Maryland Code § RP-14-126

Section RP-14-126
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(a) (1) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.
(2) "Emergency services" includes fire, rescue, and ambulance
services and a mobile crisis team as defined in § 10-1401 of the Health - General
Article.
(3) "Governing body" has the meaning stated in § 1-101 of the Local
Government Article.
(4) "Municipality" has the meaning stated in § 1-101 of the Local
Government Article.
(5) "Rental license" means any certificate, license, or permit required
to rent residential real property issued by a county or a municipality.
(6) (i) "Short-term rental unit" means a residential dwelling unit
or a portion of the unit used to provide housing for less than 31 consecutive days.
(ii) "Short-term rental unit" does not include a hotel or motel,
boarding house, group residential facility for students, fraternity or sorority house,
or similar housing.
(b) This section does not apply to a local law or ordinance governing:

(1) The installation and use of residential security alarm systems;
(2) The physical condition, sanitation, maintenance, or repair of real
property, including vacant buildings;
(3) Parking enforcement;
(4) Calls to law enforcement concerning social gatherings or
excessive noise that do not involve an offense set forth in the Criminal Law Article
and are:
(i) Made with the intent to harass another; or
(ii) Knowingly false, as a whole or in material part; or
(5) Short-term rental units.
(c) (1) The governing body of a county or a municipality may not enact
or enforce a local law or ordinance that:
(i) Establishes a threshold of requests to summon law
enforcement or emergency services to a residential property as grounds for
designating a property as a nuisance; or
(ii) Penalizes or authorizes a penalty against an operator, an
owner, an owner-occupant, or a tenant for:
1. The act of summoning law enforcement or
emergency services to a residential property; or
2. The actions of another individual to summon the
assistance of law enforcement or emergency services to a residential property.
(2) There is a presumption that a local law or ordinance relating to
summoning law enforcement or emergency services to a residential property is
prohibited under paragraph (1)(ii) of this subsection if the local law or ordinance
authorizes or requires:
(i) The assessment of a monetary penalty or fine on an
operator, an owner, an owner-occupant, or a tenant;
(ii) The use of an action for repossession of a dwelling unit from
a tenant or termination or nonrenewal of a tenant's lease; or

(iii) The revocation, suspension, or nonrenewal of a rental
license.
(d) An operator, an owner, an owner-occupant, or a tenant may raise the
issue that a local law or ordinance is prohibited under subsection (c) of this section:
(1) As a defense to an action to enforce the local law or ordinance; or
(2) As an affirmative claim for damages resulting from the
enforcement of the law or ordinance.
(e) If in any proceeding the court finds in favor of the operator, owner,
owner-occupant, or tenant, the court may enter a judgment against the county or
municipality attempting to enforce the prohibited local law or ordinance and award
the operator, owner, owner-occupant, or tenant:
(1) Reasonable damages;
(2) Reasonable attorney's fees;
(3) Court costs;
(4) Reinstatement of a rental license; and
(5) Other relief as deemed appropriate by the court.

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