I. Facts
On 15 May 2001, Joyce Griffin and her fiancé, Herberto Tubaya, purchased a home at 70 Bar Harbor Road (the *191 “Property”) in Pasadena, Maryland. The deed was appropriately recorded among the land records for Anne Arundel County. Griffin testified that she and Tubaya took out a mortgage on the Property in March 2003, which they refinanced on 27 July 2004 with Argent Mortgage. 1 Tubaya died on 25 December 2004. Griffin and her daughter continued to live on the Property.
As a result of Tubaya’s death, Griffin wanted to remove his name from the deed. On or about 23 January 2005, she spoke with a representative of Ameriquest, a company at the time affiliated with and owned by the same parent company as Argent Mortgage, who informed her that he would send someone to her house that night to sign the relevant documents. Late that evening, or possibly into the early morning hours of 24 January 2005, Griffin signed the paperwork, solely in her name, taking out a new loan. The new deed of trust extinguished the 2004 mortgage on the Property, paying off a balance of $139,315.29. The new loan was for a princiрal amount of $153,750.00. The adjustable rate note called for an initial rate of 7.990%, resetting on 1 February 2007. Subject to a few restrictions, the interest rate after that date would be 6.500% above the six-month London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR). The new deed of trust was properly recorded among the land records of Anne Arundel County. Initial monthly payments of principal and interest were set at $1,127.10. Paragraph 15 of the new deed of trust provided that “notice to [Griffin] in connection with this Security Instrument shall be deemed to have been given to [Griffin] when mailed by first class mail or when actually delivered to [Griffin]’s notice address if sent by other means.” At all relevant times, Griffin resided at and received mail at the Property.
Griffin, without the financial support of her fiancé, quickly fell into default by failing to make payments on the new loan. *192 Appellees, Howard Bierman, Jacob Gessing, Carrie M. Ward and Ralph DiPietro (“the Trustees”), were appointed as substitute trustees under the deed of trust on 15 September 2005. The Trustees docketed a foreclosure action in the Circuit Court fоr Anne Arundel County on 23 September 2005. The Trustees mailed concurrently to Griffin, by certified mail 2 and first-class mail, a letter required by Maryland Code (1974, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Real Property Article, § 7-105 3 informing her that a foreclosure action “may be or has been” docketed. 4 *193 Mrs. Griffin did not receive either letter. The letter sent by certified mail was returned to the Trustees marked “unclaimed.” The letter sent by regular mail was not returned to the Trustees by the Postal Service. On 10 October 2005, Griffin filed a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland. The filing of the bankruptcy petition stayed the foreclosure proceedings in the Circuit Court. Griffin voluntarily dismissed the petition in March 2006. 5
On 5 April 2006, the Trustees again sent Griffin § 7-105 notices, via certified mail and first-class mail, regarding the revitalized foreclosure proceeding. On 19 April 2006, the Trustees mailed Griffin, again via both first-class and certified mail, the notice required by Maryland Rule 14—206(b)(2) 6 *194 informing Griffin of the time, date (2 May 2006), and location of the public foreclosure sale. 7 This notice also was mailed to the Property address, addressed to “Occupant,” via certified and first-class mail. The certified letter addressed to Occupant was returned to the Trustees “unclaimed.” The trial court found that Griffin did not receive any of these notices. None of the regular mailings were returned to the Trustees. On 1 May 2006, the certified letter dated 5 April 2006 was received by the Trustees from the Postal Service marked “unclaimed.”
The Property was sold at auction on 2 May 2006 to Elizabeth A. Strasnick for $223,000. Ms. Griffin did not attend the sale. The trial court found that she first was informed of the foreclosure sale, after it occurred, when Strasnick posted notice on the door of the house on the Property informing Griffin that Strasnick had purchased the Property. On 17 May 2006, 15 days after the foreclosure sale, the 19 April 2006 certified mail letter was returned to the Trustees marked “unclaimed.”
It was conceded that the Trustees took no additional actions to notify Griffin of the pendency of the sale after receiving the returned “unclaimed” certified letters. It also is without dispute that the Trustees complied with Maryland statutory law and this Court’s rules regarding notice requirements in the foreclosure process.
Griffin contacted an attorney and filed exceptions to the foreclosure sale. After hearing testimony and argument, the Circuit Court issued an Order and Memorandum Opinion on 1 November 2006 refusing to set aside the foreclosure sale. The sale was then ratified. Griffin filed a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals, arguing that the foreclosure process violated her right to due process of law for lack of notice. *195 Before the intermediate appellate court could decide the appeal, we issued a Writ of Certiorari, on our initiative, to consider whether the Circuit Court was correct in denying Griffin’s exceptions to the foreclosure sale.
II. Standard of Review
Maryland Rule 8-131(c) states:
When an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate court will review the case on both the law and the evidence. It will not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly erroneous, and will give due regard to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.
This rule has “been consistently interpreted to require that appellate courts accept and be bound by findings of fact of the lower court unless they are clearly erroneous.”
Ryan v. Thurston,
III. Analysis
The veneer of Griffin’s challenge to the foreclosure sale is that her right to due process of law, guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, 8 was violat *196 ed, in application, by the failure to receive advance notice of the sale. Although Griffin firmly maintains that her constitutional objections are in the form of an “as-applied” challenge, but necessarily, her arguments embrace, as well, a facial challenge to the Maryland foreclosure notice scheme. 9 A *197 finding in Griffin’s favor would compel an obligation requiring that a foreclosing mortgagee provide proof of actual notice to the mortgagor. Because such a ruling would have such a profound effect on the notice foreclosure scheme, Griffin’s challenge first must be treated as a facial challenge.
“An elementary and fundamental requirement of due process in any proceeding which is to be accorded finality is notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprize interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.”
Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
The “constitutionality of a particular procedure for notice is assessed
ex ante,
rather than
post hoc.” Jones v. Flowers,
“We are dealing here with the notice requirements of procedural due process. In that context, actual receipt of notice is not the test.”
Golden Sands,
The Supreme Court has elaborated, on two recent occasions, on the
Mullane
standard. First, in
Dusenbery v. United States,
In
Jones v. Flowers,
*200
We conclude that the Maryland foreclosure notice process passes constitutional muster. The Maryland foreclosure scheme, as applied in the present case, represents a hybrid of the situations discussed in
Jones
and
Dusenbery.
Like
Dusenbery,
the Trustees in the present case did not have certain knowledge that Griffin had not received notice. The letters sent via first-class mail and certified mail were identical. In fact, each letter would reveal to a reader that another, identical letter had been sent via the other form of postal delivery. A recipient of the first-class mail notice, therefore, likely would not go to the post office to sign for a duplicate letter which, in substance, he or she had received already. This is confirmed by the Trustees’ repeated assertions, both in the Circuit Court and at oral argument before this Court, that a high percentage of certified mail notices in a dual mailing requirement scheme, such as exists in Maryland’s mortgage foreclosure scheme, are returned “unclaimed.”
See Crum v. Mo. Dir. of Revenue,
*201
The Trustees in the instant case, following Maryland’s notice requirements, satisfied the alternative steps considered by the Supreme Court in
Jones.
The Supreme Court suggested that Arkansas could provide for sending notice via first-class mail.
Jones,
Griffin attempts to carve the Maryland notice scheme into its individual pieces, arguing that each individual element, on its own, is constitutionally deficient. Therefore, Griffin contends, she was deprived of due process. She correctly notes that
Jones
holds that, on its own, certified mail that is returned “unclaimed” does not satisfy due process. Seizing on our holding in
Miserandino,
Griffin maintains that notice sent via first class mail, standing alone, does not satisfy due process. Finally, conveying notice solely by publication, when the addresses of the interested parties are reasonably available to the sender, does not satisfy due process.
Mullane,
Griffin’s argument fails for two reasons. First, our holding in
Miserandino
is easily distinguishable from the instant case. In
Miserandino,
a Virginia company obtained a judgment in Virginia courts against Maryland residents.
Miserandino,
*203
The case before us is not in rem or quasi in rem. This case involves an attempt by one party to obtain a money judgment against another party or parties for an alleged breach of a promise to pay. It is a classic example of a case requiring the acquisition of in personam jurisdiction. Historically, in-hand delivery of process has been the preferred method of service in a case of this kind....
Miserandino,
Miserandino
is distinguishable from the instant case. In contrast to
Miserandino,
the instant foreclosure action is an
in rem
proceeding, although that description alone would not be dispositive of a constitutional challenge.
G.E. Capital Mortgage. Servs., Inc. v. Levenson,
A distinction is properly made also because Miserandino was decided on Federal constitutional grounds. Because we decide that the notice process in the instant case satisfies federal constitutional requirements based on recently decided Supreme Court precedent, reliance on Miserandino to attack the notice in the instant case is misplaced.
Second, the whole of the Maryland notice scheme is greater than the sum of its parts.
See Turner v. Blackburn,
Similarly, it seems doubtful that the Supreme Court would endorse solely sending a letter addressed to “Occupant” as sufficient notice. These seemingly inadequate methods of delivering notice when considered individually, however, were endorsed by the Supreme Court in
Jones
because, together with other methods of conveying notice, they may cоmbine to produce a constitutionally sufficient notice system.
Jones,
Despite Griffin’s dogged efforts at oral argument to evade a response to this Court’s questions aimed at determining what she thought would be notice actions, the inescapable conclusion of her argument, taken to its logical end, is that due process requires personal service in mortgage foreclosure actions.
13
Griffin requests that we declare the foreclosure notice scheme unconstitutional without consideration of other reasonable steps that could have been taken in this case. Such a holding would constitute narrowly parsed and confusing jurisprudence. To paraphrase the Supreme Court in
Jones,
“if there were no reasonable additional steps the [Trustees] could have taken upon return of the unclaimed notice letter, it cannot be faulted for doing nothing.”
Jones,
The final remaining method of conveying notice is personal service. Personal service is the only method of conveying notice that is certain to convey actual notice. Personal service is, therefore, the only method that would seem to satisfy Griffin’s complaints about notice.
There may be merit, as a policy matter, to requiring that mortgagees personally serve property owners with notice of foreclosure. It is not, however, required to satisfy the constitutional requirements of due process. The Supreme Court expressly spurned the notion that the State must look in the phonebook or income tax rolls to attempt to convey notice to an interested property owner.'
Jones,
Our conclusion is buttressed by an older Supreme Court case,
Nelson v. City of New York,
(Further examination of the Mennonite Mission BoardJMennonite Bd. of Missions] case reveals that the court repeatedly cited the Mullane case with approval, and after its reference, with approval of the Nelson v. City of *208 New York case, immediately following; in fact, in the very next paragraph stated ‘Personal service or mailed notice is required----’----Thus, in the context of the court’s citation of Nelson v. City of New York, the omission of the words ‘certified mail’ can only mean that the court intended to also approve ‘ordinary mail.’).
Assuming,
arguendo,
that we were to accept Griffin’s challenge to the notice scheme solely as an “as-applied” challenge, our conclusion would be the same. An “as-applied” challenge is a claim that a valid law is “unconstitutional on the facts of a particular case or in its application to a particular party.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 244 (8th ed.1999). As noted above, the only fact distinguishing the instant case from the typical foreclosure case is that the trial judge found as a matter of fact that Griffin did not receive actual notice of the pending foreclosure sale. The fact that Griffin did not receive actual notice does not render the law unconstitutional as applied to her. It is well settled that due process of law is not violated in application because the interested party did not receive actual notice.
See Nelson v. Diversified Collection Servs. Inc.,
Griffin urges us to interpret Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights to require greater protection to ensure notice than that required by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitutiоn. Although “[o]ur precedent states clearly that the Maryland and Federal due process provisions have been read
in pañ mateña,
”
Koshko v. Haining,
We have often commented that such state constitutional provisions are in pañ mateña with their federal counterparts or are the equivalent of federal constitutional provisions or generally should be interpreted in the same manner as federal provisions. Nevertheless, we have also emphasized that, simply because a Maryland constitutional provision is in pañ mateña with a federal one or has a federal counterpart, does not mean that the provision will always be interpreted or applied in the same manner as its federal counterpart. Furthermore, cases interpreting and applying a federal constitutional provision are only persuasive authority with respect to the similar Maryland provision.
Dua v. Comcast Cable of Md., Inc.,
We have analyzed before foreclosure situations and the required notice scheme in the context of the State constitution. In
Sanchez v. James,
We again note the lack of authority for the proposition that constitutional due process requires personal service of process in mortgage foreclosures. In
Haas v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
*211
Griffin finally advances two policy-based arguments. First, she correctly points out that part of the due process test involvеs a balancing of the various interests involved. Griffin highlights, and we do not discount in the slightest, the weighty interest that she has in the foreclosure process, namely, “the important and irreversible prospect ... [of] the loss of a house.”
17
Jones, 547
U.S. at 230,
The escalating number of mortgage foreclosures being endured nationally and in Maryland present a serious challenge to policymakers. Perhaps some changes in the foreclosure process would be beneficial to the citizens of the State of Maryland. It is, however, not the role of this Court to ensure that the Legislature maintains a more perfect balance of all interests involved. Our duty is not to substitute our own judgment of what the law ought to be for what the Legislature declares it should be.
Borchardt v. State,
*212
The Maryland foreclosure scheme requires that the Trustees send notice by both certified and first-class mail, two “efficient and inexpensive means of communication” that we conclude are calculated reasonably to inform interested parties of the pending foreclosure action.
Mullane,
It is contended that this is a harsh statute. The New York Court of Appeals took cognizance of this claim and spoke of the ‘extreme hardships’ resulting from the application of the statute in this case. But it held, as we must, that relief from the hardship imposed by a state statute is the responsibility of the state legislature and not of the courts, unless some constitutional guarantee is infringed.
Nelson v. City of New York,
*213 It has been called to our attention that a hardship will result from an application of the rules and principles herein affirmed. While such a result is always to be regretted, it is not the province of the court to make the law so as to prevent an apparent hardship in any given case, but to expound the law and apply it, as found, to the facts shown to exist in each case. It requires no citаtion of authority to demonstrate that this must be the rule applied; otherwise, there would be no stability in the law, and no uniform application of it, but each case would ultimately be resolved according to the views, caprice, or even the prejudice of the judges who are to make the decision in the particular case.
Farmers’ & Merchs.’ Nat. Bank of Cambridge v. Harper,
Our exercise of deference at this particular point in time is supported by the fact that the Executive and Legislative branches of our State government, being particularly suited to policy balancing, appear poised to consider the problem at a policy level.
19
“Courts are under a special duty to respect the legislative judgment where the legislature is attempting to solve a serious problem in a manner which has not had an opportunity to prove its worth.”
Bowie Inn, Inc. v. City of Bowie,
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. The refinance resulted in an adjustable rate mortgage, with a reset date of August 2006. The initial rate was 10.050% on a loan of $139,500. Thus, the calculated initial monthly payment of principal and interest would have been approximately $1,229.37 per month.
. Certified mail, for the purposes of Maryland Code (1974, 2003 Repl. VoL), Real Property Article, § 7-105 is "certified mail, postage pre-paid return receipt requested....” "Certified Mail service provides the sender with a mailing receipt and, upon request, electronic verification that an article was delivered or that a delivery attempt was made.” U.S. Postal Serv., Domestic Mail Manual § 503.30, available at http://pe.usps. gov/text/DMM300/503.htm# 3_0 (last visited 1 February 2008). "Certified Mail is dispatched and handled in transit as ordinary mail.” Id. When a postal carrier attempts delivery of certified mail and no one is home, "the letter carrier will leave a notice and return the item to the Post Office.... If the sender has not asked for Restricted Delivery, the carrier may deliver the mail to anyone who receives mail at that address.” U.S. Postal Serv., A Customer's Guide to Mailing, available at http://pe.usps.com/text/DMM100/sending.htm (last visited 1 February 2008).
When certified mail is returned "unclaimed,” this indicates that the “[ajdressee abandoned or failed to call for mail.” U.S. Postal Serv., Domestic Mail Manual § 507.1.4,
available at
http://pe.usps.gov/text/ dmm300/507.htm# wpl 112908 (last visited 1 February 2008).
See Jones v. Flowers,
. Unless otherwise noted, all references to the Maryland Code are to Maryland Code (1974, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Real Property Article.
. The § 7-105 notice is required to inform the recipient:
*193 Mortgage foreclosure is a complex process. Some people may approach you about "saving” your home. You should be careful about any such promises.
The State encourages you to become informed about your options in foreclosure before entering into any agreements with anyone in connection with the foreclosure of your home. There are government agencies and nonprofit organizations that you may contact for helpful information about the foreclosure process. For the name and telephone number of an organization near you, please call the Consumer Protection Division of the Office of the Attorney General of Maryland at 1-888-743-0023. The State does not guarantee the advice of these organizatiоns.
Do not delay dealing with the foreclosure because your options may become more limited as time passes.
Maryland Code (1974, 2003 Repl.Vol.), Real Property Article, § 7-105.
. It is suggested that Griffin entered into a consent order modifying the bankruptcy stay in which order she agreed to make mortgage payments. The record of the bankruptcy case, however, is not part of the record here. Griffin did not cure the pre-bankruptcy default.
. Maryland Rule 14-206(b)(2) states:
(A) Before making a sale of the property, the person authorized to make the sale shall send notice of the time, place, and terms of sale by certified mail and by first class mail to the last known address of (i) the ‘debtor, (ii) the record owner of the property, and (iii) the holder of any subordinate interest in the property subject to the lien.
(B) The notice of the sale shall be sent not more than 30 days and not less than ten days before the date of the sale to all such persons whose identity and address are actually known to the person authorized to make the sale оr are reasonably ascertainable from a docu *194 ment recorded, indexed, and available for public inspection 30 days before the date of the sale.
. The Trustees also published the time, date, and location of the sale in the Anne Arundel County Edition of the Baltimore Sun, in compliance with Maryland Rule 14—206(b)(1).
. The parties agree that a mortgage foreclosure constitutes state action, and thus, the foreclosure process must satisfy constitutional due process requirements.
See Knapp v. Smethurst,
. Griffin’s facial challenge to the foreclosure scheme is not limited to an “as-applied” challenge simply because she did not receive actual notice.
See Nelson v. Diversified Collection Servs., Inc.,
Griffin’s brief implies that her challenge is, in fact, a facial challenge to the Maryland foreclosure notice scheme. In discussing the reliability of regular mail, Griffin proposes a number of hypothetical scenarios, including situations with a bad address ("... the intended recipient has moved away permanently, or is on an extended absence, or is in the hospital"), physical delivery impediments ("... weather conditions or physical obstructions are getting in the way”), and third-party intervention ("... someone else is stealing from the mailbox”). Nothing in the record indicates any of these problems affected the delivery of Griffin’s mail. In fact, she testified that she did not have any problems with receiving mail prior to her complaints regarding the unreceived foreclosure notices. Had there been any indication that any of Griffin’s hypotheticals hindered delivery of the mailed notices to her, the present case might be considered solely as an "as-applied” challenge to the statute. It is precisely because the facts of the instant case, with the exception of the notices not being received ultimately by Griffin, present a normal scenario that the case embraces a facial challenge to the Maryland notice scheme as well. “A statute can violate procedural due process rights as applied if the notice and opportunity to be heard either were not provided to the plaintiff or their provision was inadequate.”
Nelson v. Diversified Collection Servs., Inc.,
. Arkansas also published notice of the tax sale in a local newspaper. Therefore, Griffin argues, Arkansas was never certain absolutely that the property owner had not received actual notice. Nonetheless, "notice by publication is adequate only where ‘it is not reasonably possible or practicable to give more adequate warning.' ”
Jones,
The Supreme Court seems to have ignored that remote possibility entirely. The Supreme Court framed in
Jones
those steps necessary to satisfy due process "when the government becomes aware prior to the taking that its attempt at notice has failed The question presented is whether such knowledge on the government’s part is a ‘circumstance and condition’ that varies the 'notice required.’ ”
Jones,
. Our holding would be different, however, had the first-class mail notices been returned undelivered,
Nichol v. Howard,
. The type of action involved in a case serves as a distinguishing feature in our prior case law. We approved the use of first-class mail in other types of actions. In a wage garnishment action, we noted:
*204 Although the governmental action in this case clearly threatened a constitutionally protected property interest of Mr. Ruby, we conclude that service of the notice by ordinary mail was sufficient. We note that there was nothing to suggest that Mr. Ruby was a transient individual, or that the address given by Mrs. Ruby was not correct. The court mailed the notice of default to that address in January, 1985, and it was not returned. Similarly, the court mailed a copy of the final judgment on April 18, and it was not returned.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Ruby,
. The amici, however, had they been arguing the case, apparently would have acknowledged that personal service is the only method of notice delivery which would address Griffin's concerns, stating that “this Court should now hold that Maryland due process requires personal service in mortgage foreclosure actiоns.” Brief of Public Justice Center et al. as Amici Curiae For Appellant at 33.
. If first-class mail is undeliverable, it is returned to the sender. At which point, the sender knows that notice was not received. By contrast, the posting of the property gives the sender no feedback regarding the receipt of notice. Requiring the posting of the property in addition to the current mailing requirements would not give the sender any more certainty that notice was, or was not, received by the intended recipient. Thus, if we were to adopt Griffin’s reasoning that Jones imposes a duty on the Trustees in a dual mailing scheme to take additional action after the certified mail notice is returned "unclaimed,” that duty would be no more satisfied by posting than by sending first-class mail.
. Because of the procedural default, the property owner in
Nelson v. City of New York
was also deprived of the proceeds of the sale in excess of the amount owed.
Nelson v. City of New York,
.
See Turner v. Blackburn,
. The damage to the property interest at stake under Maryland foreclosure law is particularly irreversible because Maryland law does not provide a statutory right of redemption.
. This efficiency has the potential to benefit all parties in a foreclosure. Any additional costs in administering foreclosures would likely be borne eventually by the defaulting mortgagor.
See Udall v. T.D. Escrow Services, Inc.,
The amici suggest that we attempt to offset the cost of requiring personal service in foreclosure actions by reducing the number of times notice is required to be published in a newspaper. Brief of Public Justice Center et al. as Amici Curiae For Appellant at 26 n. 86. This is precisely the type of policy tradeoff considerations that are ill-suited for the judiciary to determine in a single case. The amici, ironically, rely on file Maryland Homeownership Preservation Task Force Final Report for support for the assertion that the current number of times notice must be published could be reduced safely. That document, however, was drafted to assist the Legislative and Executive branches in evaluating the mortgage foreclosure problem and balancing the various policy considerations during especially the 2008 legislative session.
. Our deference to the Legislative and Executive branches is even more critical at this juncture because the scope of the mortgage foreclosure problem most likely requires a comprehensive solution, one outside of this Court's authority or institutional competence to craft in a single case. The amici and the Homeownership Preservation Task Force Final Report note the various factors that contributed to the rise in mortgage foreclosures: reckless or even predatory lending, fluctuating interest rates, falling home prices, ill-timed rate resets in adjustable rate mortgages, and lacking oversight and regulation of loan origination practices. Brief of Public Justice Center et al. as Amici Curiae For Appellant at 1-12; Md. Homeownership Preservation Task Force, Final Report 7-12, available at http://www.dllr.state.md.us/whatsnews/task forcereport.pdf (last visited 1 February 2008). We are not capable of fixing a problem with so many causes outside the Court’s limited judicial realm in the present case. Although policy adjustments may be needed, they are best created as part of a comprehensive solution so that the various components of such a solution may work in concert.
. We, however, will offer an editing note to the Task Force Final Report so that it may be more helpful to policymakers. Footnote 33
*215
states, as a citation,
“Jones v. Flowers,
