UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 21-1051
DAVID S. BROWN ENTERPRISES, LTD; 8227 MAIN STREET LLC.; 8231
MAIN STREET LLC.,
Plaintiffs – Appellants,
v.
AFFILIATED FM INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant – Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
Stephanie A. Gallagher, District Judge. (1:18-cv-00319-SAG)
Argued: October 29, 2021 Decided: January 6, 2022
Before NIEMEYER and KING, Circuit Judges, and Thomas T. CULLEN, United States
District Judge for the Western District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
ARGUED: C. Thomas Brown, SILVER & BROWN, Fairfax, Virginia, for Appellants.
Bryant S. Green, NILES, BARTON & WILMER, LLP, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
ON BRIEF: Erik B. Lawson, SILVER & BROWN, Fairfax, Virginia, for Appellants.
Craig D. Roswell, NILES, BARTON & WILMER, LLP, Baltimore, Maryland, for
Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
PER CURIAM:
Over the course of one hour in July 2016, four and a half inches of rain fell on
Ellicott City, Maryland. This historic rainfall created a flash flood that damaged many
buildings in the city’s historic downtown district. Appellant David S. Brown Enterprises,
Ltd. (“DSB”) submitted an insurance claim for damage to two of its buildings to its insurer,
Appellee Affiliated FM Insurance Co. (“AFM”). AFM concluded that the policy’s flood
sublimit applied to the claim and capped DSB’s recovery at $50,000.
DSB sued AFM, challenging what it perceived as a partial denial of coverage. It
argued that a nearby watermain, which had burst during the flood, was solely responsible
for the property damage, so the flood sublimit did not apply. The district court rejected this
argument because the flood sublimit included an “anti-concurrent causation” clause. That
clause defined any damage occurring contemporaneous with a flood as flood damage,
thereby making all such damage subject to the policy’s flood sublimit. The district court
granted summary judgment in favor of AFM, and DSB appealed.
For the following reasons, we affirm.
I.
On July 30, 2016, Ellicott City experienced a 1,000-year rainfall. See J.A. 638
(“[T]here is a 0.1% chance or less of this rainfall occurring in these time durations and
location in any given year.”). Four and a half inches of rain fell in an hour, and the storm
dropped over six and half inches of rain before it ended. This downpour caused nearby
rivers to overflow, and the contents of those rivers spilled into the city. At the same time,
an underground watermain in the downtown area ruptured, spraying water skyward and
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adding to the overall water level. Video of the episode shows people kayaking through a
municipal parking lot and helping emergency responders locate townspeople who needed
help. Two people died, and many properties sustained significant damage.
Relevant to this case, two downtown buildings at 8227 Main Street and 8231 Main
Street (the “Main Street Properties”) suffered water damage. Kara Brown, the owner of
these properties, filed two insurance claims to recoup her losses. She filed the first
insurance claim with Selective Insurance Company (“SIC”), which directly insures the
properties. SIC denied this claim under its policy’s flood exclusion.
Brown also filed a second insurance claim through her husband’s company, DSB.
DSB, a real estate management company, had a business insurance policy (“the Policy”)
from AFM that covers the Main Street Properties. Unlike the SIC policy, which contained
a flood exclusion, AFM’s Policy covered flood damage, but limited recoveries for such
damage to $50,000. In that claim, filed two days after the damage occurred, Brown
explained that “[h]eavy rains and flooding caused . . . water damage to the [Main Street
Properties].” J.A. 653. And the day after that, she emailed an engineering firm to determine
whether the watermain break near her buildings could be “an angle” to avoid the Policy’s
flood sublimit. See J.A. 712. As recently as September 29, 2018, more than two years after
the flood, Brown maintained on her personal blog that her “commercial investment
properties on Main Street in the historic center of Ellicott City were completely destroyed
by flood.” J.A. 657 (emphasis added).
When AFM partially denied the claim, it explained that, under the Policy’s relevant
sublimits, DSB was only entitled to $50,000. DSB read the Policy more generously,
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concluding that it was actually entitled to $2,000,000, and it sued AFM for that amount.
The district court agreed with AFM’s reading of the relevant contractual language and
granted summary judgment to AFM. DSB appealed.
II.
Our review of a district court’s grant of summary judgment is de novo. French v.
Assurance Co. of Am., 448 F.3d 693, 700 (4th Cir. 2006). “Summary judgment is
appropriate when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled
to judgment as a matter of law.” Id.
We apply Maryland law in interpreting the Policy because the Policy was delivered
in Maryland and this diversity action was filed in the District of Maryland. See Klaxon Co.
v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., 313 U.S. 487, 496–97 (1941) (holding that a federal court
exercising diversity jurisdiction applies the choice of law principles of the state where the
federal court is located); Perini/Tompkins Joint Venture v. Ace Am. Ins. Co., 738 F.3d 95,
100 (4th Cir. 2013) (“In insurance contract disputes, Maryland follows the principle of lex
loci contractus, which applies the law of the jurisdiction where the contract was made. For
choice of law purposes, a contract is made where ‘the last act is performed which makes
the agreement a binding contract. Typically, this is where the policy is delivered and the
premiums are paid.’” (citation omitted)).
III.
A.
Maryland courts interpret insurance policies using the same principles and rules of
construction that they use to interpret other contracts. Connors v. Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co., 113
4
A.3d 595, 604 (Md. 2015). Where the policy’s language is plain and unambiguous, they
enforce the contract’s terms. Id. The parties agree that the Policy covers the Main Street
Properties. Their dispute centers on which Policy limit, if any, applies to DSB’s claim.
As a threshold matter, it is undisputed that the Main Street Properties are subject to
the Policy’s “unnamed locations” sublimit because neither building is listed as a declared
property in the insurance contract, but they are otherwise located within the Policy’s
territory. 1 See J.A. 1169. This sublimit requires AFM to insure properties it does not know
about and has never evaluated, so it extends coverage to them but only at a predetermined
and reduced level—$1,000,000. DSB argues that the “unnamed location” sublimit is the
only sublimit that applies to the Main Street Properties, so AFM owes it $2,000,000—
$1,000,000 for each of the Main Street Properties.
AFM agrees that the “unnamed location” sublimit applies, but it contends that the
Policy’s more restrictive flood sublimit caps DSB’s claim at $50,000 per year for all
“unnamed locations.” 2 See J.A. 1134. Resolution of this issue turns on whether the damage
at issue was caused by a flood, as defined in the Policy. The Policy defines a “flood” as
flood; surface waters; rising waters; storm surge, sea surge,
wave wash; waves; tsunami; tide or tidal water; the release of
water, the rising, overflowing or breaking of boundaries of
1
The “Policy’s Territory” includes “the fifty (50) United States.” J.A. 1134. Since
the Main Street Properties are in Maryland, they are “unnamed locations” covered by the
Policy and subject to a sublimit for damage of $1,000,000 per occurrence. See J.A. 1134–
35.
2
Under a heading reading “SUB-LIMITS,” the policy sets $50,000 as the sublimit
for “Flood annual aggregate as respects Errors & Omissions, Off-Premises Service
Interruption, Unnamed Locations and Supply Chain combined.” J.A. 1134.
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natural or man-made bodies of water; or the spray therefrom;
all whether driven by wind or not; or sewer backup resulting
from any of the foregoing; regardless of any other cause or
event, whether natural or man-made, contributing
concurrently or in any other sequence of loss.
J.A. 1191 (emphasis added). The final clause, beginning with the word “regardless,” is an
anti-concurrent causation clause; these clauses are common in the insurance industry. See
3 New Appleman on Insurance Law Library Edition § 16.09(2)(b)(ii)(B) (2021) (offering
a template anti-concurrent causation clause: “We will not pay for loss or damage caused
directly or indirectly by any of the following . . . . Such loss or damage is excluded
regardless of any other cause or event that contributes concur[rently] or in any sequence to
the loss.”).
Anti-concurrent causation clauses clarify an insurer’s obligation when multiple
causes (e.g., both flood waters and high winds) contribute to the damage underlying a
claim. These clauses require insurers to show only that the excluded conduct (like a flood,
earthquake, or terrorist attack) contributed to the damage at issue. If an insurer can make
this showing, the exclusion applies. See Park Ctr. III Ltd. P’ship v. Pa. Mfrs. Ass’n, 30 F.
App’x 64, 70 (4th Cir. 2002) (per curiam). These provisions reduce the fact-finding burden
on the parties to an insurance contract and, when litigation ensues, on the courts by
eliminating the need to determine the proportional damage attributable to each cause.
Maryland courts routinely enforce these provisions in insurance disputes. See, e.g., N.
Assurance Co. of Am. v. EDP Floors, Inc., 533 A.2d 682, 688–89 (Md. 1987); Aragone v.
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 378 A.2d 1346, 1350–51 (Md. 1977). Federal courts
interpreting Maryland law do as well. See, e.g., Hamilton Jewelry, LLC v. Twin City Fire
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Ins. Co., No. 8:20-cv-02248, 2021 WL 4214837, at *7 (D. Md. Sept. 16, 2021); McWhorter
v. Bankers Standard Ins. Co., No. PWG-18-2452, 2020 WL 1322977, *3–4 (D. Md. Mar.
20, 2020); Bao v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 535 F. Supp. 2d 532, 540 (D. Md. 2008).
Maryland is not unique in this regard. In New York University v. Factory Mutual
Insurance Co., NYU disputed the application of an anti-concurrent causation clause on
facts similar to ours. 374 F. Supp. 3d 315 (S.D.N.Y. 2019), aff’d, No. 20-1093-cv (2d. Cir.
July 26, 2021). That case dealt with damage to NYU’s hospital and medical school when
Hurricane Sandy struck New York City in 2012. Id. at 320–21. The insurer cited a flood
sublimit within the applicable policy and paid NYU only the $40,000,000 contemplated
under that provision. Id. at 321. NYU disputed the flood sublimit’s application and sought
the policy’s overall coverage limit of $1,850,000,000. Id.
Specifically, NYU asserted that faulty workmanship by contractors, not the flood,
caused some of its damages, and the university gave two specific examples. See id. at 321,
326–28. First, contractors uncovered a ventilation shaft leading to the basement of one of
its buildings. Id. at 326 n.5. At least 11,000,000 gallons of water entered the building
through that shaft during the storm. Id. Second, “a defectively designed wall separating
two [adjoining] buildings failed, allowing water to travel from one building to the other.”
Id. And because these damages were attributable to faulty workmanship, and not a flood,
NYU argued that it should be able to collect for them without regard to the flood sublimit.
Id. at 326.
The Southern District of New York rejected NYU’s argument. The definition of
flood in NYU’s policy included an anti-concurrent causation clause similar, in all material
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respects, to the one at issue in this case. Id. at 319 (defining “flood” as “flood . . . regardless
of any other cause or event, whether natural or man-made, contributing concurrently or in
any other sequence of loss.”). And so, the district court reasoned, even if the university
were correct that faulty workmanship (and not a flood) caused the damage, this distinction
was “immaterial because, even accepting NYU’s claims of faulty workmanship, NYU’s
losses were the result of flood under the terms of the Policy.” Id. at 326 n.5.
We find the analysis of the anti-concurrent causation clause in New York University
persuasive. DSB alleges that a broken watermain damaged the Main Street Properties, just
as NYU claimed that faulty workmanship damaged its facilities. But the Policy contains
an anti-concurrent causation clause like the one in New York University. “This clear
[anti-concurrent causation clause] is dispositive in [AFM’s] favor: even if [a broken
watermain] permitted flood waters to wreak havoc on [the Main Street properties], the
resulting losses fall within the Policy’s definition of flood.” See N.Y. Univ., 374 F. Supp.
3d at 327; see also id. at 326 n.5 (“[E]ven accepting [DSB]’s claims of [a broken
watermain], [DSB]’s losses were the result of flood under the terms of the Policy.”).
Because it happened concurrently with a flood, whatever damage the watermain break
caused is flood damage for purposes of the Policy’s flood sublimit. The claim at issue is
therefore subject to the $50,000 sublimit for flood damage to “unnamed locations.”
B.
DSB makes three arguments in support of its position that the $50,000 flood
sublimit does not apply, but none is convincing. DSB’s first argument attempts to
distinguish between water damage and flood, arguing that the water damage involved here
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is not subject to the flood sublimit. Second, DSB argues that the flood sublimit’s plain
language allows claimants to distinguish between damage attributable to a flood and
damage attributable to other causes. And third, DSB contends that we should interpret the
anti-concurrent causation clause differently because it is in a sublimit rather than in an
exclusion.
DSB’s first argument takes the district court’s opinion too literally and urges us to
reverse based on this misreading. The district court wrote that “[t]he record reflects one
[occurrence]—the foundations of the Main Street Properties were destroyed by water.” J.A.
1622. Quoting that line, DSB argues that water damage was the applicable occurrence, not
a flood. And if the occurrence was not a flood, DSB reasons, then the flood exclusion
cannot apply.
This argument fails. Properly construed, an “occurrence” is basically an insurance
claim. The Policy defines “occurrence” as “the sum total of all loss or damage of the type
insured . . . arising out of or caused by one discrete event of physical loss or damage.” J.A.
1191. An occurrence has three parts: (1) the sum total of the loss (2) that was caused by (3)
one discrete event of physical loss. See J.A. 1191. Every occurrence, then, is attributable
to “one discrete event of physical loss or damage.” J.A. 1191. In other words, the event
that causes an occurrence is not itself an occurrence.
Putting all this together, DSB’s claim was for water damage. But the water damage
resulted from the discrete event of the flood—and, by the flood sublimit’s terms, “any other
cause or event . . . contributing concurrently” to the physical loss or damage caused by the
flood. J.A. 1191. This language plainly includes a watermain break like the one at issue
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here, as it would any other natural or man-made event occurring simultaneously with a
flood. We therefore reject DSB’s attempt to misconstrue the district court’s opinion as
conflating the damage and its cause.
Second, DSB argues that the anti-concurrent causation clause in the Policy’s
definition of “flood” is not actually an anti-concurrent causation clause but instead allows
insureds to claim the proportion of the damage attributable to other causes, less the damage
attributable to the flood. Admittedly, DSB’s plain language argument has some appeal. The
use of “regardless” in the flood sublimit might plausibly be understood to mean something
like, “The policy’s plain language makes clear that a flood is a flood, regardless of other
non-flood causes that contemporaneously damage the property.” If that reading is correct,
the flood sublimit might apply only to the damage attributable to the flood, and not to
contemporaneous additional causes like broken watermains.
But this reading creates a surplusage problem. Courts must interpret contracts to
give effect to every term. See Clancy v. King, 954 A.2d 1092, 1101 (Md. 2008). And DSB’s
proffered interpretation of the anti-concurrent causation clause adds nothing to the
definition of flood. DSB provides no plausible alternative explanation for why AFM would
have included this clause in the Policy if it does nothing more than restate the language
preceding it.
Accordingly, we have no trouble adopting AFM’s construction, which has been
uniformly endorsed by state and federal courts interpreting substantially similar clauses
under Maryland law, that its anti-concurrent causation clause expands the definition of
“flood” to include events that occur simultaneously with a flood. We must give this clause
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meaning, and only AFM, backed by uncontroverted authority, has offered a plausible
meaning for its inclusion. See Clancy, 954 A.2d at 1101. Indeed, it is virtually identical to
the clause that the District of Maryland found was an anti-concurrent causation clause in
Bao. See Bao, 535 F. Supp. 2d at 540 (“[R]egardless of any other cause or event
contributing concurrently or in any sequence of loss”); see also Hamilton Jewelry, 2021
WL 4214837, at *4–5 (“[R]egardless of any other cause or event that contributes
concurrently or in any sequence to the loss”); McWhorter, 2020 WL 1322977, at *4
(“[R]egardless of any other cause or event contributing concurrently or in any sequence to
the loss”); N.Y Univ., 374 F. Supp. 3d at 320 (“[R]egardless of any other cause or event,
whether natural or man-made, contributing concurrently or in any other sequence of loss”).
That brings us to Appellant’s third argument: even though these above-cited
anti-concurrent causation clauses are nearly identical, the clause in this case is
distinguishable based on its location in the Policy. The clause in question appears in a
sublimit, whereas the clauses in Bao, Hamilton Jewelry, and McWhorter all appeared in
exclusions.
We find this distinction meaningless. A sublimit is a limited exclusion. When
included in exceptions, anti-concurrent causation clauses act to eliminate the insurer’s
liability for certain events. But when included in sublimits, like in the Policy, these clauses
only cap the insurer’s liability. Whether the insurer writes such a clause into an exclusion
or a sublimit does not change how courts interpret the clauses. Indeed, many courts have
applied anti-concurrent causation clauses found in sublimits precisely as Maryland courts
have applied those same clauses in exclusions. See, e.g., N.Y Univ., 374 F. Supp. 3d at 326–
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28 (enforcing anti-concurrent causation clause in a policy’s flood sublimit); One Place
Condo., LLC v. Travelers Prop. Cas. Co. of Am., No. 11 C 2520, 2014 WL 4977331, at
*21–23 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 6, 2014) (enforcing anti-concurrent causation clause in a policy’s
“Earth Movement” sublimit).
In sum, we are unpersuaded that the district court erred in its application of the flood
sublimit.
IV.
The plain language of the Policy caps DSB’s recovery, and the district court was
correct in so holding.
AFFIRMED
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