Maryland Code § CL-24-403

Section CL-24-403
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) Except as provided by court order, an owner shall:
(1) Assist and cooperate with the receiver in administering the
receivership and discharging the receiver's duties;
(2) Preserve and turn over to the receiver all receivership property in
the owner's possession, custody, or control, including all depository and investment
accounts;
(3) Identify and turn over all records and other information relating
to receivership property, including all passwords, keys, alarm codes, authorizations,
or other information needed to obtain or maintain access to or control of receivership
property;
(4) Make available and turn over to the receiver the records and
information in the owner's possession, custody, or control, including all financial
records, accounting records, bank statements, leases, and contracts;
(5) After being issued a subpoena, submit to examination by the
receiver that is under oath regarding the acts, conduct, property, liabilities, and
financial condition of the owner or any matter relating to receivership property or the
receivership;
(6) Refrain from entering the receivership property at any time
without the prior express written consent of the receiver;

(7) Refrain from interfering with, obstructing, or preventing in any
way the receiver's actions regarding the receivership property; and
(8) Perform any duty imposed by court order, this title, or a law of
the State other than this title.
(b) If an owner is a person other than an individual, this section applies to:
(1) Any person acting in concert with the owner and the owner's
agents; and
(2) Each officer, director, manager, member, partner, trustee,
affiliate, subsidiary, or other person exercising or having the power to exercise control
over the affairs of the owner.
(c) If a person knowingly fails to perform a duty imposed by this section,
the court may:
(1) Award the receiver:
(i) Actual damages caused by the person's failure;
(ii) Reasonable attorney's fees; and
(iii) Costs; or
(2) Sanction the failure as civil contempt.

‹ Prev All Maryland sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.