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Suntrust Bank v. Goldman
201 Md. App. 390
Md. Ct. Spec. App.
2011
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Background

  • SunTrust Bank and appellees Frank J. Goldman and Lisa B. Goldman entered a $390,000 line of credit secured by a deed of trust on their home on Feb 20, 2007.
  • The loan agreement permits collection costs and attorneys' fees: either 15% of principal plus accrued interest or reasonable fees as allowed by law, for collection efforts.
  • Appellees defaulted after a payment on Oct 9, 2008; SunTrust filed suit in Baltimore County Circuit Court on Jun 30, 2009 seeking principal, interest, and $60,206 in attorneys' fees (15% of principal).
  • Default judgment entered Mar 12, 2010 for principal and pre-judgment interest; fee request deferred to a later hearing.
  • On Apr 27, 2010, the court revised judgment to $3,258.30, found no evidence of a fee agreement to pay 15% and awarded only incurred, reasonable fees; the court did not permit 15% as a guaranteed recovery and acknowledged indemnity and reasonableness requirements.
  • Appellant SunTrust appealed, and the Court of Special Appeals affirmed, holding the trial court properly awarded only incurred fees and that merger and reasonableness principles limit contractual fee amounts.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether 15% of principal should be awarded as fees under the contract. SunTrust argues the contract allows 15% of principal plus accrued interest. Goldmans contend the 15% is a contractual indemnity limit that should be enforced, subject to reasonableness. No; 15% may be disallowed if not reasonable or not supported by incurred fees.
Whether the merger doctrine bars post-judgment recovery of unincurred fees. SunTrust seeks post-judgment fees or future collection costs. Merger extinguishes contract-based fee rights after judgment absent clear non-merger language. Merger bars recovery of unincurred fees; only incurred, reasonable fees are recoverable.
Whether the fee award was properly limited to incurred fees under reasonableness standards. SunTrust asserts the contract allows amount based on 15% and future costs. Fees must be reasonable and based on actual services rendered; Rule 1.5 factors apply. Yes; the circuit court correctly applied reasonableness standards and awarded incurred fees.

Key Cases Cited

  • Mortgage Investors of Washington v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co. of Maryland, 278 Md. 505 (Md. 1976) (indemnity-based fee cap; cannot exceed actual fees paid to attorneys)
  • Webster v. People's Loan, Sav. & Deposit Bank of Cambridge, 160 Md. 57 (Md. 1931) (discussed indemnity and crediting excess/deficit after judgment; context of confessed judgments)
  • AccuBid Excavation, Inc. v. Kennedy Contractors, Inc., 188 Md.App. 214 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2009) (merger doctrine; post-judgment fee rights extinguished unless exceptions exist)
  • Monmouth Meadows Homeowners Ass'n v. Hamilton, 416 Md. 325 (Md. 2010) (reasonableness standard for contract-based attorney fees; Rule 1.5 factors guidance)
  • Johnston v. Johnston, 297 Md. 48 (Md. 1983) (non-merger clause analysis; incorporated but not merged agreements survive)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Suntrust Bank v. Goldman
Court Name: Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
Date Published: Sep 30, 2011
Citation: 201 Md. App. 390
Docket Number: 803, September Term, 2010
Court Abbreviation: Md. Ct. Spec. App.