Quanta Brownlee, et al., v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co. et al., Misc. No. 1,
September Term 2017. Opinion by Hotten, J.
CERTIFIED QUESTION OF LAW – PUBLIC POLICY – INSURANCE
LIABLILITY
The Court of Appeals of Maryland answered a certified question posed before it by the
United States District Court for the District of Maryland in the negative. In applying the
rule of lex loci contractus with respect to an insurance contract made in Georgia, the Court
of Appeals determined that application of Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution
exclusion clause in an insurance policy issued by the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company
to the Salvation Army as excluding coverage for bodily injuries resulting from the ingestion
of lead-based paint does not violate Maryland public policy.
United States District Court for the District of
Maryland
Case No. Civil No. JFM-16-3177 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
Argued: September 12, 2017
OF MARYLAND
Misc. No. 1
September Term, 2017
__________________________________
QUANTA BROWNLEE, ET AL.
v.
LIBERTY MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE CO. ET AL.
__________________________________
Barbera, C.J.,
Greene,
Adkins,
McDonald,
Watts,
Hotten,
Getty,
JJ.
__________________________________
Opinion by Hotten, J.
Watts, J., dissents.
__________________________________
Filed: December 18, 2017
This Court has been asked to answer a certified question of law by the United States
District Court for the District of Maryland. The Maryland Uniform Certification of
Questions of Law Act, Maryland Code, §§ 12-601, 12-613 of the Courts and Judicial
Proceedings Article (“CJ”) empowers this Court to “answer a question of law certified to
it by a court of the United States…if the answer may be determinative of an issue in a
pending litigation in the certifying court and there is no controlling appellate decision,
constitutional provision, or statute of this State.” CJ § 12-603.
The United States District Court for the District of Maryland has asked us to answer
the following question:
Would application of Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution
exclusion contained in the insurance policy issued by Liberty Mutual
Insurance Company to the Salvation Army as excluding coverage for bodily
injuries resulting from the ingestion of lead-based paint violate Maryland
public policy?
We answer this question in the negative. For reasons to be explained, we hold that
application of Georgia law concerning the pollution exclusion in the policy under the
principle of lex loci contractus does not violate Maryland public policy.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1
1
These facts are adopted from the factual allegations set forth in Appellants’ and
Appellees’ briefs.
Quanta Brownlee, Jamal Brownlee, Shakeira Jones, Daquane2 Jones, and
De’Aunttae Jones (collectively “Appellants”) were exposed to lead-based paint at a
property, owned by the Salvation Army, located at 1114 North Calvert Street in Baltimore
City, Maryland.
In 1995, Appellants Quanta Brownlee and Jamal Brownlee resided at the property,
which contained deteriorated lead-based paint. Appellants sustained permanent brain
damage and elevated blood lead levels as a result of the exposure to lead-based paint. In
2001, Shakeira Jones, Daquane Jones, and De’Aunttae Jones also resided at the property.
Shakeira Jones, Daquane Jones, and De’Aunttae Jones also sustained permanent brain
damage and elevated blood lead levels as a result of the exposure to lead-based paint.
Appellants named the Salvation Army as a defendant in their lead-based paint
related tort claims in a complaint that is now pending in the United States District Court
for the District of Maryland.3 In addition to alleging that there was no insurance available
in connection with Appellants’ claim, the Salvation Army asserted that it was immune from
liability on charitable immunity grounds, unless and until Liberty Mutual indemnified it as
responsible for Appellants’ injuries and damages. The parties do not dispute that Liberty
Mutual issued comprehensive general liability insurance policies (“the Liberty Mutual
2
In Appellants’ brief, Daquane Jones’ name is spelled inconsistently, sometimes
being referenced as Dequane Jones. The remainder of this Opinion will reference the
Appellant as Daquane Jones.
3
Appellants brought their action in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Liberty
Mutual removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Maryland.
2
insurance policies”) to the Salvation Army, or that these policies were purchased in
Georgia, and were effective from October 1, 1993 until October 1, 2001.
Notably, the policies do not include lead-based paint exclusion provisions, but the
policies do include pollution exclusion provisions. The pollution exclusion provision is
written as such:
This insurance does not apply to:
(f) Pollution
(1) “Bodily injury” or “property damage” arising out of the
actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration,
release or escape of pollutants:
(a) At or from any premises, site or location which is or was at
any time owned or occupied by, or rented or loaned to any insured ….
Complaint, Exhibit 4 at 82. “Pollutants” are defined in each of the Liberty Mutual insurance
policies as “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke,
vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemical or waste.” Id. at 83.
Appellants seek affirmation from this Court that Liberty Mutual is obligated to
indemnify the Salvation Army and defend against claims brought by the Appellants.
Appellee Liberty Mutual asserts that it is under no obligation to indemnify and defend
Appellee Salvation Army because: (1) the Liberty Mutual insurance policies were formed
in Georgia, thus implicating the legal principle of lex loci contractus i.e., the law governing
the contracts is the law of the place where the contract is formed, and (2) pursuant to
Georgia law, the pollution exclusion provision in the insurance policies excluded coverage
for bodily injuries resulting from exposure to lead-based paint.
3
The Supreme Court of Georgia has held that bodily injuries allegedly resulting from
the ingestion of lead-based paint are within the pollution exclusion. See Georgia Farm
Bureau of Mut. Ins. Co. v. Smith, 298 Ga. 716, 784 S.E.2d 422 (2016). The language of the
pollution exclusion clause in Georgia Farm is identical to the language of the pollution
exclusion clause in the Liberty Mutual insurance policies.
Liberty Mutual has moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that Maryland
courts follow the doctrine of lex loci contractus in choosing the applicable law,
Cunningham v. Feinberg, 441 Md. 310, 326, 107 A.3d 1194, 1204 (2015); Allstate Ins. Co.
v Hart, 327 Md. 526, 529, 611 A.2d 100, 101 (1992) and that, under Georgia law, the
insurance policy does not cover claims for lead-based paint poisoning. To the contrary,
Appellants contended in the federal district court that Maryland courts would not apply
Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution exclusion clause because it violates Maryland’s
public policy. The United States District Court for the District of Maryland asks us resolve
which law applies, so that the federal court may decide the merits on Liberty Mutual’s
Motion to Dismiss. This Court must answer whether application of Georgia’s decision in
Georgia Farm violate Maryland’s public policy.
DISCUSSION
I. Lex Loci Contractus
It is not in dispute that the doctrine of lex loci contractus is applicable here. Both
parties agree that lex loci contractus is the proper lens through which this Court should
analyze their claims. Maryland has long recognized the doctrine of lex loci contractus. See
4
De Sobry v. De Laistre, 2 H. & J. 191, 191 (1807) (applying the laws of the country where
the terms of the contract were created). When this Court applies lex loci contractus,
typically either the validity or enforceability of a contract is at issue. Cunningham, 411 Md.
at 327–28, 107 A.3d at 1205. The “doctrine requires that, when determining the
construction, validity, enforceability, or interpretation of a contract, we apply the law of
the jurisdiction where the contract was made.” Id. at 326, 107 A.3d at 1204. Therefore, the
substantive application of the law to the contract between the parties is subject to the
enforcement of the jurisdiction where the contract was formed. Id.
The rule of lex loci contractus, however, has a narrow exception. Maryland law
still governs when a contractual provision is contrary to a strong Maryland public policy.
“Nevertheless, for Maryland public policy to override the lex loci contractus rule, the
public policy must be very strong and not merely a situation in which Maryland law is
different from the law of another jurisdiction.” Hart, 327 Md. at 530, 611 A.2d at 102. See
Lab. Corp. of Am. v. Hood, 395 Md. 608, 620, 911 A.2d 841, 848 (2006) (opining that the
lex loci contractus principle is “not inflexible” and that it will not govern a contract
provision that is against Maryland public policy) (internal citations omitted); Cunningham,
441 Md. at 337, 107 A.3d at 1211 (explaining that this Court has “long recognized an
exception to the application of lex loci contractus: we refuse to apply the doctrine when
doing so would be ‘contrary to a strong public policy of this State[ ]’”) (quoting Am.
Motorists Ins. Co. v. ARTRA Grp., Inc., 338 Md. 560, 573, 659 A.2d 1295, 1301 (1995));
Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. G.C. Zarnas & Co., 304 Md. 183, 188–89, 498 A.2d 605, 608
5
(1985) (recognizing the choice of law rule which has been consistently recognized by this
Court, “lex loci contractus does not apply to a contract provision which is against Maryland
public policy[ ]”). Thus, absent a determination that Georgia’s law violates a strong
Maryland public policy, Georgia’s law applies.
II. Authority on Pollution Exclusion Clauses
Both Appellants and Appellees agree that, under Georgia case law, the Liberty
Mutual insurance policies in question do not cover claims for lead-based paint poisoning.
Because the Liberty Mutual insurance policies were issued in Georgia, and the lex loci
contractus doctrine is applicable, Georgia’s law must be examined first. The Supreme
Court of Georgia examined a pollution exclusion provision using identical language as the
insurance contract currently before this Court. Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 717, 784 S.E.2d
at 423. See Id. (defining a “pollutant” as “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or
contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste[ ]”).
In Georgia Farm, the plaintiff, a residential tenant, sued her landlord for injuries
sustained when plaintiff’s daughter allegedly ingested lead from deteriorating lead-based
paint in the rented house. Id. The landlord insured the residence through a general
commercial liability insurance policy issued by Georgia Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance
Company (“Georgia Farm”). Following an insurance claim initiated by the landlord,
Georgia Farm filed a declaratory judgment action against Plaintiff and the landlord.
Georgia Farm argued that the daughter’s lead-based poisoning injuries were not covered
by the policy because of a pollution exclusion provision, thus discharging Georgia Farm’s
6
obligation to defend or indemnify the landlord in the lawsuit. The Supreme Court of
Georgia held that lead present in paint “unambiguously qualifies as a pollutant and that the
plain language of the policy’s pollution exclusion clause” removed plaintiff’s claims
against her landlord from coverage. Id. at 721, 784 S.E.2d at 426. The Georgia Farm Court
discussed this Court’s analysis in Sullins v. Allstate Ins. Co. when reversing the Court of
Appeals of Georgia’s determination that Georgia Farm had a duty to defend the landlord. 4
Sullins v. Allstate Ins. Co, 340 Md. 503, 667 A.2d 617 (1995); Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. St
716, S.E.2d at 422 (2016); Smith v. Georgia Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 331 Ga. App. 780,
786, 771 S.E.2d 452, 457 (2015), cert. granted (July 6, 2015), rev’d, 298 Ga. 716, 784
S.E.2d 422 (2016), and vacated, 337 Ga. App. 300, 789 S.E.2d 193 (2016).
In Sullins, we reviewed an insurance policy’s pollution exclusion clause. 340 Md.
at 509, 667 A.2d at 620. The insurance policy language at issue in Sullins differed from the
language in Appellants’ insurance policies. In Sullins, the Allstate Insurance Company
(“Allstate”) issued a Deluxe Homeowners Policy to Reverend D. Paul Sullins and Patricia
H. Sullins. Id. at 506–07, 667 A.2d at 618. In Sullins’ policy, under the heading “Losses
We Do Not Cover,” the policy contained the following language:
We do not cover bodily injury or property damage which results in any
manner from the discharge, dispersal, release, or escape of:
a) vapors, fumes, acids, toxic chemicals, toxic liquids or toxic gasses;
b) waste materials or other irritants, contaminants or pollutants.
4
The Court of Appeals of Georgia is Georgia’s intermediate appellate court.
WELCOME TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF GEORGIA, http://www.gaappeals.us/
(https://perma.cc/S6FD-LS43) (last visited December 15, 2017).
7
Id. We determined that “contaminants” and “pollutants” are susceptible to two different
interpretations by a lay person. Id. at 509, 667 A.2d at 620. One interpretation of the two
terms could reasonably encompass lead-based paint, while another could refer to
environmental contaminants or pollutants. Id. However, we noted that “[to] be sure that
lead paint poisoning claims were excluded from coverage, [the insurer] could have
included a provision…explicitly excluding such claims.” Id. at 518 n.3, 667 A.2d at 624
n.3. The Sullins Court ruled that the policy language was ambiguous and did not remove
the insurer’s duty to defend the lead-based paint poisoning action. Id. at 518, 667 A.2d at
624.
Georgia’s intermediate appellate court, the Georgia Court of Appeals, cited Sullins
for the proposition that if an insurer “had intended to exclude injuries caused by lead-based
paint from coverage in the policy at issue in this case it was required, as the insurer that
drafted the policy, to specifically exclude lead-based paint injuries from coverage.” Smith,
331 Ga. App. at 785, 771 S.E.2d at 456 (footnote omitted) (internal citations omitted).
Georgia’s intermediate appellate court went on to explain that, as in Sullins, “an insured
could reasonably have understood the provision at issue to exclude coverage for injury
caused by certain forms of industrial pollution, but not coverage for injury allegedly caused
by the presence of leaded materials in a private residence.” Id. However, the Supreme Court
of Georgia disagreed that the insurance policy terms at issue here created the same
ambiguities. Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 716, 784 S.E.2d at 423. Like in Sullins, the Georgia
Farm court considered that if “a policy provision is susceptible to more than one meaning,
even if each meaning is logical and reasonable, the provision is ambiguous and….will be
8
construed strictly against the insurer/drafter and in favor of the insured.” Georgia Farm,
298 Ga. at 719, 784 S.E.2d at 424–25 (internal citations omitted). The Georgia Farm court
determined that the pollution exclusion clause was unambiguous and held that the “policy
contains an absolute pollution exclusion clause which precludes recovery for bodily injury
or property damage resulting from exposure to any pollutant.” Id. at 719, 784 S.E.2d at
425.
Our decision in Sullins, and Georgia’s application of the pollution exclusion clause
in Georgia Farm can coexist. The law of our State and Georgia’s law are not so contrary
because the insurance policy terms at issue here, and the terms at issue in Sullins, are
different. Sullins required us to interpret the pollution exclusion clause because the terms
were undefined and ambiguous, and thus susceptible to multiple interpretations. That is not
the case here. The Liberty Mutual insurance policies define ‘Pollutants’ as “any solid,
liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes,
acids, alkalis, chemical or waste.” See supra Complaint, Exhibit 4 at 83. The Sullins Court
took issue with ascertaining the intention of the parties because the parties did not define
the pollution exclusion’s terms as they have here. Sullins, 340 Md. 503 at 514, 667 A.2d at
622. The Sullins Court was then forced to analyze the historical context and the parties’
intentions to determine the contract’s meaning. Id. However, lex loci contractus does not
require us to interpret the terms of the Liberty Mutual insurance policies, or determine the
intent of the parties, because Georgia’s Court already has determined that is not a relevant
line of analysis here. Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 720, 784 S.E.2d at 425.
9
The Sullins Court was required to perform a full review of pollution exclusion clause
history to ascertain the parties’ intentions. Similarly to the Supreme Court of Georgia, we
noted that insurance exclusion clauses in their infancy generally applied to accidental
contamination. Sullins, 340 Md. at 513–15, 667 A.2d at 622–23; Georgia Farm, 298 Ga.
at 719, 784 S.E.2d at 425. Both Sullins and Georgia Farm acknowledged that in the mid-
1980s, the insurance industry adopted the “absolute pollution exclusion,” which denied
coverage for bodily injury arising from pollutants. Sullins, 340 Md. at 514–15, 667 A.2d
at 622; Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 719, 784 S.E.2d at 425. At this point, the discussion in
Georgia Farm and Sullins diverges. Sullins decided that the insurance industry’s absolute
pollution exclusion, which denied coverage for “bodily injury or property damage arising
out of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, release, or escape of pollutants” and
defined “pollutant” as “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant
including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalies, chemicals and waste[,]” were
environmental terms of art, and thus the parties intended environmental hazards, and not
lead-based paint, to be excluded. Sullins, 340 Md. at 515, 667 A.2d at 622.
Georgia Farm relied on its past decision in Reed v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 284 Ga.
286 667 S.E.2d 90 (2008), for the proposition that the Court should not “adopt an approach
which considered the purpose and historical evolution of pollution exclusions before
looking to the plain language of the clause itself.” Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 720, 784
S.E.2d at 425. In Reed, the plaintiff claimed that she was poisoned by the release of carbon
monoxide inside her rental home. Reed, 284 Ga. at 288, 667 S.E.2d at 92. The insurance
policy’s definition of “pollutant” in Reed is the same definition provided for in Georgia
10
Farm, and the same definition included in the Liberty Mutual insurance policies at issue
here. The Supreme Court of Georgia read that the plain language of the “pollutant”
definition was “matter, in any state, acting as an ‘irritant or contaminant[.]’” Georgia Farm,
298 Ga. at 720, 784 S.E.2d at 425 (quoting Reed, 284 Ga. at 288, 667 S.E.2d at 92).
Specifically, the Court noted that focusing on extrinsic sources of interpretation is what
leads to the ambiguity in the pollution exclusion clause where none exists. Georgia Farm,
298 Ga. at 721, 784 S.E.2d at 426.
Maryland Courts similarly first apply the terms of the insurance contract itself. Litz
v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 346 Md. 217, 224, 695 A.2d 566, 569 (1997) (quoting
Bausch & Lomb v. Utica Mutual, 330 Md. 758, 779, 625 A.2d 1021, 1031 (1993). Then,
“[w]e construe insurance policies as a whole to determine the parties’ intentions.” Litz, 346
Md. at 224, 695 A.2d at 569 (internal citations omitted). The Georgia Farm court decided
not to interpret the insurance contract’s terms, and rather decided Georgia Farm on the
narrower grounds of applying the contract’s plain language. Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 720,
784 S.E.2d at 425. The Sullins Court was not afforded that luxury, because the term
“pollutant” was not defined in the parties’ contract. Had the term been defined, the Sullins
Court may not have examined the historical context and come to a different conclusion,
but that is not an issue for this Court to currently decide.
The case law of Maryland and Georgia on pollution exclusion clauses is not so
contrary to overcome lex loci contractus. Sullins required us to interpret the contract’s
language. We are not charged with such a task here. Rather, we are asked to answer the
question of whether Maryland’s current public policy is so contrary to Georgia’s decision
11
in Georgia Farm, which, even in light of our discussion in Sullins, is no. We have
consistently held “that the lex loci contractus principle is not inflexible” and thus, Georgia
Farm’s holding will apply to Appellants’ claims, unless the exception applies, because
such a result would violate Maryland’s public policy. Hood, 395 Md. at 620, 911 A.2d at
848. Because Georgia Farm did not interpret the terms that we determined had
environmental implications, the two cases are not so at odds to override Georgia’s law. To
interpret Sullins to mean that Maryland’s public policy strongly requires lead-based paint
exclusions to be explicitly and unambiguously identified, sufficient to overcome lex loci
contractus, would be inapposite to the express direction from the legislature and the
precedent of this Court. See Maryland Code, § 19-704(c) of the Insurance Article
(permitting insurers to include lead hazard coverage exclusions in insurance policies);
Sullins, 340 Md. at 518, 667 A.2d at 624 (opining that “conflicting interpretations of the
policy language in judicial opinions is not determinative[ ]”). For the lex loci contractus
doctrine to be set aside, Maryland’s public policy “must be very strong and not merely a
situation in which Maryland law is different from the law of another jurisdiction.”
Cunningham, 441 Md. at 337–38, 107 A.3d at 1211. For reasons to be explained,
Maryland’s public policy is not contrary to Georgia Farm, thus Georgia’s law applies.
III. Maryland’s Public Policy
Appellants contend that Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution exclusion
provision should not apply because it would violate Maryland’s public policy concerning
the protection of victims of childhood lead-based paint poisoning. This Court has long
12
recognized that declaration of the State’s public policy is the function of the legislative
branch of the government. Felder v. Butler, 292 Md. 174, 183, 438 A.2d 494, 499 (1981);
see Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Clark, 404 Md. 13, 36, 944 A.2d 1122, 1135
(2008) (commenting “[i]t is, after all, the General Assembly that sets the public policy of
the State….”); Rausch v. Allstate Ins. Co., 388 Md. 690, 715, n. 13, 882 A.2d 801, 816, n.
13 (2005) (explaining the General Assembly that “sets the public policy of the State,
especially economic and social policy[ ]”); Frey v. Frey, 298 Md. 552, 562, 471 A.2d 705,
710 (1984) (internal citations omitted) (opining that the “declaration of public policy is
normally the function of the legislature,” and to evaluate the public policy we look to
statutory provisions); Harrison v. Montgomery County Bd. of Educ., 295 Md. 442, 460,
456 A.2d 894, 903 (1983) (recognizing that the declaration of the public policy of
Maryland is normally the function of the General Assembly).
Demonstration of a strong public policy, sufficient to warrant an exception to
application of another jurisdiction’s law under lex loci contractus, is usually evidenced by
explicit legislative action. Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. G.C. Zarnas & Co., 304 Md. 183, 190,
498 A.2d 605, 608 (1985). Even though evidence of Maryland’s public policy may be
found through explicit legislative determinations, “explicit legislative language [is] not
required always in order to reach a conclusion that a Maryland Code provision represents
strong public policy. On occasion, we have given some weight to evolving public policy.”
Cunningham, 441 Md. at 340, 107 A.3d at 1213. We now turn to examine Maryland’s
lead-based paint and pollution exclusion initiatives to determine whether either of these are
13
currently evolving areas of public policy that would merit abandonment of the lex loci
contractus choice of law doctrine in this instance.
A. Maryland’s Public Policy Approach to Lead-Based Paint Abatement
Neither this Court, nor this State, is blind to the deleterious and devastating effects
of childhood lead-based paint poisoning. Appellants thoroughly discuss the historical,
legislative, judicial, and scientific-related initiatives concerning the safety and protection
of victims of lead-based paint poisoning. Appellants assert Maryland’s response to the
public health issue is evidence of “strong and steadfast” public policy. However,
Appellants misunderstand that a response to a public health issue does not affirmatively
answer the very narrow question posed before us: whether Georgia’s application of
pollution exclusion clauses clearly violates Maryland’s public policy.
Historically, Maryland has developed a series of legislative policies aimed at
protecting Maryland’s children against the severe and permanent effects of lead-based
paint poisoning by eradicating lead-based paint in homes. These legislative policies are
indicative of a statewide commitment to eliminating lead-based paint from homes. These
policies are not evolving toward requiring insurers to cover lead-based paint related claims.
Appellants’ contentions that Maryland’s steadfast and continued efforts to pass laws geared
towards removing lead-based paint from homes, do not necessarily translate into a
demonstration of a strong state public policy of barring a pollution exclusion provision
sufficient to override Georgia’s law.
14
Maryland has taken a strong approach in protecting children from poisoning by
lead-based paint containing substances5 through legislation aimed at abatement6 of lead-
based paint. Childhood lead-based paint poisoning has been a public issue of national
concern for the last fifty years. See Richard Rabin, Warnings Unheeded: A History of Child
Lead Poisoning, 79 Am. J. Pub. Health, 1668, 1668 (Dec. 1989). Beginning in the mid-
1920s, childhood lead-based paint poisoning gained broader recognition as a common
childhood disease, originally believed to be a condition solely stemming from lead-painted
surfaces in the home. Id. However, later research uncovered that major sources of lead-
based paint were also in “toys, furniture, porch railings, and window sills…” of many
5
A ‘Lead containing substance’ means:
(1) Any paint, plaster, or surface encapsulation material containing more than
0.50 percent lead by weight calculated as lead metal in the dried solid or more
than 0.7 milligrams lead per square centimeter as measured by an X-ray
fluorescence analyzer; or
(2) Such other standards consistent with an applicable federal definition as
the Department may set by regulation.
Maryland Code, § 6-1001(c) of the Environmental Article.
6
By statute, abatement is defined as follows:
(b) “Abatement” means a set of measures that eliminate or reduce lead-based
paint hazards in residential, public, or commercial buildings, bridges, or
other structures or superstructures in accordance with standards established
by the Department which may include:
(1) The removal of lead-based paint and lead-contaminated dust, the
containment or encapsulation of lead-based paint, the replacement or
demolition of lead-painted surfaces or fixtures, and the removal or covering
of lead-contaminated soil;
(2) All preparation, cleanup, disposal, and postabatement clearance testing
activities associated with these measures; and
(3) The renovation, repair, and painting of a lead-containing substance in a
residential, public, or commercial building built before 1978.
Maryland Code, § 6-1001(b) of the Environmental Article.
15
residences. Id. at 1669. Children, who typically exhibit hand-to-mouth activity, can ingest
either lead-based paint chips that have flaked, or lead dust that becomes present due to
normal wear and tear, home repair, or renovation. Jane E. Schukoske, Lead Paint and the
Warranty of Habitability in Pre-1950 Rental Housing: Maryland’s Lead Poisoning
Prevention Program Creates A Presumption of the Presence of Lead Paint, 4 U. Balt. J.
Envtl. L. 22, 29 (1994). Consumption of lead-based paint flakes or dust, even in small
amounts, may result in poisoning. Id. Permanent injuries caused by lead-based paint
poisoning include cognitive impairments, learning disabilities, and developmental delays.
Md. Gen. Assemb. Rep. of the Lead Paint Poison. Comm’n. at 2 (May 5, 1994). Often,
these permanent injuries that manifest during childhood subsequently impact a person’s
ability to function as an adult. Id.
In many ways, Maryland’s approach to abating lead-based paint began in Baltimore
City, which has been particularly devastated by lead-based paint poisoning. Commencing
in 1935, Baltimore City embarked on a series of steps to aid in the diagnoses and prevention
of childhood lead-based paint poisoning. See George W. Schucker, et. al., Prevention of
Lead Paint Poisoning Among Baltimore Children, 80 Pub. Health Rep. 969, 969 (Nov.
1965). At the first signs of large-scale lead-based paint poisoning in children, Baltimore
began offering free access to physicians and hospitals for determination of blood lead levels
in children. Id. By 1949, Baltimore City assigned a public health nurse to investigate lead-
based paint reports. Id. Baltimore initiated laboratory studies, through which patients’
homes were visited and paint samples were taken for testing. Id. Baltimore distributed
16
pamphlets and aired television and radio broadcasts, to inform the public of the dire
consequences and risks of childhood ingestion of lead-based paint. Id.
In 1951, Baltimore became the first city in the United States to prohibit the use of
lead-based paint through city regulation, which was later codified in Baltimore’s City
Code. Id.; Baltimore City Rev. Code, HEALTH, § 5-402; (City Code, 1976/83, art. 11,
§72.) (Ord. 99-548.) Even with this regulation, a series of surveys initiated in 1957 to assess
the prevalence of lead-based paint in Baltimore homes, revealed that between fifty-eight to
seventy percent of homes contained lead-based paint. Schucker, supra at 970. Although
Baltimore City was a pioneer in its response to the lead-based paint issue, children in
Baltimore City were at very high-risk for lead poisoning compared to the nation as a whole.
Joanne Pollak, The Lead-Based Paint Abatement Repair & Maintenance Study in
Baltimore: Historic Framework and Study Design, 6 J. Health Care L. & Pol’y 89, 92
(2002).
Recognizing a public health crisis, Maryland responded with legislation to abate the
frequency of poisoning in children by removing lead-based paint in homes. Although a
positive development, the General Assembly did not react to the lead-based paint issue
until twenty years after Baltimore City. In 1971, the General Assembly prohibited use of
lead based paint statewide on “any interior surfaces; on any exterior surfaces where
children may commonly be exposed; on any porch of any dwelling or….any article that is
intended for household use.” 1971 Md. Laws, Ch. 495; Maryland Code, § 6-301 of the
Environmental Article (“EN”) (1982, 2013 Repl. Vol.). The statewide prohibition of lead-
17
based paint was still in many ways a progressive step, with evidence suggesting that
Maryland was one of only four states that had statutorily prohibited lead-based paint use
by 1974.7 William F. Greer, Jr, Lead Paint Poisoning--Municipal, State, and Federal
Approaches, 7 Urb. L. Ann. 247, 256 (1974). It was not until 1978 that the United States
Consumer Products Safety Commission prohibited the use of lead in house paint
throughout the nation. 16 C.F.R. § 1303.1. Later codified in the United States Code,
Congress found that the Federal response to the national crisis was severely limited but
identified a national goal of eliminating lead-based paint hazards in housing. 42 U.S.C.A.
§ 4851. However, banning lead-based paint at the national, state, and local level did not by
itself eliminate the root of the issue: the stock of existing housing that still contained lead-
based paint. Pollak, supra at 91.
Maryland’s public policy reflects an effort to abate lead-based paint poisoning by
stopping its use in older buildings that contained lead-based paint. Maryland’s statutory
scheme creates incentives and compliance driven initiatives requiring homeowners,
namely landlords, to remove lead-based paint from their property. Regulatory programs
incentivize landlords to remove lead-based paint in residential properties, often by
assessing fines or civil damages for noncompliance. Jennifer Tiller, Easing Lead Paint
Laws: A Step in the Wrong Direction, 18 Harv. Envtl. L. Rev. 265, 268–69 (1994). Without
7
Cal. Civ. Code Ann. § 1942 (West 1954); La. Civ. Code Ann. art. 2694 (West
1954); Mont. Rev. Codes Ann. § 42-202 (1947); N.D. Cent. Code § 47-16-13 (1960); Okla.
Stat. Ann. tit. 41, § 32 (1954); S.D. Compiled Laws § 43-32-9 (1967). William F. Jr.
Greer, Lead Paint Poisoning--Municipal, State, and Federal Approaches, 7 Urb. L. Ann.
247, 256 n. 52 (1974).
18
the threat of civil liability, it would be in the landlord’s pecuniary interest to let society
bear the cost of childhood lead poisoning. Id. Since Maryland banned lead-based paint in
homes in 1971, the General Assembly has passed a series of laws with the purpose of
removing lead-based paint from homes, while ensuring that landlords are compliant with
state prescribed initiatives.
Maryland took another step to abate lead-based paint in homes by creating the Lead
Poisoning Prevention Program.8 See generally 1994 Maryland Laws Ch. 114 (H.B. 760);
EN §§ 6-802, 6-807. The purpose of the program is “to reduce the incidence of childhood
lead poisoning, while maintaining the stock of available affordable rental housing.” EN §
6-802. Through the program, landlords are required to register affected property.9 Property
owners then must satisfy certain risk reduction standards, and pass a test for lead-
8
The General Assembly of Maryland created the Accreditation of Lead Paint
Abatement Services. See generally LEAD PAINT ABATEMENT SERVICES—
ACCREDITATION, 1993 Maryland Laws Ch. 296 (H.B. 306); EN § 6-1004(b)(2). The
Lead Accreditation Fund was comprised of government funds or grants to assist with
the “development, establishment, administration, and education and enforcement activities
of the lead paint abatement services accreditation program[.]” Id.
9
Affected property, requiring registration is defined in section 6-801(b) as follows:
(b)(1) “Affected property” means:
(i) A property constructed before 1950 that contains at least one rental dwelling unit;
(ii) On and after January 1, 2015, a property constructed before 1978 that contains
at least one rental unit; or
(iii) Any residential rental property for which the owner makes an election under §
6-803(a)(2) of this subtitle.
(2) “Affected property” includes an individual rental dwelling unit within a multifamily
rental dwelling.
(3) “Affected property” does not include property exempted under § 6-803(b) of this
subtitle. Id. § 6-801.
19
contaminated dust provided that flaking paint has been removed or repainted on the exterior
and interior surfaces. Id. § 6-815. The property owner has to satisfy the statutorily
prescribed standards and pass the lead-contaminated dust test before each occupancy
turnover. Id. By statute, a State inspector must verify the property owner’s compliance with
the statute. Id. The Lead Poisoning Prevention Commission was tasked with measuring the
law’s ability to protect children from lead poisoning and lessen risks to responsible owners.
Id. § 6-810. See generally Schukoske, supra (discussing statutory nuances of the Lead
Poisoning Prevention Program).
The General Assembly further elucidated through § 19-704 of the Insurance Article
that that excluding lead-based paint as a pollutant does not run contrary to this State’s
public policy.10 1996 Maryland Laws Ch. 11 (H.B. 11); Maryland Code, § 19-704 of the
Insurance Article (“IN”). Section § 19-704(c) provides that “whenever an authorized
insurer issues or renews a policy for an affected property, the authorized insurer may
include in the policy a lead hazard coverage exclusion.” IN § 19-704(c). The statute’s
10
In 1994, as part of the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, the General Assembly
adopted §§ 734 through 737, Article 48A, of the Insurance Code. As originally enacted,
Md. Code Art. 48A, § 735(a) provided: “[n]otwithstanding subsection (f) of this section,
upon the inception or renewal of a policy, an insurer may provide for a lead hazard
exclusion with respect to a policy of insurance covering an affected property.” Md. Code
1957, Art. 48A, § 735(a). Section 19-704 was created through the Maryland 1996 Session
Laws following a recodification of the Insurance Article, but subsection (c) traces the
language in article 48A, § 735(a). See 1996 Maryland Laws Ch. 11 (H.B. 11) (explaining
“[t]his section is new language derived without substantive change from former Art. 48A,
§§ 734(e)(2) and 735(a) through (f)[ ]).
20
application to “affected properties,”11 similarly to the language in EN § 6-801 defined
supra note 9, primarily focuses on stock housing built prior to 1978 that may contain lead-
based paint. The General Assembly expressly indicated that insurers can exclude lead-
based paint related claims from insurance policies. Thus, the General Assembly had the
opportunity and means to consider lead-based paint related insurance issues. It then follows
that if the General Assembly considered the maximum of explicitly permitting insurers to
exclude coverage of lead-based paint claims, it cannot be contrary to the State’s public
policy to exclude lead-based paint claims pursuant to a pollution exclusion clause.
IN § 19-704(c) does not reference a duty for insurers to indemnify and defend lead-
based paint claims through a pollution exclusion clause. It does not reference pollutants at
all. Rather, it plainly states that insurers have the option to exclude coverage for lead-based
paint related claims. We should not read an interpretation into a statute that is
unambiguous. It is well established that “we neither add nor delete words to a clear and
11
Affected property, requiring registration is defined in section § 19-701 (b)(1) as
follows:
(b)(1)“Affected property” means:
(i) 1. a residential rental property constructed before 1950 that contains not more
than one rental dwelling unit; or
2. a residential rental property that contains not more than one rental dwelling unit
for which the owner makes an election under § 6-803(a)(2) of the Environment
Article; or
(ii) an individual rental dwelling unit within:
1. a residential rental property constructed before 1950 that contains more than one
rental dwelling unit; or
2. a residential rental property that contains more than one rental dwelling unit for
which the owner makes an election under § 6-803(a)(2) of the Environment Article.
(2) “Affected property” does not include property exempted under § 6-803(b) of the
Environment Article. IN § 19-701(b).
21
unambiguous statute to give it a meaning not reflected by the words that the General
Assembly used or engage in forced or subtle interpretation in an attempt to extend or limit
the statute’s meaning.” Bellard v. State, 452 Md. 467, 481 (2017). If the statute is
unambiguous, our legislative inquiry ends. Id. The statute unambiguously demonstrates
that removing lead-based paint claims from insurance policies is permissible. Further, the
General Assembly’s explicit dictation of the State’s public policy in IN § 19-704, a year
after this Court held that an insurer had a duty to defend a lead-based paint related injury
in Sullins, illustrates that the General Assembly is responsible for establishing public
policy. Sullins, 340 Md. at 518, 667 A.2d at 624. The statute’s application to “affected
property,” i.e. older homes that may contain lead-based paint, confirms our conclusion that
the General Assembly’s legislative goals are lead-based paint abatement and holding
landlords accountable to their tenants.
Laws passed after the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program began, and the General
Assembly specifically expressed that insurers could exclude lead-based paint related
claims, also worked toward stopping lead-based paint at its source and assisting landlords
in removing lead-based paint. Maryland created financial protection for tenants when a
landlord fails to make the premises safe and free of lead-based paint as required by the
Lead Poisoning Prevention Program. 1997 Maryland Laws Ch. 714 (H.B. 1068); Maryland
Code, § 8-211.1 of the Real Property Article (“RP”) provides that “if a landlord fails to
comply with the applicable risk reduction standard under § 6-815 or § 6-819 of the
Environment Article, the tenant may deposit the tenant’s rent in an escrow account….” RP
22
§ 8-211.1(a). Maryland also initiated the Lead Hazard Reduction Grant and Loan
Programs. 2005 Maryland Laws Ch. 26 (H.B. 11); Maryland Code, §§ 4-708, 4-709 of the
House and Community Development Article (“HS”). The purpose of these programs was
to “make grants and loans to owners of residential property or child care centers for
financing lead hazard reduction activities[.]” HS § 4-703. In conjunction with
implementing these programs, the General Assembly found that “lead poisoning harms the
health and well-being of children and pregnant women and causes substantial long-term
public costs for medical expenses and additional education[.]” HS § 4-702(3).
Maryland’s public policy on lead-based paint poisoning was designed to protect
victims of lead-based paint by working to thwart its existence in stock housing. The
General Assembly evidenced this policy through direct legislation banning lead-based
paint in homes, allowing insurers to remove coverage for lead-based paint related claims,
requiring homeowners to register properties that could be affected by lead-based paint,
protecting tenants’ financial interests who may be living in homes with lead-based paint,
funding loan and grant programs to remove lead-based paint from homes, and establishing
healthcare funds for victims of lead-based paint poisoning. Appellants are correct that the
overarching public policy in Maryland affords protection for victims of childhood lead-
based paint poisoning. However, Maryland’s public policy approach focused on
eradicating the source of lead-based paint and aiding victims’ health care needs, if
impacted. Georgia’s decision holding that lead-based paint is a pollutant, is not at odds
with Maryland’s public policy where our General Assembly has not directly indicated
23
otherwise, and the clear trend of Maryland’s public policy is to remove lead-based paint in
homes and provide health care for victims. Georgia Farm, 298 Ga. at 721, 784 S.E.2d at
426.
B. Maryland’s Public Policy on Contract Exclusion Provisions
Application of Georgia law under the lex loci contractus doctrine further does not
clearly offend Maryland’s public policy because the General Assembly has not expressly
dictated that lead-based paint cannot be excluded from insurance policies as pollutants, and
because pollution exclusion clauses are not an evolving area of public policy. In fact, the
General Assembly has explicitly expressed that insurers “may include in the policy a lead
hazard coverage exclusion.” IN § 19-704(c). Although Maryland has taken strong
initiatives requiring landlords to abate lead-based paint in housing, in those instances where
we have applied the lex loci contractus public policy exception, the legislature has
explicitly stated that the action was void or contrary to public policy. See, e.g. Bethlehem
Steel, 304 Md. at 190, 498 A.2d at 608 (deciding against application of lex loci contractus
for a construction contract executed in Pennsylvania as void against Maryland public
policy when the relevant statute “unequivocally told the Maryland judiciary that such a
clause ‘is void and unenforceable’ ... [and] in the same sentence of the statute, the General
Assembly expressly stated that such an indemnity provision ‘is against public policy[ ]’”).
See also Nat'l Glass, Inc. v. J.C. Penney Properties, Inc., 336 Md. 606, 614, 650 A.2d 246,
250 (1994) (holding that a Pennsylvania choice of law provision was void where a
mechanic’s lien statute contained a clause stating that contractual provisions made in
24
violation of the statute were “void as against public policy of this State.”) (citing Maryland
Code (1974, 1988 Repl. Vol.), RP §§ 9–101 et seq.).
As Appellees have highlighted, Appellants have not identified any Maryland
legislative action addressing lead-based paint as a pollutant in insurance policies. It
appears, no such legislation exists. A review of both Maryland’s legislative lead-based
paint and insurance exclusion initiatives does not reflect a current or evolving public policy
strong enough to overcome Georgia’s pollution exclusion law. Without a statement from
the General Assembly to the contrary, we cannot conclude that Georgia’s interpretation of
the pollution exclusion clause is clearly against Maryland’s public policy.
Despite Appellants’ contention, Clendenin Bros., Inc. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., is not
persuasive. 390 Md. 449, 889 A.2d 387 (2006). Appellants rely on Clendenin to argue that
the pollution exclusion in the Liberty Mutual insurance policies is invalid. In Clendenin,
we examined a pollution exclusion provision in the United States Fire Insurance
Company’s policy and found the provision to be ambiguous. Id. Following the Maryland
rules of construction, we concluded that the provision did not exclude coverage for bodily
injury resulting from workplace welding fumes. Id. at 468, 889 A.2d at 399. We determined
that “products, despite their toxic nature, are not ‘pollutants’ or ‘contaminants’ when used
intentionally and legally.” Id. at 463, 889 A.2d at 396 (emphasis omitted). Clendenin is not
relevant to the certified question before this Court, where the issue is not of intent or
legality, but rather, whether Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution exclusion clause
violates Maryland’s public policy.
25
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the application of Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution
exclusion contained in the Liberty Mutual insurance policies does not violate Maryland’s
public policy. Absent a legislative affirmation that pollution exclusion clauses are against
public policy, we decline to declare that Georgia’s law violates Maryland’s public policy.
Therefore, Georgia’s interpretation of the pollution exclusion clause governs here.
THE CERTIFIED QUESTION ANSWERED
AS SET FORTH ABOVE. PURSUANT TO
SECTION 12-610 OF THE COURTS AND
JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS ARTICLE,
THE COSTS SHALL BE EQUALLY
DIVIDED BETWEEN THE PARTIES.
26
United States District Court for the District of
Maryland
Case No. 1:16-cv-03177-JFM
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
Argued: September 12, 2017
OF MARYLAND
Misc. No. 1
September Term, 2017
______________________________________
QUANTA BROWNLEE, ET AL.
v.
LIBERTY MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANY, ET AL.
______________________________________
Barbera, C.J.
Greene
Adkins
McDonald
Watts
Hotten
Getty,
JJ.
______________________________________
Dissenting Opinion by Watts, J.
______________________________________
Filed: December 18, 2017
Respectfully, I dissent. The United States District Court for the District of Maryland
certified to this Court the following question of law: “Would application of Georgia’s
interpretation of the pollution exclusion contained in the insurance policy issued by Liberty
Mutual Insurance Company [(“Liberty Mutual”)] to the Salvation Army as excluding
coverage for bodily injuries resulting from the ingestion of lead-based paint violate
Maryland public policy?” Unlike the Majority, I would answer the certified question of
law with a resounding “yes,” and hold that it is a violation of Maryland public policy to
apply Georgia case law that permits a pollutant exclusion in an insurance policy to be
interpreted as a lead-based paint exclusion because Maryland has a strong public policy of
protecting children from injuries caused by lead-based paint and of requiring exclusions
for lead-based paint to unambiguously and specifically indicate that the exclusion applies
to lead-based paint to be valid.
Under the choice of law principle of lex loci contractus, “when determining the
construction, validity, enforceability, or interpretation of a contract, we apply the law of
the jurisdiction where the contract was made.” Cunningham v. Feinberg, 441 Md. 310,
326, 107 A.3d 1194, 1204 (2015) (citations omitted). Nevertheless, the principle of lex
loci contractus “is not inflexible and [] it does not apply to a contract provision which is
against Maryland public policy.” Lab. Corp. of Am. v. Hood, 395 Md. 608, 620, 911 A.2d
841, 848 (2006) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). This Court has stated,
however, “that merely because Maryland law is dissimilar to the law of another jurisdiction
does not render the latter contrary to Maryland public policy and that for another [S]tate’s
law to be unenforceable, there must be a strong public policy against its enforcement in
Maryland.” Id. at 620, 911 A.2d at 848 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
The key issue in this case—indeed, the very issue posed in the certified question of
law—is whether Maryland has a strong public policy of protecting children from lead-
based paint poisoning and in requiring that lead-based paint exclusions be specifically
identified in insurance policies such that application of Georgia’s case law is unenforceable
and would offend the principle of lex loci contractus. On this key issue, I depart from the
view of the Majority, as I would conclude that there is a strong public policy expressed by
the General Assembly in Maryland that renders the application of Ga. Farm Bureau Mut.
Ins. Co. v. Smith, 784 S.E.2d 422, 423 (Ga. 2016) unenforceable.
Establishing clear public policy, Md. Code Ann., Ins. (1995-97, 2011 Repl. Vol.)
(“IN”) § 19-704, derived from former Md. Code, Art. 48A, §§ 734 and 735, concerning
lead hazard coverage for rental property, provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
(c) Exclusion of coverage. — Notwithstanding subsection (g) of this section,
whenever an authorized insurer issues or renews a policy for an affected
property, the authorized insurer may include in the policy a lead hazard
coverage exclusion.
An “affected property,” in turn, is defined in IN § 19-701(b) as follows:
(1) “Affected property” means:
(i) 1. a residential property constructed before 1950 that contains
not more than one rental dwelling unit; or
2. a residential rental property that contains not more than one
rental dwelling unit for which the owner makes an election under § 6-
803(a)(2) of the Environment Article;[1] or
1
Md. Code Ann., Envir. (1982, 1987, 2013 Repl. Vol.) (“EN”) § 6-803(a)(2)
provides that Subtitle 8, concerning reduction of lead risk in housing, applies to,
-2-
(ii) an individual rental dwelling unit within:
1. a residential rental property constructed before 1950 that
contains more than one rental dwelling unit; or
2. a residential rental property that contains more than one
rental dwelling unit for which the owner makes an election under § 6-
803(a)(2) of the Environment Article.
(2) “Affected property” does not include property exempted under § 6-803(b)
of the Environment Article.[2]
IN § 19-704(c) does not provide that insurance policies containing pollutant
exclusions are the equivalent of insurance policies containing lead hazard coverage
exclusions. Stated otherwise, as IN § 19-704(c) demonstrates, a lead hazard coverage
exclusion is different from a pollutant exclusion. Indeed, IN § 19-704(c) specifically
provides that, with respect to certain properties—affected properties as that term is defined
in IN § 19-701(b)— insurers may include within an insurance policy a lead hazard
coverage exclusion. In other words, IN § 19-704(c) is a very specific statute that provides
“[n]othwithstanding subsection (b) of this section, any residential rental property, the
owner of which elects to comply with this subtitle.”
2
EN § 6-803(b) provides that Subtitle 8, concerning reduction of lead risk in
housing, does not apply to:
(1) Property not expressly covered in subsection (a) of this section;
(2) Affected property owned or operated by a unit of federal, State, or local
government, or any public, quasi-public, or municipal corporation, if the
affected property is subject to lead standards that are equal to, or more
stringent than, the risk reduction standard established under § 6-815 of this
subtitle; or
(3) Affected property which is certified to be lead-free pursuant to § 6-804
of this subtitle.
-3-
for a lead hazard coverage exclusion under detailed identified circumstances; this statute
does not authorize a pollutant exclusion to operate as the equivalent of a lead hazard
coverage exclusion.
Indeed, the majority opinion explicitly recognizes that IN § 19-704 does not apply
to pollutant exclusions in insurance policies. Without qualification, the Majority writes:
“IN § 19-704(c) does not reference a duty for insurers to indemnify and defend lead-based
paint claims through a pollution exclusion clause. It does not reference pollutants at all.
Rather, it plainly states that insurers have the option to exclude coverage for lead-based
paint related claims.” Maj. Slip Op. at 21. With this admission, the majority opinion
concedes that IN § 19-704 offers no support for the proposition that it provides guidance
with respect to public policy in Maryland concerning allowing pollutant exclusions in
insurance policies to act as lead hazard coverage exclusions. Nonetheless, the majority
opinion concludes that “Georgia’s decision holding that lead-based paint is a pollutant, is
not at odds with Maryland’s public policy where our General Assembly has not directly
indicated otherwise[.]” Maj. Slip Op. at 23-24. The majority opinion apparently reasons
that there is a lack of strong public policy against pollutant exclusions being treated as lead
hazard coverage exclusions because the General Assembly has not expressly addressed the
issue of pollutant exclusions covering lead-based paint. The majority opinion, however,
ignores the strong public policy implications of IN § 19-704(c)’s unambiguous permission
of lead hazard coverage exclusions only, i.e., lead-based paint exclusions must be clear and
unequivocal.
Significantly, in Sullins v. Allstate Ins. Co., 340 Md. 503, 506, 509, 516, 518, 667
-4-
A.2d 617, 618, 620, 623, 624 (1995), in response to a certified question of law from the
United States District Court for the District of Maryland, in a thorough and well-reasoned
opinion, this Court determined that the terms “contaminants” and “pollutants” in a pollutant
exclusion of an insurance policy were ambiguous and susceptible to different meanings,
including meanings not encompassing lead-based paint, and that, in accordance with
Maryland law, the insurance policy at issue could not be construed to include lead-based
paint as a contaminant or pollutant, and instead was to be construed against the insurer as
the drafter of the policy, such that the insurer was not relieved of its duty to defend in the
underlying lead-based paint poisoning lawsuit. In Sullins, id. at 506-07, 667 A.2d at 618,
the pollutant exclusion at issue, contained in a section labeled “Losses We Do Not Cover,”
provided:
We do not cover bodily injury or property damage which results in any
manner from the discharge, dispersal, release, or escape of:
a) vapors, fumes, acids, toxic chemicals, toxic liquids or toxic gasses;
b) waste materials or other irritants, contaminants or pollutants.
In construing the terms “contaminants” and “pollutants,” and determining whether
lead-based paint was a contaminant or pollutant, this Court observed that the terms were
“susceptible of two interpretations by a reasonably prudent layperson. By one
interpretation, these terms encompass lead paint; by another interpretation, they apply only
to cases of environmental pollution or contamination, and not to products such as lead
paint.” Id. at 509, 667 A.2d at 620. This Court explained that, “[w]hile lead is clearly
‘toxic,’ a reasonably prudent layperson may not view lead as a ‘chemical[,]’” and that
-5-
“[s]imilarly, a reasonably prudent layperson may not generally think of lead as an
‘irritant.’” Id. at 510, 667 A.2d at 620. This Court acknowledged, however, that a
reasonably prudent layperson could consider lead to be a “contaminant” or a “pollutant”
under the ordinary dictionary definitions of those terms. See id. at 511, 667 A.2d at 620.
On the other hand, this Court noted that “[a] reasonably prudent layperson may also
interpret the terms ‘contaminant’ and ‘pollutant’ as not including lead paint.” Id. at 511,
667 A.2d at 620 (emphasis in original). This Court further observed that courts in other
jurisdictions had found the term “pollutant” both ambiguous and unambiguous with respect
to lead-based paint. See id. at 511, 667 A.2d at 620-21.
This Court also examined the history of the pollutant exclusion, and determined that
the history supported the conclusion that a reasonably prudent layperson may not consider
lead-based paint to be either a pollutant or a contaminant. See id. at 513, 667 A.2d at 621-
22. The original pollutant exclusions were drafted by insurers in response to environmental
catastrophes that occurred in the 1960s to clarify that commercial general liability
insurance policies did not indemnify knowing polluters. See id. at 514, 667 A.2d at 622.
That “sudden and accidental” pollutant exclusion, which specifically referenced “into or
upon land, the atmosphere or any watercourse or body of water[,]” “was intended to
eliminate coverage for damages from pollution of the environment.” Id. at 514, 667 A.2d
at 622 (citations omitted). Thereafter, in 1985, the insurance industry adopted the
“‘absolute pollution exclusion[,]’ which denied coverage for ‘bodily injury or property
damage arising out of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, release, or escape of
pollutants’ and defined ‘pollutant’ as ‘any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or
-6-
contaminant including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalies, chemicals and waste.’”
Id. at 514-15, 667 A.2d at 622. In adopting the “absolute pollution exclusion,” and using
environmental terms of art such as “discharge, dispersal, release, or escape,” insurers
deleted as redundant reference to “into or upon land, the atmosphere or any watercourse or
body of water.” Id. at 515, 667 A.2d at 622. This Court explained that there was “no
indication that the change in the language was meant to expand the scope of the clause to
non-environmental damage.” Id. at 515, 667 A.2d at 622 (citation and internal quotation
marks omitted). Indeed, this Court concluded that the use of environmental law terms of
art such as “discharge,” “dispersal,” “release,” “escape,” “contaminant,” and “pollutant” in
the absolute pollution exclusion demonstrated that the insurance “industry’s intention was
to exclude only environmental pollution damage from coverage[.]” Id. at 515, 667 A.2d at
622-23.
Accordingly, in Sullins, this Court determined that the history of the pollutant
exclusion supported “our conclusion that a reasonably prudent layperson may interpret the
terms ‘pollution’ and ‘contamination,’ in the circumstances of the case now before us, as
not encompassing lead paint, a product used legally and intentionally.” Id. at 516, 667
A.2d at 623 (emphasis in original). And, because the terms “pollution” and
“contamination” were ambiguous, this Court held that they had to be construed against the
insurer as the drafter of the insurance policy. See id. at 516, 667 A.2d at 623.
What can be gleaned from Sullins is that, where an insurance policy contains a
pollutant exclusion with ambiguous terms—terms that could be interpreted to have
multiple meanings when viewed by a reasonably prudent layperson—such terms must be
-7-
construed against the drafter of the policy, i.e., the insurer. Moreover, as explained in
Sullins, tracing the history of the pollutant exclusion demonstrates that pollutant exclusions
originated as a means of excluding coverage for damage caused by environmental
pollution, not for damage caused by non-environmental pollution of the type that could
result from the legal use of products in residences. Additionally, notably, Sullins supports
the conclusion that exclusions from coverage for injuries caused by lead-based paint must
unambiguously include lead-based paint as a pollutant to be valid.
This is not the status of Georgia case law. In 2016, in Ga. Farm, 784 S.E.2d at 423,
the Supreme Court of Georgia concluded that lead-based paint was a “pollutant” as defined
by the applicable insurance policy such that the “pollution exclusion” in the insurance
policy applied to exclude coverage of personal injury claims arising from lead-based paint
poisoning. This is the case that the Majority finds to be controlling. In Ga. Farm, id., Amy
Smith (“Smith”), in her individual capacity and on behalf of her daughter Tyasia Brown
(“Brown”), sued her landlord, Bobby Chupp (“Chupp”), for injuries that Brown allegedly
sustained from lead-based paint poisoning that occurred in the house that Smith rented
from Chupp. During the relevant time, Chupp’s house was insured under a commercial
general liability insurance policy issued by Georgia Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance
Company (“Georgia Farm”), which contained a “pollution exclusion” that provided as
follows:
This insurance does not apply to:
...
(f) Pollution
-8-
(1) “Bodily injury” or “property damage” arising out of the actual,
alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release
or escape of “pollutants”: (a) At or from any premises, site or location
which is or was at any time owned or occupied by, or rented or loaned
to, any insured.
Id. (ellipsis in original). The insurance policy defined the term “pollutant” as “any solid,
liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes,
acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste.” Id.
In the trial court, Georgia Farm argued, in pertinent part, that the pollutant exclusion
applied to Brown’s alleged injuries from lead poisoning, i.e., that the claims were excluded
from coverage, and that, accordingly, it was relieved of its contractual duty to defend and
indemnify Chupp in the lawsuit. See id. The trial court agreed and granted summary
judgment in Georgia Farm’s favor, finding “that lead-based paint unambiguously fell
within the policy’s definition of a ‘pollutant,’ and, as a result, Brown’s alleged injuries
were excluded from coverage pursuant to the pollution exclusion clause.” Id. In so ruling,
the trial court relied on Reed v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 667 S.E.2d 90, 92 (Ga. 2008), in
which the Supreme Court of Georgia interpreted an identical pollutant exclusion contained
in a commercial general liability insurance policy insuring residential rental property and
held that, although not expressly identified in the insurance policy as a pollutant, carbon
monoxide gas was a pollutant and, therefore, the plaintiff’s injuries arising from carbon
monoxide poisoning were excluded from coverage under the pollutant exclusion. See Ga.
Farm, 784 S.E.2d at 423-24.
Notably, in Ga. Farm, id. at 424, on appeal to the Court of Appeals of Georgia, that
-9-
Court reversed the trial court’s judgment in favor of Georgia Farm, observing that there
existed a conflict in other jurisdictions as to whether lead-based paint should be considered
a pollutant for purposes of a pollutant exclusion in an insurance policy. In light of Georgia
law requiring the narrow construction of exclusions from coverage in insurance policies,
the Court of Appeals of Georgia was persuaded to follow the example of jurisdictions that
had held that a pollutant exclusion did not bar coverage for injuries arising from lead-based
paint poisoning. See id. Significantly, the Court of Appeals of Georgia relied on this
Court’s opinion in Sullins, 340 Md. at 509-10, 667 A.2d at 620, and concluded that, “with
respect to allegations of bodily injury arising from exposure to lead-based paint, the terms
‘contaminants’ and ‘pollutants’ used in a [commercial general liability] policy’s pollution
exclusion were ambiguous and should be strictly construed against the insurer[.]” Ga.
Farm, 784 S.E.2d at 424 (citation omitted). The Court of Appeals of Georgia determined
that Georgia Farm had failed to demonstrate that lead-based paint was a “pollutant” as
defined by the insurance policy. See id. The Court of Appeals of Georgia distinguished
Reed, the case relied on by the trial court, “finding that, while a straightforward reading of
the pollution exclusion in Reed compelled the conclusion that carbon monoxide gas was a
pollutant, it was unclear whether identical language in the instant policy was expansive
enough to unambiguously include lead, lead-based paint or paint as a pollutant.” Ga. Farm,
784 S.E.2d at 424 (citation omitted). Thereafter, Georgia Farm filed a petition for a writ
of certiorari, which the Supreme Court of Georgia granted. See id.
Ultimately, the Supreme Court of Georgia reversed the judgment of the Court of
Appeals of Georgia, and relied on Georgia precedent in which Georgia courts had
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interpreted pollutant exclusions to apply to all injuries caused by pollutants, even those
caused by something other than traditional environmental pollution, and that the term
“pollutant” applies to any contaminant and the contaminant need not be expressly
identified in the insurance policy for a pollutant exclusion to be valid. See id. at 425. After
discussing applicable Georgia case law, the Supreme Court of Georgia concluded that,
“[u]nder the broad definition contained in Chupp’s policy, . . . lead present in paint
unambiguously qualifies as a pollutant and [] the plain language of the policy’s pollution
exclusion clause thus excludes Smith’s claims against Chupp from coverage.” Id. at 426
(footnote omitted). This outcome would not have been the same had the circumstances of
the case been analyzed under the principles set forth by this Court in Sullins.
The majority opinion attempts to distinguish this Court’s holding in Sullins by
inaccurately claiming that the policy at issue in Georgia Farms was different because the
policy contained a definition of the term pollutant and, in Georgia Farms, “[t]he Supreme
Court of Georgia read that the plain language of the pollutant definition was matter, in any
state, acting as an irritant or contaminant[,]” whereas in the pollution exclusion at issue in
Sullins, the term pollutant was not defined. Maj. Slip Op. at 11 (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). The definition of the term pollutant in the pollution exclusion
at issue in Georgia Farms, 784 S.E.2d at 423, was in actuality as set forth above—“any
solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot,
fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste”—and the definition did not unambiguously
define pollutant to include lead-based paint. Rather than relying on the plain language of
the exclusion, in reversing the intermediate appellate court, the Supreme Court of Georgia
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utilized Georgia case law in which Georgia courts had earlier determined that the term
“pollutant” applies to any contaminant, and the contaminant need not be expressly
identified in the insurance policy for a pollutant exclusion to be valid. See id. at 425. Thus,
in Georgia Farms, the term pollutant was not defined in a manner that merely allowed a
plain language determination that the term included lead-based paint, and such is not the
circumstance in this case either.
To be sure, public policy in Maryland permits an insurance policy to contain an
exclusion for coverage for injuries caused by lead-based paint. IN § 19-704(c) speaks for
itself, authorizing insurers to include lead hazard coverage exclusions under certain narrow
circumstances. Nevertheless, the Liberty Mutual insurance policy at issue in this case does
not contain a lead hazard coverage exclusion; it contains a pollutant exclusion. Indeed, the
Majority specifically acknowledges that, “[n]otably, the policies do not include lead-based
paint exclusion provisions, but the policies do include pollution exclusion provisions.”
Maj. Slip Op. at 3.
After conceding that the Liberty Mutual exclusion is a pollution exclusion and not
a lead hazard coverage exclusion, the majority opinion concludes that “the General
Assembly’s explicit dictation of the State’s public policy in IN § 19-704, a year after this
Court held that that an insurer had a duty to defend a lead-based paint related injury in
Sullins, illustrates that the General Assembly is responsible for establishing public policy.”
Maj. Slip. Op. at 22 (citing Sullins, 340 Md. at 518, 667 A.2d at 624). The majority opinion
overlooks the legislative history of IN § 19-704. What is now IN § 19-704(c) was
originally enacted by the General Assembly in 1994 as part of the Lead Poisoning
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Prevention Program Act. See 1994 Md. Laws 1282, 1343 (Ch. 114, H.B. 760). The Lead
Poisoning Prevention Program Act took effect on October 1, 1994, and the session law
provided “[t]hat, notwithstanding other provisions of this Act, this Act shall apply
beginning on January 1, 1995 to insurance policies issued or renewed between October 1,
1994 and December 31, 1994.” Id. at 1347.
As originally enacted, Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol., 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, §
735(a)—the section that is now IN § 19-704(c)—provided:
(a) Provision. — Notwithstanding subsection (f) of this section, upon the
inception or renewal of a policy, an insurer may provide for a lead hazard
exclusion with respect to a policy of insurance covering an affected property.
In 1996, as part of adding certain titles to the Insurance Article, Md. Code (1994 Repl.
Vol., 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, § 735(a) was recodified without substantive change as IN §
19-704(c). See 1996 Md. Laws 235, 236, 524-28 (Ch. 11, H.B. 11). That recodification
took effect on October 1, 1997. See 1996 Md. Laws 693 (Ch. 11, H.B. 11). As recodified,
IN § 19-704(c) provided, and continues to provide, as follows:
(c) Exclusion of coverage. — Notwithstanding subsection (g) of this section,
whenever an authorized insurer issues or renews a policy for an affected
property, the authorized insurer may include in the policy a lead hazard
coverage exclusion.
The history of IN § 19-704 demonstrates that the lead hazard coverage exclusion in
Maryland preceded the Court’s decision in Sullins. It is inaccurate to link the enactment
of IN § 19-704 to Sullins in anyway. This Court issued Sullins on November 6, 1995,
after Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol., 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, § 735(a) was enacted and became
effective. However, Sullins involved an insurance policy that was issued on September
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14, 1990; i.e., Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol., 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, § 735(a) would not have
applied to the policy at issue in that case. And, in Sullins, this Court did not discuss or
mention Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol., 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, § 735(a) or the Lead Poisoning
Prevention Program Act.
Moreover, Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol, 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, § 735(a) was
recodified in 1996 as IN § 19-704(c) without substantive change. As stated, Sullins was
decided in 1995. In recodifying Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol, 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, §
735(a) in 1996, the General Assembly would have been aware of this Court’s decision in
Sullins, and could have made changes to the lead hazard coverage exclusion to enlarge it
to encompass pollutant exclusions generally, but the General Assembly did not do this. It
is clear that the strong public policy in Maryland is that a lead-based paint exclusion must
be unambiguous. Undoubtedly, one of the purposes of IN § 19-704(c) and its predecessor
is plainly to prevent insureds from signing insurance policies and being unaware that
coverage for injuries caused by lead-based paint is excluded.
Ultimately, in Maryland, there is a strong public policy of protecting children from
injuries caused by lead-based paint and of requiring that lead-based paint exclusions in
insurance policies be clear and unambiguous. This is evident from statutes enacted by the
General Assembly. For example, in Md. Code Ann., Hous. & Cmty. Dev. (2005-06) § 4-
702, part of the subtitle governing the lead hazard reduction grant program and lead hazard
reduction loan program, the General Assembly specifically made the following findings:
The General Assembly finds that:
(1) lead paint is present in a large percentage of residential properties
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in the State, particularly residential rental properties constructed before 1950;
(2) lead paint on the friction surfaces of windows is a leading cause
of lead poisoning;
(3) lead poisoning harms the health and well-being of children and
pregnant women and causes substantial long-term public costs for medical
expenses and additional education; and
(4) reduction or elimination of lead in the environment will reduce:
(i) the risk of lead poisoning of children and pregnant women;
(ii) the incidence of learning disabilities and behavioral
problems in children who live in older housing; and
(iii) the cost of publicly financed medical care.
I would conclude that there is an equally strong public policy in Maryland, as demonstrated
by Md. Code (1994 Repl. Vol., 1995 Supp.), Art. 48A, § 735(a), and its recodification
without substantive change to IN § 19-704(c) after this Court’s decision in Sullins, that for
an insurance policy exclusion from coverage of injuries caused by lead-based paint to be
valid, the exclusion must be explicit and unambiguous. Stated otherwise, in my view, IN
§ 19-704(c), its predecessor, and the existence of this Court’s decision in Sullins
inescapably lead to the conclusion that a lead-based paint exclusion in an insurance policy
must be expressly and unambiguously identified, either through a lead hazard coverage
exclusion of the type authorized by IN § 19-704(c) or through some other exclusion, which
expressly includes lead-based paint for purposes of the exclusion. Respectfully, the
Majority’s conclusion that, under Georgia case law, an insurance contract with a pollution
exclusion is enforceable as a lead-based paint exclusion and that this does not violate
Maryland’s public policy is in direct contradiction with this Court’s holding in Sullins, in
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which this Court answered the same certified question to the contrary.
I would determine that the pollutant exclusion in the Liberty Mutual insurance
policy runs afoul of a strong Maryland public policy on its face by failing to specifically
and unambiguously include lead-based paint as a “pollutant” covered in the pollutant
exclusion. The definition of “pollutant” contained in the Liberty Mutual insurance
policy—“any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke,
vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste”—is ambiguous and a reasonably
prudent layperson both may and may not believe lead-based paint to be a “pollutant” based
on the plain language of the pollutant exclusion contained in the Liberty Mutual insurance
policy. And, notably, the Liberty Mutual pollutant exclusion contains environmental law
terms of art such as “discharge,” “dispersal,” “seepage,” “migration, “release”, and
“escape,” which, as this Court explained in Sullins, 340 Md. at 515-16, 667 A.2d at 622-
23, supports the conclusion that the insurance industry intended pollutant exclusions to
apply only to environmental pollution damage, and not necessarily to the lawful use of
products in the home, and that a reasonably prudent layperson could “interpret the term[]
‘pollution’ . . . as not encompassing lead paint, a product used legally and intentionally.”
(Emphasis in original). I would conclude that the public policy exception to the principle
of lex loci contractus is applicable, and I would answer the certified question of law “yes,”
and hold that it would violate Maryland public policy to apply Georgia case law,
specifically, the Ga. Farm case, under the circumstances of this case because Maryland has
both a strong public policy of protecting children from injuries caused by lead-based paint
and of requiring exclusions for lead-based paint to be unambiguous to be valid.
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For the above reasons, respectfully, I dissent.
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