unambiguous. A person
    who provides a service to, or materials for, a vehicle has a “motor vehicle
    lien” only for those charges incurred for repair or rebuilding, storage, or
    tires or other parts or accessories. A processing fee is not included as a part
    of the lien.
    Allstate Lien & Recovery Corp., 219 Md. App. at 587, 101 A.3d at 527.
    The Petitioners, however, argue that the statutory context requires that Mr.
    Stansbury have paid the fees and expenses of the sale before redeeming his vehicle prior
    to sale. They reference Sections 16-207 of the Commercial Law Article, which governs
    disbursement of funds after sale, as well as Sections 16-206 and 16-208 of the
    Commercial Law Article, which permit the owner of the car to challenge the garageman’s
    right to enforce the lien in a replevin action or in an appropriate judicial action. Because
    Section 16-202(c) involves only the creation of a lien and not the subsequent activity for
    its discharge, they argue that the entire statutory scheme permitting assessment of the cost
    of process of lien enforcement costs must be considered.
    The Petitioners urge that they could have recovered the cost of process fees that
    they already expended had they sold the car, pursuant to Section 16-207(e)(1)(i), which at
    the time of the events in issue and now states, in pertinent part:
    (e) Application of proceeds generally. — (1) If notice required under § 16-
    203(b) of this subtitle was sent, the proceeds of a sale under this section
    shall be applied, in the following order, to:
    18
    (i) The expenses of giving notice and holding the sale, including reasonable
    attorney’s fees[.]
    The Petitioners insist that the sale of the vehicle is not limited to the actual sale at auction
    but instead includes the advance notices and registered mailings that are required as part
    of the sale process. In this regard, the Petitioners argue that a car owner could escape
    payment of these expenses by paying the outstanding repair bill after the expenses have
    been incurred and accrued but before the auction is held. To avoid this illogical result,
    they argue, the statutory scheme must be interpreted in a way that protects the garageman
    and requires the car owner to pay any costs and expenses accrued leading up to the sale
    of the car.
    The Petitioners also rely on Section 16-208, which provided and continues to
    provide a vehicle owner the opportunity to file a replevin action24 to secure the return of
    his car from the retaining garageman, prior to sale. They argue that the terms of Section
    16-208 provide for them to secure the amount of “any expenses properly incurred or
    accrued before the trial, including storage or advertising”:
    (a) Issuance of writ. — If the owner of property subject to a lien
    institutes an action of replevin and establishes a right to the issuance of a
    writ but for the defendant’s alleged lien under this subtitle, the court shall
    issue the writ.
    (b) Trial of replevin action. — (1) In the trial of the replevin action,
    the court shall determine:
    (i) The amount of the lien, if any; and
    24
    Black’s Law Dictionary defines replevin as, “An action for the repossession of
    personal property wrongfully taken or detained by the defendant, whereby the plaintiff
    gives security for and holds the property until the court decides who owns it.” Black’s
    Law Dictionary 1491 (10th ed. 2014).
    19
    (ii) The amount of any expenses properly incurred or accrued
    before the trial, including storage and advertising.
    (2) If judgment is for the defendant:
    (i) It may include reasonable attorney’s fees; and
    (ii) It shall be either for the property replevied or for the
    amounts determined in accordance with paragraph (1) of this subsection.
    (3) The defendant has the burden of proof to establish his lien claim to
    the same extent as if he were a plaintiff in an action to secure judgment on
    an open account.
    Section 16-208, in fact, permitted the garageman in Friendly Finance to assert $675 in
    lien expenses, in addition to repair and storage charges, as part of the lien in that case.
    Friendly Finance, 
    378 Md. at 341
    , 
    835 A.2d at 1200
    . Petitioners urge that the same result
    inures in the present case because they could have recovered the amounts were Mr.
    Stansbury to have filed a replevin action.
    They also contend that Mr. Stansbury could have filed suit and recovered
    immediate possession of his vehicle by posting a corporate bond, conditioned upon full
    payment of the final judgment of the claim, costs of bringing suit, as well as “all costs
    and expenses which result from the enforcement of the lien”, pursuant to Section 16-
    206(a):
    (a) Institution of judicial proceedings. — (1) If the owner of
    property subject to a lien disputes any part of the charge for which the lien
    is claimed, he may institute appropriate judicial proceedings.
    (2) Institution of the proceedings stays execution under the lien until
    a final judicial determination of the dispute.
    (b) Immediate repossession of property; bond. — (1) If the owner of
    property subject to a lien disputes any part of the charge for which the lien
    is claimed, he immediately may repossess his property by filing a corporate
    bond for double the amount of the charge claimed.
    (2) The bond shall be filed with and is subject to the approval of the
    clerk of the court of the county where the services or materials for which
    the lien is claimed were provided.
    (3) The bond shall be conditioned on:
    20
    (i) Full payment of the final judgment of the claim, together
    with interest;
    (ii) All costs incident to the bringing of suit; and
    (iii) All cost and expenses which result from the enforcement
    of the lien and are incurred before the lienor was notified that the bond was
    filed.
    Petitioners insist that Section 16-206 supports their argument that they are entitled to the
    amount of expenses incurred or accrued in the enforcement of a lien because had Mr.
    Stansbury filed an appropriate judicial action, he would have been required to post a
    corporate bond in the amount of “all cost and expenses which result from the
    enforcement of the lien”, resulting in their recovery of the amount of expenses that they
    had incurred.
    Essentially, they argue that because enforcement of the lien always includes “costs
    and expenses” which result from the enforcement of the lien, they are entitled to the costs
    and expenses incurred and accrued whether or not Mr. Stansbury initiated any judicial
    action. In fact, counsel for Allstate Lien, in response to questioning by the Court at oral
    argument, posited that almost any amount could have been assessed for lien enforcement
    costs upon Mr. Stansbury to redeem his car prior to its sale:
    Counsel: [Mr. Stansbury] had other ways he could have stopped this sale.
    He could have challenged the bill. He could have said, ‘I did something
    wrong.’ or ‘They did something wrong.’ or ‘This fee is too much.’ The
    Court would have had to determine whether it was appropriate or it wasn’t
    appropriate.
    Court: So you’re saying, absent a consumer doing that, it’s totally up to the
    company that repaired the vehicle and the lien company that does the sale,
    that what it asserts as the fees for a consumer to get back his car, even
    though under the Lien Recovery Act, in that section (c), it’s never
    enumerated. It could be $5,000? It could be $10,000?
    21
    Counsel: As the attorney’s fees that is in the statute could be $5,000. It
    could be $10,000.
    We disagree. Although Mr. Stansbury’s constitutional rights of due process are not
    at issue before us, as they were before the federal court in Hernandez v. European Auto
    Collision, Inc., 
    487 F.2d 378
     (2nd Cir. 1973), the basic premise presented in our
    garageman’s lien statutory scheme is that costs incurred by the repair company to sell the
    vehicle subject to a garageman’s lien, can only be recovered from the proceeds of the
    actual sale of the vehicle, when actual expenses for lien enforcement costs were known
    and could be authenticated.
    Costs accrued in the course of arranging an impending sale, however, can only be
    recovered by the garageman through judicial intervention, prior to sale, solicited by the
    owner, in a replevin action or in an appropriate judicial action by posting a corporate
    bond covering such costs. In either circumstance, the amount owed for enforcement costs
    incurred, not the subject of a lien established under Section 16-202(c), would be subject
    to judicial scrutiny for reasonableness, at the least.
    To interpret the statute differently would permit the repair company to assert, prior
    to sale, any amount (imaginary or otherwise) for lien enforcement costs in order to
    redeem the vehicle, even though the owner never consented to their assessment nor were
    they provided for in Section 16-202(c). To adopt the stance presented by the Petitioners
    would inhibit redemption of the vehicle and extinguish the car owner’s interest. The
    Maryland statutory scheme does not afford such an unbridled opportunity to garagemen,
    such as Russel Collision, to assess on an ex parte basis such costs allegedly accrued or to
    22
    be accrued to enforce the lien, absent judicial intervention or consent by the vehicle
    owner.
    As a result, we hold that a garageman’s lien includes charges incurred for “repair
    or rebuilding, storage, or tires or other parts or accessories”, but does not encompass lien
    enforcement costs or expenses or cost of process fees prior to sale, should the owner
    attempt to redeem the vehicle before sale.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED.
    COSTS IN THIS COURT AND
    THE COURT OF SPECIAL
    APPEALS TO BE PAID BY
    PETITIONERS.
    23
    Circuit Court for Baltimore County, Maryland
    Case No. C-11-10572
    Argued: September 10, 2015
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 7
    SEPTEMBER TERM, 2015
    ALLSTATE LIEN AND RECOVERY
    CORPORATION, et al.
    v.
    CEDRIC STANSBURY
    Barbera, C.J.,
    Battaglia,
    Greene,
    Adkins,
    McDonald,
    Watts,
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr. (Retired, Specially
    Assigned),
    JJ.
    Concurring Opinion by Harrell, J.
    Filed: November 23, 2015
    I concur with the legal analysis of the statutory scheme and the judgment
    expressed in the Majority opinion.        I write separately only to flesh-out the factual
    narrative, in the interests of posterity and fairness.
    No party to this case covered itself in glory. The Majority opinion catalogs amply
    Petitioners’ mis-steps because it focuses as a source for the majority of its factual
    recitation on Stansbury’s allegations in his Third Amended Complaint, not on what was
    proved at trial in a case that went to the jury, and was not disposed of on preliminary
    motion.    Moreover, although thereby including a number of immaterial “facts,” the
    Majority opinion neglects to mention some of the less than praiseworthy conduct of
    Stansbury:
     Stansbury received on or about 25 January 2011 from his insurer MAIF
    (after application of a $250 deductible), $6,086.00 to pay for the repair of
    his vehicle; he did not deposit the check into his M&T checking account
    until sometime in April 2011.
     He allowed those funds to be drawn-down thereafter to pay discretionary
    family expenses, rather than holding the money to pay Russel Collision for
    the repairs.
     Consequently, when Stansbury offered the first time to pay Russel
    Collision $6,330.37 on 18 May 2011 (after 5:00 p.m.) by check (at a point
    in the business day when his bank was closed), he admitted that he knew
    that he did not have sufficient available funds in the account (short by
    $3,000) to cover the check he wrote (but which a Russel employee would
    not accept until the bank could verify that Stansbury’s account was active).
     Stansbury’s explanation for why he wrote and tendered a check in an
    account that he knew lacked sufficient funds at the time it was delivered
    was that he had $3,000-4,000 in cash at home in a safe that he intended to
    deposit imminently so the check would not “bounce” (the supposed $3,000-
    4,000 in cash in the safe was available also at the time the MAIF check
    proceeds were used to pay the discretionary family expenses).
     As to each of the times after 18 May 2011 that Stansbury claimed he was
    ready to pay ostensibly Russel Collision the original $6,330.37 repair bill,
    he admitted that he knew that he still had not placed additional funds in his
    checking account to cover such a check and that the account continued to
    lack sufficient funds to cover a check in that amount.
     The subsequent “bump up” of the repair costs from $6,330.37 to $6,630.37
    was not a mystery to Stansbury; he acknowledged at trial that he had been
    told by Russel Collision that the additional $300 was for “a little extra work
    on the metal molding.”
    Nonetheless, I agree with the Majority opinion’s interpretation of the statutory
    scheme. Although the statutory scheme authorizes the recovery by the lienholder of the
    cost and expense of having to resort to an actual sale of such a vehicle, it fails to address
    a “hole in the donut” where incurred or projected sale costs and expenses are demanded
    by the lienholder in order for the vehicle to be redeemed prior to sale. I imagine, at least
    as to actual and reasonable costs paid or incurred pre-sale, it may have been a legislative
    oversight not to have provided for their recovery; however, as the Majority opinion
    concludes implicitly, it is entirely rational to refuse to authorize unreasonable, imaginary,
    or projected costs and expenses to be imposed as a condition of pre-sale redemption.1
    Perhaps the Legislature should re-examine the statutory scheme in light of the Court’s
    decision in this case.
    1
    Russel Collision paid (pre-sale) to Allstate Lien & Recovery a total of $522 ($400
    processing fee, $40 for advertising the sale, and $82 for title service). Whether that
    payment was reasonable is irrelevant on the record of this case.
    2