Maryland Commercial Evictions: District Court Procedures
Understand the Maryland commercial eviction process. Discover why self-help is illegal and how Failure to Pay Rent and Breach of Lease actions work.
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While commercial landlords enjoy immense contractual freedom in Maryland, the state draws a hard line when it comes to removing a tenant: self-help evictions are illegal. All commercial evictions must proceed through the judicial system.
Maryland Commercial Eviction Steps in maryland
Review Lease Notice
Check the lease for specific cure periods required before declaring a default.
Provide Notice
Serve notice of default based strictly on the lease terms.
File Proceeding
File for repossession in District Court if the tenant fails to cure.
Judgment & Warrant
Obtain a judgment and file for a warrant of restitution.
Commercial Lockout
Coordinate with the sheriff to legally reclaim the premises.
The Prohibition of Self-Help
A commercial landlord may not independently re-enter the property, change the locks, seize the tenant's equipment, or terminate utilities to force a defaulting tenant out. Doing so leaves the landlord liable for massive civil damages, including the crippling of the tenant's business.
The landlord must obtain a court order (a Warrant of Restitution) and rely on the sheriff to execute the physical eviction.
Grounds for Eviction in District Court
Maryland offers three primary avenues for commercial eviction:
1. Failure to Pay Rent
The most common eviction action. Wait times and grace periods depend entirely on the lease. While residential law mandates a strict 10-day notice before filing, commercial landlords are bound by whatever "Notice and Right to Cure" period is defined in the lease. Once that notice period expires (often 3 to 10 days, depending on the contract), the landlord files a complaint in District Court.
2. Breach of Lease
If the tenant violates a non-monetary clause-such as unauthorized subletting, improper use of the space, or failing to maintain required insurance-the landlord can file a Breach of Lease action.
- The landlord must issue a notice granting the tenant an opportunity to cure the breach, as specified in the lease document (often 30 days).
- If the tenant fails to cure, the landlord files in court. The court must determine that the breach is "substantial" and warrants lease termination.
3. Tenant Holding Over
If a commercial lease expires and the tenant refuses to vacate, the landlord can file a Tenant Holding Over action. To succeed, the landlord must prove they provided the required written notice to vacate prior to the lease expiration (the required notice period is dictated by the lease, or state law if the lease is silent).
Right of Redemption
Similar to residential tenants, commercial tenants facing a "Failure to Pay Rent" eviction generally have a right of redemption-meaning they can pay all owed rent, late fees, and court costs prior to the sheriff's arrival to cancel the eviction. However, if the landlord has secured three prior judgments against the tenant for unpaid rent within the last 12 months, the tenant loses this right of redemption.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, payments, and compliance document dates - making it easy to stay compliant with Maryland regulations.
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