NAZARIAN, J.
This case is about title insurance, specifically what it does and doesn't cover. Back Creek Partners, LLC ("Back Creek") seeks (after the fact) to recover the attorneys' fees and costs it incurred in defending itself (successfully) in a lawsuit sorting out the easement and access rights in a waterfront community Back Creek developed. The Circuit Court for Montgomery County granted summary judgment to Back Creek's insurer, appellee First American Title Insurance Company ("First American"). We agree that the claims asserted in the third-party litigation against Back Creek fall outside the coverage of the title insurance policies at issue and affirm.
Back Creek is a real estate development company that purchased a piece of waterfront property in Annapolis in 1998. Back Creek developed a residential community called Harbor View on the property, complete with boat slips and water access. At the time of its purchase, Back Creek also bought a title insurance policy from First American Title Insurance Company ("First American") that insured its interest and estate in the land. The front page of the policy described the categories of "loss or damage" it covered:
(Emphasis added.)
In June 1999, in the course of developing Harbor View, Back Creek recorded a subdivision plat that divided the property into five single family lots and one larger
At some time around June 2000, Back Creek "procured a commitment from First American Title for an additional title policy... in order to protect and insure the value created by both the improvements made since its original 1998 purchase and the recorded Easement." Back Creek claims that this second commitment "committed for both a lender's policy and a Back Creek owner's policy" and "incorporated First American Title's standard title policy terms and conditions and listed the express exceptions to be contained in the policy." The commitment also, according to Back Creek, "did not describe any exceptions for either the Easement or the future Pier from coverage." There is no direct evidence that this commitment ever ripened into an actual second policy, but the parties and the circuit court assumed for purposes of summary judgment (and assume on appeal as well) that the second policy existed and that its terms and conditions "were identical and were comprised of the printed, boilerplate terms of the 1992 ALTA Owner's Policy Form."
Between 2000 and 2006, Back Creek conveyed the five residential lots to separate individual purchasers and conveyed the pier and boat slips to the community homeowners' association, subject to the Declaration. Back Creek conveyed Lot 4, the individual lot that is the subject of this case, in April 2001 to Nancy Hassett by way of a special warranty deed. She did not keep it for long: in August 2002, Ms. Hassett sold Lot 4 to Jeffrey C. Smith and Sandra Corry Smith ("the Smiths").
Notwithstanding the idyllic setting, life in Harbor View proved contentious and, ultimately, litigious. The Declaration's description of the Community Waterfront Access Easement proved ambiguous and impractical, and the neighbors (most notably the Smiths) began to dispute whether and where neighbors farther from the pier could walk to it. These disputes led to unsuccessful negotiations to establish a new path and, eventually, a lawsuit: on May 13, 2008, the Smiths filed a declaratory judgment suit in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County (the "Smith Action") against the community homeowners' association and Back Creek. The Smith Action complaint defies easy summarization, but all of its fifteen claims
After discovery, motions and an animated trial
After the Smith Action concluded, Back Creek sent a letter to First American asserting that the Smith Action claims fell within the scope of coverage of its title insurance policies and demanding reimbursement for Back Creek's attorneys' fees and litigation expenses. First American denied coverage, and Back Creek initiated this action in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County on December 2, 2011, alleging that First American breached the title insurance policies. First American responded to the complaint with a Motion for Summary Judgment that disputed coverage on three bases: (1) the policies had expired in 2006, when Back Creek finished divesting its interest in the development; (2) the claims against Back Creek in the Smith Action were not covered under the policies' terms; and (3) Back Creek had failed to give First American timely notice
On April 16, 2012, after a hearing, the circuit court granted First American's motion for summary judgment. Back Creek filed a Motion for Clarification, and the circuit court entered an order on May 15, 2012, that clarified and reaffirmed summary judgment. Back Creek filed a timely notice of appeal.
We review de novo questions of law decided on summary judgment. Myers v. Kayhoe, 391 Md. 188, 203, 892 A.2d 520 (2006). We must determine as well "whether a material factual issue exists, and in doing so, all factual inferences must be resolved against the moving party," Cheverly Terrace P'ship v. Ticor Title Ins. Co., 100 Md.App. 606, 615-16, 642 A.2d 285 (1994) (citing Rosenberg v. Helinski, 328 Md. 664, 674, 616 A.2d 866 (1992)), in this case, First American.
Boiled to its essence,
But we don't need to reach those questions here because the duty to defend never attached in the first place. Title insurance in general is meant to protect title to property as it existed at a particular time; these title policies in particular covered claims relating to the title that Back Creek obtained when it bought the property and the titles it passed to the Harbor View neighbors. The Smith Action involved no such claims. Instead, the claims in the Smith Action involved disputes regarding the location of the Community Water Access Easement, the neighbors' respective access to that easement and dock, and the scope of the Smiths' riparian rights. Nobody alleged, and the court in the Smith Action never addressed, any defect in Back Creek's title or the titles it conveyed to the Harbor View residents, nor any liens or encumbrances that hadn't been disclosed. As we explain below, we agree with the circuit court that the claims against Back Creek
Title insurance protects property holders against loss or damage resulting from defects or unmarketability in the title of the property held by the insured. Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. West, 110 Md.App. 114, 128, 676 A.2d 953 (1996). Title insurance can also serve as "litigation insurance," id. (citing D. Barlow Burke, Jr., Real Estate Transactions: Examples and Explanations 185 (1993)), to the extent that the policy requires the insurer to defend the policy holder from attacks by third parties against the insured title. Id. An insurer's duty to defend is broader than its duty to indemnify. Walk v. Hartford Cas. Ins. Co., 382 Md. 1, 15, 852 A.2d 98 (2004); Brohawn v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 276 Md. 396, 408, 347 A.2d 842 (1975). But the duty to defend is not limitless: a title insurer's duty to defend depends on (1) the scope of the policy's coverage and (2) whether the allegations in the underlying suit bring the claim within this coverage. Cheverly Terrace, 100 Md.App. at 610, 642 A.2d 285 (citing St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Pryseski, 292 Md. 187, 193, 438 A.2d 282 (1981)); see also Lawyers Title Ins. Corp. v. Knopf, 109 Md.App. 134, 144, 674 A.2d 65 (1996).
To determine whether First American had a duty to defend Back Creek in the Smith Action, we must examine (a) the scope of coverage of the title insurance policies, and (b) whether the Smith Action claims against Back Creek fell within this scope of coverage. As always, we start with the policies, specifically "the terms of the insurance policy, ... accord[ing] the terms their `customary, ordinary, and accepted meaning.'" Knopf, 109 Md.App. at 148, 674 A.2d 65 (quoting Chantel Assocs. v. Mt. Vernon Fire. Ins. Co., 338 Md. 131, 142, 656 A.2d 779 (1995)). We assume, as the parties and the circuit court did, that the second title policy exists and contains the same terms and conditions as the first.
The insuring language in the policies provides that First American "insures, as of [the] Date of Policy ..., against loss or damage ... sustained or incurred by the insured by reason of" four categories of claims:
(Emphasis added.) According to the "Conditions and Stipulations," coverage continues so "long as the insured retains an estate or interest in the land ... or [] so long as the insured shall have liability by reason of covenants of warranty made by the insured in any transfer or conveyance of the estate or interest." The operative language is consistent with the title (as it were) of the policies themselves: they cover claims relating to the insured's title or access to the designated property, and they provide coverage during the time when the insured holds title to the property or owes a warranty of title to a subsequent purchaser. Once the insured no longer holds title to the property, or no longer owes anyone else a warranty of title, coverage terminates — at that point, the insured's successor-in-interest either will have assumed or insured the risk of defects in the title it took.
Out of the box, then, Back Creek runs into what would seem to be an insurmountable problem: the Smith Action was initiated in 2008, two years after Back Creek conveyed its last interest in any lot of the insured property. In Gebhardt, we affirmed summary judgment in favor of an insurer and held that the insured's transfer of property from the insured family members to an LLC owned and controlled entirely by the same people transferred the title defect and terminated the policy:
132 Md.App. at 466, 752 A.2d 1222 (emphasis added).
Timing aside, though, we agree with the circuit court that First American had no duty to defend Back Creek against the Smith Action claims. We recognize that the "facts ultimately proven in the ... underlying suit" have no bearing on First American's duty to defend under the title insurance policies. Cheverly Terrace, 100 Md.App. at 612, 642 A.2d 285. "Rather, an insurer's duty to defend is based on whether the allegations in the complaint potentially bring the claim within the policy's coverage ...[,] even where the action against the insured is frivolous." Id. at 612-13, 642 A.2d 285. And we recognize as well that Back Creek only would need to demonstrate that one of the Smiths' claims is potentially covered by the title insurance policies. If any claim raised by the insured potentially falls within the scope of policy coverage, the insurer must defend against all claims raised by the insured. Utica Mut. Ins. Co. v. Miller, 130 Md.App. 373, 383, 746 A.2d 935 (2000).
Nevertheless, a careful review of the Smith Action claims reveals that Back Creek fails to clear even this relatively low bar. Although perhaps difficult to summarize concisely, the Smith Action claims all relate to the rights of access established by the subdivision covenants and related
Because these title insurance policies could not possibly have covered the Smith Action claims against Back Creek, the circuit court correctly held that First American had no duty to defend Back Creek, and thus no obligation to pay Back Creek's attorneys' fees and defense costs. Summary judgment in favor of First American is affirmed; we need not, and do not, reach First American's other coverage defenses.