STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Appellant, Sharon McKlveen (“McKlveen”), appeals from an order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County granting the motion of appellee, Monika Courts Condominium (“Monika Courts”), to strike her jury demand and transferring her case to the District Court for Prince George’s County. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the circuit court’s ruling.
I. Initiation of Legal Action
In March 2011, Monika Courts filed a complaint in the District Court of Maryland for Prince George’s County against McKlveen, the owner of a Monika Courts condominium unit. Monika Courts alleged that McKlveen owed unpaid assessments and claimed damages of $3,219.17, plus interest of $127.00 and attorney’s fees of $724.79, for a total of $4,070.96. McKlveen was served on May 12, 2011, and filed a Notice of Intention to Defend on May 27.
McKlveen also filed a counterclaim against Monika Courts on June 6. She asserted that she had made the requisite payments to Monika Courts and that it had failed to credit her for those payments. She claimed that Monika Courts’ debt collection action amounted to violations of two Maryland statutes: the Maryland Consumer Protection Act, Md.Code (1975, 2005 RepLVol.), Commercial Law Article (“CL”), § 13-301 el seq., and the Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act, CL § 14-201 el seq. McKlveen alleged damages for each count of $11,000 and $15,000, respectively, for a total of $26,000. Finally, McKlveen also requested a jury trial.
Following McKlveen’s jury trial request, the district court transferred the case to the circuit court. Subsequently, Monika Courts filed a Motion to Dismiss Counter-Plaintiffs Counterclaim, or in the Alternative to Strike Counter-Plaintiffs Jury Demand. Monika Courts argued that Md.Code (1973, 2006 RepLVol.), Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJP”), § 4-405 gave the district court exclusive jurisdiction over its small claim action against McKlveen. It claimed that McKlveen “improperly attempted to divest the [district [cjourt of jurisdiction over the original small claims collection case” by filing a $26,000 counterclaim that “exceed[ed] the jurisdiction of the small claims court,” in violation of Md. Rule 3-331©.
II. Circuit Court Hearing and Opinion
Pursuant to the request of both parties, the circuit court held a hearing on September 29, 2011.
The court first considered McDermott v. BB & T Bankcard Corp.,
Finally, the circuit judge also pointed to three reasons for not considering damages asserted in a counterclaim when determining the amount in controversy. First, relying only on the complaint for the amount in controversy provides a “quick rule of thumb” that allows for “simplicity, clarity and ease of administration in the Maryland courts.” Second, giving defendants the ability to determine the amount in controversy “would greatly expand the number of cases entitled to trial by jury,” which is “contrary to the due regard for the district court’s jurisdiction and authority.” Finally, as master of the complaint, a plaintiff should be permitted to set or even reduce the value of a claim so as to “take advantage of the time and money savings inherent in the district court’s expedited litigation.”
The court ordered that the demand for a jury trial be stricken and remanded the case to the district court. McKlveen timely filed a Notice of Appeal on October 27, 2011.
QUESTION PRESENTED
McKlveen presents the following issue for resolution:
Should a counterclaim be considered in determining whether the amount in controversy entitles a party to trial by jury?
We answer this question in the negative and affirm the circuit court.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We review the trial court’s determination of legal questions or conclusions of law de novo. Tribbitt v. State,
II. Analysis
We respond to McKlveen’s three primary arguments, which focus on the meaning of “amount in controversy,” the right
A. Amount in Controversy
McKlveen first argues that “there is currently no controlling precedent in Maryland establishing that counterclaims are not to be considered in determining whether the amount in controversy entitles a party to a jury trial.” She also argues that although Maryland courts look to federal caselaw for guidance on procedural matters, federal cases that declined to consider the value of a counterclaim when computing the amount in controversy did so for reasons other than determining the mode of trial, such as removal and diversity jurisdiction. In response, Monika Courts relies on this Court’s decision in McDermott,
This Court has said in McDermott that “counterclaims should not be considered in determining whether the amount in controversy requirement is satisfied.” Id. Although both McKlveen and the circuit court interpret McDermott’s holding as dicta, we disagree and find it to be a sound reflection of the state of the law. “When a question of law is raised properly by the issues in a case and the [cjourt supplies a deliberate expression of its opinion upon that question, such opinion is not to be regarded as obiter dictum, although the final judgment in the case may be rooted in another point also raised by the record.” Schmidt v. Prince George’s Hosp.,
McDerm,ott required the Court to consider whether the value of a counterclaim counted towards the amount in controversy for jury trial purposes. In concluding that it did not, the Court made a decision about counterclaims generally, not just the specific counterclaim improperly filed by the defendants in McDermott. The sole difference between the counterclaim in McDermott and this case is timing. The McDermott defendants filed their counterclaim after the case was transferred from the district court to the circuit court, while McKlveen filed her counterclaim before the case was transferred.
Even assuming that the holding in McDermott is mere dicta and does not control, there is ample support for the proposition that the value of the amount in controversy depends solely on the plaintiffs complaint. First, Maryland caselaw strongly indicates that the value of the amount in controversy is drawn only from “the demand in the pleading.” See Purvis v. Forrest Street Apartments,
The amount in controversy therefore depends on what is alleged in the plaintiffs complaint. In this case, the amount in controversy amounts to $4,070.96, or the damages, fees, and interest that Monika Courts pleaded in its complaint. Because this amount does not exceed $15,000, neither Monika Courts nor McKlveen meets the requirements for requesting a jury trial.
III. Common Law Jury Trial Right
McKlveen argues that she “has a fundamental right as a citizen of Maryland to have the claims raised by her counterclaim determined by a jury.” She points to the Court of Appeals’ conclusion in Davis v. Slater,
One way in which the right has been modified is the establishment of a minimum amount in controversy for eligibility for a jury trial. The required amount has increased over time, from $5 in 1850 to $15,000 today. See Art. 5; Art. 23; 2010 Md. Laws, Chap. 480 (raising amount in controversy from $10,000 to $15,000); Davis,
The distinction may be best illustrated by comparing this case with the facts of Davis. In that case, the parties had originally and properly made a demand for a jury trial, with an initial pleading claiming an amount in controversy of $25,000.
We therefore find that McKlveen’s claim that she has a “fundamental right as a citizen of Maryland to have the claims raised by her counterclaim determined by a jury” overstates her right to a jury trial.
IV. Stay of the District Court Action
Finally, McKlveen takes issue with the fact that a district court judge may—but not must—grant a stay in the district court in response to the filing of a related circuit court proceeding.
Md. Rule 3—331(f) permits a district court to grant a stay of an action when a counterclaim exceeds the jurisdiction of the district court. McKlveen is not satisfied with the permissive phrasing of the rule and argues that without the guarantee of a stay, a party that files an action in the
We note, however, that McKlveen’s claims on their own, absent the jury demand, do not appear to exceed the jurisdiction of the district court. The district court has exclusive jurisdiction over “[a]n action in contract or tort, if the debt or damages claimed do not exceed $30,000 exclusive of prejudgment or postjudgment interest, costs, and attorney’s fees if attorney’s fees are recoverable by law or contract.” CJP § 4-401(a). Monika Courts claimed a principal debt of $3,219.17, and McKlveen counterclaimed for $26,000, amounting to a total of $29,219.17 in alleged damages—less than the $80,000 jurisdictional limit of the district court. As far as Md. Rule 3-331(f) is concerned, McKlveen would be ineligible for the stay whose availability she questions. The relief she seeks would more appropriately be obtained under Md. Rule 3-508(a),
As a general matter, a broad reading of the permissive “may” in Rules 3-331(f) and 3-508(a) would go far in appeasing anxious litigants like McKlveen that a district court case would not march forward while a circuit court case on the same issue was pending. When faced with a request for a stay under Rule 3-331(f) or a motion for a continuance under Rule 3-508(a), when the amount of the counterclaim does not exceed the jurisdictional amount of the district court, and the threat of res judicata is genuine, district courts should readily consider and grant the sought-after relief.
Moreover, even in the absence of a stay, we are not convinced that in this case res judicata would apply and bar McKlveen’s counterclaim were she to pursue a separate action in the circuit court. See Rowland v. Harrison,
Monika Courts filed a breach of contract claim against McKlveen, for her alleged failure to pay assessments she owed under the condominium by-laws. McKlveen did not use her counterclaims to dispute the existence of the debt; rather, she raised issues that related to the method in which the debt was collected. Her claims under the Maryland Consumer Protection Act and the Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act both concern the collection, not the existence, of debts. See CL § 13-303(5) (prohibiting unfair or deceptive trade practices in the collection of consumer debts); CL § 14-202 (prohibiting various methods, such as the use or threat of
For all of these reasons we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. Md. Rule 3-331(1) provides:
A party may not file a counterclaim or cross-claim that exceeds the monetary jurisdiction of the court, but the court, on motion of a party having such a claim and for good cause shown, may grant a stay of the action against that party for a period and on the terms it deems proper to permit the party to commence an action in the circuit court on that claim.
. No transcript from that hearing is contained in the record.
. The circuit court interpreted this language as dicta because the counterclaim a1 issue in McDermott was filed after the case had been transferred to the circuit court. McDermott,
. Although an order striking a jury trial demand is ordinarily deemed interlocutory and not immediately appealable, Old Cedar Dev. Corp. v. Parker,
. See generally Caterpillar, Inc. v. Williams,
. These federal authorities address the amount in controversy for jurisdictional purposes. Because the Seventh Amendment to the U.S. Constitution preserves the right to jury trial in federal court civil cases when the amount in controversy is only $20 or more, there is no similar wealth of federal authority on the precise issue before us.
. Art. 5(a) provides:
(1) That the Inhabitants of Maryland are entitled to the Common Law of England, and the trial by Jury, according to the course of that Law, and to the benefit of such of the English statutes as existed on the Fourth day of July, seventeen hundred and seventy-six; and which, by experience, have been found applicable to their local and other circumstances, and have been introduced, used and practiced by the Courts of Law or Equity; and also of all Acts of Assembly in force on the first day of June, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven; except such as may have since expired, or may be inconsistent with the provisions of this Constitution; subject, nevertheless, to the revision of, and amendment or repeal by, the Legislature of this State....
(2) Legislation may be enacted that limits the right to trial by jury in civil proceedings to those proceedings in which the amount in controversy exceeds $15,000.
. Art. 23 provides: "The right of trial by Jury of all issues of fact in civil proceedings in the several Courts of Law in this State, where the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $15,000, shall be inviolably preserved.”
. It is not clear that McKlveen can rely on a pre-July 4, 1776 common law right to jury trial on her counterclaim. The term "counterclaim” is a statutory creation. See 20 Am.Jur.2d Counterclaim, Recoupment, Etc. at § 1 (2005). It first appeared in Maryland in Young v. Twigg, 27 Md. 620 (1867), in the context of conflicting title claims on a piece of land. The term was first used in its modern sense in Ess-Arr Knitting Mills, Inc. v. Fischer,
. When the complaint in Davis was filed, a party could request a jury trial when the amount in controversy exceeded $10,000. See
. The Court of Appeals’ conclusion that a reduction in the amount in controversy does not remove jury trial eligibility mirrors the federal practice that ''[jjurisdiction, once established, cannot be destroyed by a subsequent change in events.” Klepper,
. Of course, McKlveen is not denied a jury trial on her counterclaim, if she pursues it as a separate action in the circuit court. She just cannot drag Monika Courts’ claim along with her.
. The Court of Appeals specifically reserved the question of “whether the entitlement to a jury trial exists in small claims cases.” Davis,
. To conclude otherwise would deprive Monika Courts of its right to pursue an action in the district court without a jury.
. The record does not indicate what, if anything, happened at the district court following the circuit court’s transfer of this case.
. Md. Rule 3-508(a) provides, that in a civil case in the district court: "On motion of any party or on its own initiative, the court may continue a trial or other proceeding as justice may require.”
. The elements of res judicata are recognized in Md. Rule 2-331 as well. Counterclaims that must be filed in response to a complaint are only those that are specifically required by statute or so interrelated with the claim that successful prosecution of a second action would nullify a first action. See Md. Rule 2-331(a); Rowland,
