Harleysville Preferred Ins. Co. v. Rams Head Savage Mill, LLC ( 2018 )


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  • Harleysville Preferred Insurance Company, et al., v. Rams Head Savage Mill LLC, et al.,
    No. 2409, September Term, 2016. Opinion by Fader, J.
    INSURANCE – PLEADINGS – DUTY TO DEFEND
    Where plaintiffs in tort suits against insured alleged claims covered by the insurance policy,
    the insurer had a duty to defend. Even if the tort plaintiffs do not allege facts that clearly
    bring a claim within policy coverage, the insurer must defend if there is a potentiality that
    the claim could be covered by the policy.
    INSURANCE – POLICY INTEREPRETATION
    Restaurant’s commercial general liability policy providing coverage for “personal and
    advertising injury” arising out of “invasion of the right of private occupancy of a room,
    dwelling or premises that a person occupies, committed by or on behalf of its owner,
    landlord or lessor” unambiguously applied to claims of invasion of privacy caused by an
    insured’s act of surreptitiously surveilling female patrons in the restaurant’s single-
    occupancy restroom.
    INSURANCE – POLICY INTERPRETATION
    A policy provision granting coverage for “the wrongful eviction from, wrongful entry into,
    or invasion of the right of private occupancy” did not require that a claimant alleging an
    invasion of a right of private occupancy also allege a possessory interest in the property to
    fall within the coverage grant.
    DECLARATORY JUDGMENT – EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE
    Where a party attempted to contest coverage by using extrinsic evidence to resolve an issue
    that is to be determined in the underlying litigation, it was appropriate to defer resolution
    of that issue to the underlying litigation.
    INSURANCE – APPLICATION OF CRIMINAL ACTS EXCLUSION
    Where allegations of an underlying complaint did not allow for the potentiality that an
    insured engaged in conduct that was not criminal, coverage was barred under the policy’s
    exclusion for conduct arising out of the criminal acts. Because the tort of unreasonable
    intrusion upon seclusion does not require criminal intent, the exclusion did not render
    coverage illusory.
    Circuit Court for Howard County
    4273   Case No. 13-C-15-104273
    REPORTED
    4273
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 2409
    September Term, 2016
    HARLEYSVILLE PREFERRED
    INSURANCE COMPANY, et al.
    v.
    RAMS HEAD SAVAGE MILL, LLC, et al.
    Friedman,
    Fader,
    Rodowsky, Lawrence F.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.*
    Opinion by Fader, J.
    Filed: June 28, 2018
    *Judge Timothy E. Meredith did not participate
    in the Court’s decision to designate this opinion
    for publication pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1.
    Appellants Harleysville Preferred Insurance Company and Nationwide Mutual
    Insurance Company (collectively, “Harleysville”) ask us to decide that they had no
    obligation to provide a defense for two lawsuits filed against their insured, Rams Head at
    Savage Mill, LLC (“Rams Head”), and Rams Head’s general manager and majority owner,
    Kyle Muehlhauser.       The underlying lawsuits sought damages arising from Mr.
    Muehlhauser’s surreptitious videotaping of women who were using a restroom at a
    restaurant and tavern owned by Rams Head.
    We conclude that Harleysville had a duty to defend Rams Head. Harleysville issued
    insurance policies that provide coverage for damages Rams Head becomes legally
    obligated to pay because of, among other offenses, the “invasion of the right of private
    occupancy of a room . . . that a person occupies, committed by or on behalf of its owner
    . . . .” Under the plain language of the coverage grant, we conclude that the underlying tort
    suits alleged that Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser invaded the plaintiffs’ right of private
    occupancy of the restroom when Mr. Muehlhauser conducted his unauthorized video
    surveillance. We also conclude that an exclusion for “Recording and Distribution of
    Material or Information in Violation of Law” does not preclude coverage.
    Harleysville did not, however, have a duty to defend Mr. Muehlhauser because
    coverage for him is excluded by the policies’ Criminal Acts exclusion. There is no version
    of facts alleged in the complaints under which Mr. Muehlhauser’s alleged conduct is not
    criminal. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part.
    BACKGROUND
    Rams Head is a Maryland limited liability company that owns and operates the
    Rams Head Tavern. Rams Head’s operating agreement designates Mr. Muehlhauser as
    general manager and majority owner of the company and gives him “full, exclusive, and
    complete discretion, power, and authority . . . to manage, control, administer, and operate
    the business and affairs” of Rams Head.
    Rams Head leases the property on which it operates the Rams Head Tavern from
    Savage Mill Limited Partnership under a long-term lease that was originally entered in
    1998. During the term of that lease, provided Rams Head pays its rent and abides by the
    other terms of the lease, Rams Head “shall peaceably and quietly hold and enjoy the Leased
    Premises . . . without hindrance or interruption by Landlord or any other person or persons
    . . . .” Rams Head is permitted to make improvements, and is responsible for making
    repairs, renovations, and renewals to the leased property, subject to approval by Savage
    Mill. Savage Mill is permitted to make changes to the leased property only with the
    approval of Rams Head. The circuit court found that Rams Head exercised “exclusive
    control” over the restaurant.
    The Underlying Incident
    In May 2014, a Rams Head Tavern patron was using its single-occupancy women’s
    restroom when a portable camera fell onto the floor from underneath the sink, close to the
    toilet. She reported the incident to the police, who identified Mr. Muehlhauser as the
    culprit. In July 2015, Mr. Muehlhauser pleaded guilty to two counts of conducting video
    2
    surveillance with prurient intent in violation of § 3-902 of the Criminal Law Article (2012
    Repl.; 2017 Supp.).1
    Two different sets of plaintiffs filed class action complaints in the Circuit Court for
    Howard County against Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser. In Michelle Castle, et al. v.
    Kyle C. Muehlhauser, et al. (Case No. 13-C-15-102598), the plaintiffs alleged that from
    March 2, 2012 to May 9, 2014, Mr. Muehlhauser mounted a camera in the women’s
    restroom at Rams Head Tavern to “conduct visual surveillance of the female patrons and
    employees using the toilets . . . solely for prurient intent” in “an attempt to satiate his sexual
    perversions at the expense of the privacy of the female patrons and employees.” The
    complaint further alleged that Mr. Muehlhauser was “at all times . . . acting in the scope of
    his employment and/or authority as a principal and employee of” Rams Head and that
    Rams Head “adopted and ratified” his conduct.
    1
    Section 3-902(c) of the Criminal Law Article provides, in relevant part:
    A person may not with prurient intent conduct . . . visual surveillance of
    (1) an individual in a private place without the consent of that individual; or
    (2) the private area of an individual by use of a camera without the consent
    of the individual under circumstances in which a reasonable person would
    believe that the private area of the individual would not be visible to the
    public, regardless of whether the individual is in a public or private place.
    The statute defines “visual surveillance” as “the deliberate, surreptitious observation of an
    individual by any means[,]” including with “the use of cameras.” Crim. Law § 3-902(a)(6).
    “Private place” includes any “room in which a person can reasonably be expected to fully
    or partially disrobe and has a reasonable expectation of privacy, in,” among other places, a
    “restaurant or tavern.” 
    Id. § 3-902(a)(5)(i).
    “Private place” expressly includes a
    “restroom.” 
    Id. § 3-902(a)(5)(ii).
    3
    The Castle complaint brought claims against Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser for
    (1) violation of § 3-902 of the Criminal Law Article, which criminalizes certain visual
    surveillance with prurient intent and also creates a private cause of action for individuals
    subjected to unlawful surveillance, and (2) the tort of unreasonable intrusion upon
    seclusion. The complaint alleged that Ms. Castle and the other putative plaintiffs incurred
    damages including “expenses, mental pain and suffering, fright, nervousness, indignity,
    humiliation, embarrassment and insult.”
    The plaintiffs in Felicia Barlow Clar, et al. v. Kyle C. Muehlhauser, et al. (Case No.
    13-C-15-102863), similarly alleged that Mr. Muehlhauser, “both individually and in his
    capacity as President, General Manager, and Owner of the Rams Head . . . did plant video
    recording equipment in the ladies[’] restroom for the purpose of videotaping women
    patrons and employees in the restroom without their permission.” The Clar plaintiffs,
    women who used the restroom at the Rams Head Tavern between January and May of
    2014, alleged that “[a]t all relevant times, Defendant Muehlhauser did violate Md. Code
    Ann., Crim. Law § 3-902 . . . .”
    The Clar complaint brought seven causes of action: negligent hiring, retention,
    supervision, selection and qualification (Count I); intrusion upon seclusion (Count II);
    breach of contract and of the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing (Count III);
    violation of § 3-902 of the Criminal Law Article (Count IV); negligent violation of § 3-902
    of the Criminal Law Article (Count V); negligent entrustment (Count VI); and intentional
    infliction of emotional distress (Count VII). Counts II, III, IV, V, and VII were brought
    against Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser. Mr. Muehlhauser was not named as a defendant
    4
    in Counts I and VI.      The plaintiffs alleged that, as a result of the conduct of Mr.
    Muehlhauser and Rams Head, they “suffered severe humiliation, violation, anxiety, loss of
    dignity, emotional distress, mental anguish, and loss of valuable consideration.” In Count
    VII, they further alleged that they “sustained severe emotional distress resulting in physical
    manifestations, emotional anguish, fear, anxiety, humiliation, embarrassment and other
    physical and emotional injuries . . . .”
    The Harleysville Policies
    During the period covered by the allegations in the complaints—from March 2012
    through May 2014 for the Castle complaint and from January 2014 through May 2014 for
    the Clar complaint—Harleysville insured Rams Head under three one-year commercial
    lines insurance policies. For policies running from December 1, 2011 through December
    1, 2012 and December 31, 2012 through December 31, 2013, respectively,2 policy
    provisions relevant to this dispute were supplied on Harleysville’s Commercial General
    Liability Coverage Form CG 00 01 12 04 (the “04 Policy Form”). From December 31,
    2013 through December 31, 2014, relevant policy provisions were supplied on Form CG
    00 01 12 07 (the “07 Policy Form”). Rams Head was listed as a named insured under each
    policy, and each included within the definition of “an insured” the members and managers
    of the named insureds, but only to the extent of their respective roles. Because the policy
    provisions were essentially identical each year, with one notable exception identified
    below, we discuss them collectively.
    2
    The parties have not explained or raised any issues regarding the apparent gap
    between the end of the first policy and the beginning of the second.
    5
    The policies each provided grants of coverage for bodily injury and property
    damage liability (Coverage A) and personal and advertising liability (Coverage B). Under
    Coverage A, Harleysville agreed to “pay those sums that the insured becomes legally
    obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ to which this
    insurance applies.”      Coverage A excludes property damage or bodily injury that is
    “expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.” In addition to this duty to
    indemnify, the parties agreed that Harleysville would also have “the right and duty to
    defend the insured against any ‘suit’ seeking those damages,” but only if such damages
    would be covered by the policies.
    Under Coverage B, Harleysville agreed to “pay those sums that the insured becomes
    legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘personal and advertising injury’ to which
    this insurance applies,” including any such injury “caused by an offense arising out of your
    business” during the policy period. “‘Personal and advertising injury’ means injury,
    including consequential ‘bodily injury,’ arising out of” seven enumerated categories of
    offenses. Most relevant here is “[t]he wrongful eviction from, wrongful entry into, or
    invasion of the right of private occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises that a person
    occupies, committed by or on behalf of its owner, landlord or lessor.” As with Coverage
    A, in Coverage B Harleysville also undertook “the right and duty to defend the insured
    against any ‘suit’ seeking [] damages” for personal and advertising injury covered by the
    policy.
    Harleysville invokes three coverage exclusions contained in the policies. First, only
    with respect to the policy in place from December 31, 2013 through December 31, 2014
    6
    (the “2014 Policy”), the “Recording and Distribution of Material or Information in
    Violation of Law” exclusion (the “Recording and Distribution exclusion”) precludes
    coverage under both Coverage A and Coverage B for injuries “arising directly or indirectly
    out of any action or omission that violates or is alleged to violate” three specific statutes—
    the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003, and the
    Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”)—or
    [a]ny federal, state, or local statute, ordinance or regulation, other than the
    TCPA, CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 or FCRA and their amendments and
    additions, that addresses, prohibits, or limits the printing, dissemination,
    disposal, collecting, recording, sending, transmitting, communicating or
    distribution of material or information. [3]
    Second, the “Criminal Acts” exclusion exempts from Coverage B injuries “arising
    out of a criminal act committed by or at the direction of the insured.” Third, the “Knowing
    Violation of Rights of Another” exclusion (the “Knowing Violation exclusion”) precludes
    coverage under Coverage B for injuries “caused by or at the direction of the insured with
    the knowledge that the act would violate the rights of another and would inflict ‘personal
    and advertising injury’.”
    3
    The 04 Policy Form, which was applicable to the Harleysville policies in place
    before December 31, 2013, had a narrower version of this exclusion, titled “Distribution of
    Material in Violation of Statutes.” That exclusion, which Harleysville does not contend
    applies here, precluded coverage for injuries arising from the TCPA, the CAN-SPAM Act
    of 2003, or “any statute, ordinance or regulation other than the TCPA or CAN-SPAM Act
    of 2003, that prohibits or limits the sending, transmitting, communicating or distribution
    of material or information.”
    7
    The Declaratory Judgment Action
    Harleysville sought a declaratory judgment that it did not owe a defense to Rams
    Head or Mr. Muehlhauser with respect to either underlying action. Harleysville argued
    that the complaints did not allege injuries covered under either Coverage A or Coverage B
    and, with respect to the 2014 Policy, that the Recording and Distribution exclusion
    precluded coverage. Harleysville further argued that Mr. Muehlhauser does not qualify as
    an insured under the policies because the Criminal Acts and Knowing Violation exclusions
    preclude coverage for him.
    After a hearing, the circuit court issued a memorandum opinion and declaration that
    Harleysville had a duty to defend Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser against both
    complaints.   The court observed that the duty to defend “depends on whether the
    allegations” in a complaint “potentially come[] within the Policy coverage,” regardless of
    whether the claims have a “probability of success.” Thus, the court concluded, Harleysville
    had an obligation under Coverage A to provide a defense for Rams Head to the Clar
    complaint, which the court concluded “clearly set[] forth numerous ‘occurrences’” of
    negligence by Rams Head that “enabled” Mr. Muehlhauser to conduct surveillance in the
    restroom, causing “bodily injury” to the plaintiffs.
    The court held that both defendants were entitled to a defense under Coverage B,
    specifically the policy’s coverage for injuries arising from an alleged “invasion of the right
    of private occupancy of a room . . . that a person occupies, committed by or on behalf of
    its owner.” Finding that coverage grant to be ambiguous, the court interpreted it in the
    light most favorable to the policyholder. The court further rejected Harleysville’s reliance
    8
    on exclusions, concluding that: (1) the Recording and Distribution exclusion is limited to
    the protection of “personal and financial” information; and (2) the Knowing Violation and
    Criminal Acts exclusions are invalid under Bailer v. Erie Ins. Exch., 
    344 Md. 515
    (1997),
    because applying them would render the coverage grant illusory. Because the complaints
    alleged that Mr. Muehlhauser was, at all relevant times, acting on behalf of Rams Head,
    the court also concluded that Harleysville owed a duty to defend Mr. Muehlhauser. In light
    of the pendency of the underlying cases, the court declined to accept extrinsic evidence to
    resolve whether Mr. Muehlhauser was actually acting on behalf of Rams Head.
    Both underlying complaints have now been resolved finally in favor of Rams Head
    and Mr. Muehlhauser.4      As a result, the sole remaining coverage issue is whether
    Harleysville had a duty to defend.
    DISCUSSION
    “When an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate court will review the
    case on both the law and the evidence. It will not set aside the judgment of the trial court
    on the evidence unless clearly erroneous . . . .” Maryland Rule 8-131(c). “To the extent
    this case involves questions of law, including the interpretation of a contract, we review
    for legal error.” White Pine Ins. Co. v. Taylor, 
    233 Md. App. 479
    , 493 (2017); see Clickner
    4
    As we explained in our unreported opinion affirming the entry of summary
    judgment for Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser in Clar, none of the named plaintiffs could
    demonstrate either that they had used the restroom at the Rams Head Tavern on the only
    day on which there was evidence that Mr. Muehlhauser had placed a video camera there or
    that Mr. Muehlhauser had videotaped them at any other time. Clar v. Muehlhauser, No.
    851, Sept. Term 2016, 
    2017 WL 2962816
    , *5 (July 12, 2017).
    9
    v. Magothy River Ass’n, 
    424 Md. 253
    , 266-67 (2012) (“Where a case involves both issues
    of fact and questions of law, this Court will apply the appropriate standard to each issue.”).
    Whether an insurer has a duty to defend “is determined by the allegations in the tort
    actions. If the plaintiffs in the tort suits allege a claim covered by the policy, the insurer
    has a duty to defend.” Brohawn v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 
    276 Md. 396
    , 407 (1975). We
    employ a two-part test to make this determination. First, we determine the “coverage[s]
    and . . . the defenses under the terms and requirements of the insurance policy.” St. Paul
    Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Pryseski, 
    292 Md. 187
    , 193 (1981). Second, we review the
    allegations of the underlying suit to determine whether they “potentially bring the tort claim
    within the policy’s coverage.” 
    Id. “Even if
    a tort plaintiff does not allege facts which
    clearly bring the claim within or without the policy coverage, the insurer still must defend
    if there is a potentiality that the claim could be covered by the policy.” 
    Brohawn, 276 Md. at 408
    . The scope of the duty to defend is broad; it applies whenever a tort plaintiff brings
    an “action that is potentially covered by the policy, no matter how attenuated, frivolous, or
    illogical that allegation may be.” Sheets v. Brethren Mut. Ins. Co., 
    342 Md. 634
    , 643
    (1996).
    To address the first part of this test, we must construe the relevant language of the
    policy according to contract principles. Md. Cas. Co. v. Blackstone Int’l Ltd., 
    442 Md. 685
    , 694 (2015). “Maryland follows the law of objective contract interpretation.” Sy-Lene
    of Wash., Inc. v. Starwood Urban Retail II, LLC, 
    376 Md. 157
    , 166 (2003). Thus, “[i]n
    construing insurance contracts in Maryland we give the words of the contract their ordinary
    and accepted meaning, looking to the intention of the parties from the instrument as a
    10
    whole.” 
    Taylor, 233 Md. App. at 498
    (quoting Finci v. Am. Cas. Co., 
    323 Md. 358
    , 369-
    70 (1991)). We must construe a contract “as a whole” and give effect “to every clause and
    phrase.” 
    Taylor, 233 Md. App. at 498
    (quoting Phila. Indem. Ins. Co. v. Md. Yacht Club,
    Inc., 
    129 Md. App. 455
    , 468 (1999)).
    “Although Maryland does not follow the rule that insurance contracts should be
    construed against the insurer . . . , any ambiguity will be ‘construed liberally in favor of the
    insured and against the insurer as drafter of the instrument.’” Blackstone Int’l 
    Ltd., 442 Md. at 695
    (quoting Dutta v. State Farm Ins. Co., 
    363 Md. 540
    , 556 (2001)). We “ascertain
    the intent of the parties from the policy as a whole, considering extrinsic and parol evidence
    to construe any ambiguity.” Connors v. Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co., 
    442 Md. 466
    , 483 (2015).
    “The court’s analysis should ‘accord words their ordinary and accepted meanings’” to
    ascertain “what meaning a reasonably prudent layperson would attach to the term.” 
    Taylor, 233 Md. App. at 499
    (quoting JMP Assocs., Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    345 Md. 630
    , 635 (1997)). “If the language in an insurance policy suggests more than one
    meaning to a reasonably prudent layperson, it is ambiguous.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    Co. v. DeHaan, 
    393 Md. 163
    , 193 (2006) (quoting Sullins v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    340 Md. 503
    ,
    508 (1995)).
    Because “exclusions are designed to limit or avoid liability, they will be construed
    more strictly than coverage clauses and must be construed in favor of a finding of
    coverage.” Megonnell v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 
    368 Md. 633
    , 656 (2002) (quoting Eric
    Mills Holmes & Mark S. Rhodes, 2 Holmes’s Appleman on Insurance § 7.2, at 276-81
    11
    (Eric Mills Holmes ed., West 1996). Insurers thus must draft exclusionary provisions
    “conspicuously, plainly and clearly.” 
    Id. I. HARLEYSVILLE
    HAD A DUTY TO DEFEND AGAINST CLAIMS THAT RAMS
    HEAD INVADED THE UNDERLYING PLAINTIFFS’ RIGHT OF PRIVATE
    OCCUPANCY OF THE RAMS HEAD TAVERN’S RESTROOM.
    A.     The Plain Language of the Coverage Grant
    The coverage grant on which Rams Head primarily relies requires Harleysville to
    provide a defense to claims for damages based on the “wrongful eviction from, wrongful
    entry into, or invasion of the right of private occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises
    that a person occupies, committed by or on behalf of its owner, landlord or lessor.” Rams
    Head argues that this coverage grant obligates Harleysville to defend it because the Clar
    and Castle complaints alleged that (1) the plaintiffs had a right to occupy the private
    restroom at the Rams Head Tavern, (2) the plaintiffs in fact occupied that room,
    (3) Mr. Muehlhauser, acting on behalf of Rams Head, invaded that right of private
    occupancy by his video surveillance, and (4) Rams Head, by virtue of its control over the
    restroom, was its owner for purposes of this coverage grant.
    Harleysville disagrees that the coverage grant applies to these allegations. Relying
    heavily on the fact that it is paired in the policy with the concepts of “wrongful eviction”
    and “wrongful entry,” Harleysville argues that to have a “right of private occupancy in a
    room,” one must have a possessory interest in the room. Because the plaintiffs lacked any
    such interest, Harleysville contends that their claims do not fall within the coverage grant.
    Harleysville also argues that Rams Head was not the “owner” of the restroom because it
    was merely a lessee of the premises, which were instead owned by non-party Savage Mill.
    12
    To determine who is correct, we turn to the plain meaning of the relevant policy
    terms.    JMP Assocs., 
    Inc., 345 Md. at 635
    . We start with the specific policy language
    under which Rams Head claims an entitlement to coverage, an “invasion of a right of
    private occupancy in a room.” “Occupancy,” as commonly understood, is “the action or
    fact of occupying a place.” New Oxford American Dictionary, “occupancy,” at 1213 (3d
    ed. 2010); see also Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, “occupancy,” at 858 (11th
    ed. 2014) (“the fact or condition of holding, possessing, or residing in or on something”).
    Common meanings of “occupy” similarly include “to take up (a place or extent in space),”
    “to take or hold possession or control of,” and “to reside in as an owner or tenant,” all in
    Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate, “occupy,” at 858; and “reside or have one’s place of
    business in,” “fill or take up,” or “be situated in or at,” all in New Oxford American,
    “occupy,” at 1213. Although each of these sets of definitions of “occupy” includes one
    that references “resid[ing]” in a place, the others reference more generic concepts of taking
    up space or having temporary possession of a place. Indeed, the use of variants of “occupy”
    and “occupied” specifically to identify one’s temporary possession of a restroom (e.g., on
    an airplane) are common.
    The word “occupancy” appears as part of the phrase “right of private occupancy.”
    The question is thus not just whether a person claims to have been occupying a particular
    “room, dwelling or premises,” but whether that person claimed a “right” to occupy that
    location in private. We conclude that, in Maryland, a patron of a business using that
    business’s restroom stall for its intended purpose has a right to do so in private. We need
    look no further than § 3-902 of the Criminal Law Article, the statute under which Mr.
    13
    Muehlhauser was convicted and on which the underlying plaintiffs relied, to find a
    statutory embodiment of this right. Section 3-902(a) prohibits a person from conducting
    nonconsensual visual surveillance of an individual in a private place with prurient intent.
    The statute defines “private place” to mean “a room in which a person can reasonably be
    expected to fully or partially disrobe and has a reasonable expectation of privacy,”
    including a “restroom” in, among other places, a “restaurant or tavern.” Crim. Law
    § 3-902(a)(5)(i) and (6). We conclude that the plain meaning of the phrase “right of private
    occupancy” covers the right of an individual who is occupying a single-occupancy
    restroom in a restaurant or tavern for its intended purpose to do so in private.
    We also have no trouble in concluding that video surveillance of the activities of an
    individual who is using a restroom stall in a restaurant or tavern for its intended purpose
    constitutes an “invasion” of that right. That is, again, conclusively established by the
    criminal penalties and private right of action created by § 3-902 itself. Maryland also
    recognizes a cause of action for intrusion upon seclusion, which is “the intentional intrusion
    upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his private affairs or concerns that would be
    highly offensive to a reasonable person.” Pemberton v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 66 Md.
    App. 133, 163 (1986) (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652B (1977)).5 As with other
    privacy torts, whether conduct is “highly offensive” is based on a test of reasonableness.
    See Beane v. McMullen, 
    265 Md. 585
    , 600-01 (1972) (stating that “rea[s]onableness under
    the facts presented is the determining factor” for invasion of privacy claims generally).
    5
    Harleysville argues that privacy torts require publication. Intrusion upon seclusion
    has no such requirement. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652B (1977).
    14
    Thus, “we ask whether there has been an ‘intrusion into a private place or the invasion of
    a private seclusion that the plaintiff has thrown about his person or affairs.’” Furman v.
    Sheppard, 
    130 Md. App. 67
    , 73 (2000) (quoting 
    Pemberton, 66 Md. App. at 163
    ). Video
    surveillance of a person’s activities in a private restroom stall easily meets that standard.
    We conclude that the plain meaning of the phrase “invasion of the right of private
    occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises that a person occupies,” if construed on its
    own: (1) is unambiguous; and (2) encompasses allegations that an insured conducted video
    surveillance of individuals using a restroom stall on its premises. We now turn to examine
    whether other language in the policies compels a different conclusion.
    B.     The Plain Language of the Coverage Grant in Context
    Because we do not analyze contractual language in isolation, 
    Taylor, 233 Md. App. at 498
    , we must look at the broader context of the coverage grant to determine the scope of
    coverage, Moscarillo v. Prof’l Risk Mgmt. Servs. Inc., 
    398 Md. 529
    , 540 (2007) (“Maryland
    Courts should examine the character of the [insurance] contract, its purpose, and the facts
    and circumstances of the parties at the time of the execution.”) (quoting Litz v. State Farm
    Fire & Cas. Co., 
    346 Md. 217
    , 224-25 (1997). Harleysville correctly points out that the
    language “invasion of the right of private occupancy of a room” does not appear alone in
    the policy. In particular, Harleysville highlights that this phrase appears with two others,
    “wrongful eviction from” and “wrongful entry into,” each of which requires the claimant
    to allege that she or he has a possessory interest in the property at issue. Based on the
    doctrine of ejusdem generis, Harleysville argues that this construction requires that a
    15
    claimant alleging an invasion of a right of private occupancy must also allege a possessory
    interest in the property to fall within this coverage grant.
    Ejusdem generis, meaning “of the same kind or class,” is a “canon of construction
    holding that when a general word or phrase follows a list of specifics, the general word or
    phrase will be interpreted to include only items of the same class as those listed.” Black’s
    Law Dictionary, “ejusdem generis,” at 631 (10th ed. 2014). Maryland courts have applied
    this doctrine to the construction of statutes when: (1) there is “an enumeration by specific
    words”; (2) “the members of the enumeration suggest a class”; (3) “the class is not
    exhausted by the enumeration”; (4) the enumeration is supplemented, and generally
    followed, by a “general reference”; and (5) the statute does not “clearly manifest[] an intent
    that the general term be given a broader meaning than the doctrine requires.” Tribbitt v.
    State, 
    403 Md. 638
    , 657 (2008) (quoting In re Wallace W., 
    333 Md. 186
    , 190 (1993)). The
    doctrine “is based on ‘the supposition that if the legislature had intended the general words
    to be construed in an unrestricted sense, it would not have enumerated the specific things.’”
    In re Wallace 
    W., 333 Md. at 190
    (quoting State v. One Hundred & Fifty-Eight Gaming
    Devices, 
    304 Md. 404
    , 429 n.12 (1985)). The legislature is thus saved from having to
    “spell[] out in advance every contingency in which the statute could apply.” 
    Id. at 190-91
    (quoting 2A Sutherland Statutes & Statutory Const. § 47.17, at 188 (5th ed. 1992)). “The
    doctrine is applicable to contracts as well as to statutes, and has been applied to insurance
    policies.” Neuman v. Travelers Indem. Co., 
    271 Md. 636
    , 646 (1974).
    In In re Wallace W., the Court of Appeals applied the doctrine to a statute
    proscribing the unauthorized use of “any horse, mare, colt, gelding, mule, ass, sheep, hog,
    16
    ox or cow, or any carriage, wagon, buggy, cart, boat, craft, vessel, or any other vehicle
    including motor vehicle as defined in the laws of this State relating to such, or property
    
    whatsoever.” 333 Md. at 190
    . The Court held that because the enumerated items fell into
    only two categories—livestock and “vehicles that travel on land or water”—the phrase
    “property whatsoever” should be construed as limited to property falling into one of those
    two categories. 
    Id. at 191.
    Similarly, in State v. Sinclair, the Court construed “other thing
    of value” in the phrase “money, credit, goods, wares, or other thing of value,” to be limited
    to the class of things “having intrinsic value measurable in money.” 
    274 Md. 646
    , 650,
    659 (1975).
    By contrast, the Court has declined to apply the doctrine when doing so would not
    further legislative intent. Thus, in One Hundred & Fifty-Eight Gaming Devices, the Court
    declined to hold that “other object,” as used in the phrase “any piece of money, coin, token
    or other object representative of [or] convertible into money,” was limited to “tangible
    
    things.” 304 Md. at 429
    n.12. And in Tribbitt, the Court declined to interpret the general
    term “sexual abuse” as being limited by the specific examples identified in the 
    statute. 403 Md. at 656-58
    .
    In contrast to In re Wallace W. and Sinclair, it is not at all clear from the structure
    of the provision at issue here that “invasion of the right of private occupancy” is intended
    to be limited by the terms “wrongful eviction” and “wrongful entry,” as opposed to
    constituting a broader type of claim with independent significance. The provision itself is
    one of seven listed categories of offenses that comprise the definition of “personal and
    advertising injury.” The full list is:
    17
    a. False arrest, detention or imprisonment;
    b. Malicious prosecution;
    c. The wrongful eviction from, wrongful entry into, or invasion of the right
    or private occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises that a person occupies,
    committed by or on behalf of its owner, landlord or lessor;
    d. Oral or written publication, in any manner, of material that slanders or
    libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s or organization’s
    goods, products or services;
    e. Oral or written publication, in any manner, of material that violates a
    person’s right of privacy;
    f. The use of another’s advertising idea in your ‘advertisement’; or
    g. Infringing upon another’s copyright, trade dress or slogan in your
    ‘advertisement’.
    Nothing about this list suggests that “invasion of the right of private occupancy” is intended
    to be limited in scope by the two terms that precede it. Indeed, none of the other categories
    of offenses follow that structure. To the contrary, categories (a), (b), (f), and (g), simply
    list specific offenses. And categories (d) and (e) identify broad categories, but without any
    specific examples.
    We also find it notable that “invasion of the right of private occupancy” is not
    preceded by the word “other,” which is a standard grammatical cue that a term is meant to
    encompass what came before it. See, e.g., 
    Sinclair, 274 Md. at 659
    (referencing “other
    thing of value”). Instead, the provision simply lists three items, separated by an “or” that
    is not paired with “other,” which is the standard grammatical cue that an additional listed
    item is to follow. By contrast, several of the cases from other jurisdictions on which
    Harleysville relies construed coverage grants that did include the cue “other.” Thus, in
    Groshong v. Mut. of Enumclaw Ins. Co., the Oregon Supreme Court interpreted a coverage
    18
    grant addressing the “wrongful entry or eviction, or other invasion of the right of private
    occupancy.” 
    985 P.2d 1284
    , 1289-90 (Or. 1999). And in Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. East
    Cent. Okla. Elec. Coop., the personal injuries included “wrongful entry or eviction or other
    invasion of the right of private occupancy.” 
    97 F.3d 383
    , 389 (10th Cir. 1996). Indeed,
    the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit observed that “[a]lmost all of the
    precedent invoking the Latin maxim involve insurance policies that include the phrase
    ‘other invasion of the right of private occupancy.’” New Castle County v. Nat’l Union Fire
    Ins. Co., 
    243 F.3d 744
    , 752 (3d Cir. 2001). That linguistic difference is significant.6
    Harleysville asserts that “courts nationwide” have “uniformly characterized” the
    “right of private occupancy” in such a coverage provision “as requiring proof of a
    possessory interest in real property that is the subject of interference by its owner, typically
    in cases involving the dispossession of a tenant.” Harleysville’s contention is overstated.
    First, as just noted, many of those cases were interpreting policy language that differed in
    an important respect from that here. 
    Id. Second, other
    cases relied on by Harleysville did
    not need to, and so did not, interpret the language “invasion of a right of private occupancy”
    because they specifically concerned claims of wrongful eviction. E.g., STK Enters., Inc.
    v. Crusader Ins. Co., 
    14 P.3d 638
    , 642 (Or. App. 2000); Century Sur. Co. v. Seductions,
    6
    We decline to read the language of these other policies into the Harleysville policy.
    To the extent the language of the Harleysville policies differs from others, the use of
    different language is presumptively purposeful and meaningful. See Aragona v. St. Paul
    Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    281 Md. 371
    , 375 (1977) (“Insurance contracts, like other
    contracts, must be read as a single document and construed as a whole . . . . [T]he primary
    purpose in construing insurance contracts is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the
    parties.”). We reach no conclusion here regarding how we would interpret a different
    insurance policy that used different language.
    19
    LLC, 
    609 F. Supp. 2d 1273
    , 1278-81 (S.D. Fla. 2009); Westfield Ins. Grp. v. J.P.’s Wharf,
    Ltd., 
    859 A.2d 74
    (Del. 2004); Zelda, Inc. v. Northland Ins. Co., 
    56 Cal. App. 4th 1252
    ,
    1263-66 (1997).
    Third, Harleysville’s claim of uniformity is simply incorrect. In New Castle County,
    the Third Circuit observed that courts interpreting similar policy language had reached
    inconsistent conclusions. There, New Castle County was a defendant in suits alleging that
    it had frustrated development plans by denying a building permit and voiding a recorded
    plan for the property at 
    issue. 243 F.3d at 747-48
    . The court surveyed other cases
    interpreting similar policy provisions, finding that some concluded that the provision
    requires a possessory interest in real property and others, admittedly smaller in number,
    did not. 
    Id. at 750-54.
    Observing that insurance companies had stubbornly refused to
    clarify the policy language in response to these varied interpretations, the court found the
    language ambiguous and, as a result, held that New Castle County was entitled to coverage.
    
    Id. at 756.
    The court rejected the use of ejusdem generis, reasoning that applying the
    doctrine to reach the conclusion that the policy language was unambiguous “would fly in
    the face of commonsense.” 
    Id. at 747;
    accord Nautilus Ins. Co. v. BSA Ltd. P’ship, 602 F.
    Supp. 2d 641, 653 (D. Md. 2009) (finding the phrase “invasion of the right of private
    occupancy” ambiguous in light of the many varying interpretations of it, and thus
    construing it against the insurer under Maryland law); see Town of Goshen v. Grange Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    120 N.H. 915
    , 917 (1980) (finding that a “tangible interference with [] physical
    property” was not required to find an invasion of private right of occupancy).
    20
    Indeed, in the case that is most directly on point, the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit, applying Mississippi law, concluded that nearly identical policy
    language afforded coverage for a similar claim. Am. Guarantee & Liab. Ins. Co. v. The
    1906 Co., 
    273 F.3d 605
    (5th Cir. 2001). There, the underlying allegations were that a
    “male employee had surreptitiously videotaped female customers changing clothes in a
    women’s dressing room on the insured’s premises.” 
    Id. at 607.
    The policy provided
    coverage for personal injury, including “[w]rongful eviction from, wrongful entry into, or
    invasion of the right of private occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises that a person
    occupies by or on behalf of its owner, landlord or lessor.” 
    Id. at 611
    (emphasis supplied
    by Fifth Circuit). Construing the applicable terms according to their plain and ordinary
    meanings, the court concluded “that an average purchaser of insurance could reasonably
    understand” the policy to cover “the invasion of a room that is secluded from the sight,
    presence, or intrusion of others,” and that the video surveillance alleged “falls within this
    definition.”   
    Id. at 619.
      Moreover, although the court found the provision to be
    unambiguous, it further noted that even if it were ambiguous, it would need to be
    interpreted in favor of coverage under Mississippi law. 
    Id. at 619-20
    (acknowledging that
    “[w]ell reasoned opinions of other courts” had found the phrase to be “highly ambiguous”).
    We join the Fifth Circuit in declining to read into the phrase “invasion of the right
    of private occupancy” a requirement that a claimant asserting such a right have a possessory
    interest in the property at issue. As already noted, we do not consider the doctrine of
    ejusdem generis to be implicated by either the grammatical structure of the provision or
    the context of the list in which it appears. We do not believe the coverage grant to be
    21
    ambiguous. But even if it were, in the absence of any extrinsic evidence that would support
    Harleysville’s interpretation, we would be required to interpret the provision in favor of
    the reasonable interpretation proffered by Rams Head. We thus conclude that, for purposes
    of the duty to defend under the Harleysville policies, video surveillance of individuals
    using a restroom in a tavern or restaurant for its intended purpose is an invasion of the right
    of private occupancy of the restroom.
    C.     Rams Head as the Owner of the Restroom
    Harleysville also contends that the underlying complaints do not allege “personal
    and advertising injury” under the policy because they do not allege that the invasion of the
    right of private occupancy at issue was committed by or on behalf of the “owner, landlord
    or lessor” of the restroom. The facts are not in dispute. Rams Head leases the property on
    which the Rams Head Tavern is located from Savage Mill pursuant to a long-term lease.
    Provided Rams Head complies with its obligations under the lease, it is entitled to
    “peaceably and quietly hold and enjoy the Leased Premises . . . without hindrance or
    interruption by Landlord or any other person or persons . . . .” The circuit court found that
    Rams Head exercises “exclusive control” over the restaurant.
    In essence, Harleysville asks that we strictly construe the term “owner” to be limited
    to the legal ownership of the real property on which the building is located. Rams Head
    counters that the use of “owner” in the provision is more flexible and encompasses Rams
    Head’s exclusive control over the restroom located in the business it owns and operates.
    To resolve this issue, we look to the common and popular understanding of the word
    “owner.” See generally Bausch & Lomb Inc. v. Utica Mut. Ins. Co., 
    330 Md. 758
    , 781
    22
    (1993) (observing that courts afford policy terms the meanings “as used and understood by
    reasonably prudent laypersons in daily life”). Of course, “owner” is not used in a vacuum,
    but it appears as part of the phrase “of a room, dwelling or premises that a person occupies,
    committed by or on behalf of its owner, landlord or lessor.” Given that we are focused on
    a “right of private occupancy” in the restroom, the question is whether Rams Head was the
    “owner” of that room.
    A common definition of “own” is “have (something) as one’s own; possess.” New
    Oxford American, “own,” at 1253; accord Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate, “own,” at 887
    (“to have or hold as property: POSSESS”). There is no indication in the policies that
    “owner” was intended to reference fee simple ownership of real property as opposed to this
    common, everyday understanding of the term. It is uncontested here that Rams Head
    possessed the entire Rams Head Tavern, including its women’s restroom; indeed,
    Harleysville’s counsel expressly conceded that at oral argument. We conclude that, for
    purposes of this coverage grant, Rams Head was the “owner” of the restroom in the Rams
    Head Tavern.
    We consider it confirmation of our interpretation of the plain language of the policy
    that coverage would be rendered illusory if we were to instead accept Harleysville’s
    interpretation.   This category of personal and advertising injury insurance provides
    coverage for claims that an insured who has granted someone a right to possess or occupy
    privately a “room, dwelling or premises” has wrongfully diminished or destroyed that right.
    Interpreting “owner, landlord or lessor” as proposed by Harleysville would effectively
    eliminate coverage for any owner of a business that, like Rams Head, does not own in fee
    23
    simple the property on which the business operates. In light of the structure of many
    modern businesses, that would effectively wipe out coverage for many business owners
    even for wrongful eviction or wrongful entry claims. For example, a hotel that is operated
    by a company that does not own the underlying property would be denied coverage for a
    claim that it improperly evicted a patron from a room she or he had rented.
    Rams Head, not Savage Mill, possessed and had control over the restroom. And
    Rams Head, not Savage Mill, was empowered to grant its customers the right to occupy
    the restroom while they were patronizing the restaurant. We therefore conclude that Rams
    Head was the owner of the restroom for purposes of the coverage grant. We now turn to
    the exclusions Harleysville invokes.7
    D.     The Recording and Distribution Exclusion
    Harleysville contends that even if Rams Head otherwise would be entitled to a
    defense, coverage is precluded under the 2014 Policy by the Recording and Distribution
    exclusion.8 Under that exclusion, coverage is not available for “‘personal and advertising
    injury’ arising directly or indirectly out of any action or omission that violates or is alleged
    to violate” three specific statutes—the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), the
    7
    In light of our conclusion that Harleysville owed a duty to defend Rams Head with
    respect to both underlying complaints under Coverage B of the policies, we do not address
    Rams Head’s contention that Harleysville also had a duty to provide coverage for the Clar
    complaint under Coverage A.
    8
    The Castle complaint alleged conduct going back to 2012. The Clar complaint
    alleged conduct only in 2014. The Recording and Distribution exclusion applies only to
    the 2014 Policy. If the Recording and Distribution exclusion were applicable, it would
    thus preclude coverage entirely for the Clar complaint, but Harleysville would still owe a
    defense for the Castle complaint under the policies in effect during 2012 and 2013.
    24
    CAN-SPAM Act of 2003,9 and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”)—or “[a]ny
    federal, state or local statute, ordinance or regulation, other than the TCPA, CAN-SPAM
    Act of 2003 or FCRA and their amendments and additions, that addresses, prohibits, or
    limits the printing, dissemination, disposal, collecting, recording, sending, transmitting,
    communicating or distribution of material or information.”
    Unlike the listing of offenses covered as personal and advertising injury, this
    appears to be a paradigmatic case for application of ejusdem generis, as it satisfies all of
    the In re Wallace W. 
    criteria. 333 Md. at 190
    . Here, we have (1) an enumeration by
    specific words of statutes intended to be covered; (2) the enumeration suggests a class of
    statutes directed at protecting consumers from either unwanted solicitations (TCPA and
    CAN-SPAM) or the collection and distribution of financial information (FCRA); (3) a class
    that is not exhausted by these references; (4) a reference to a general category; and (5) no
    manifestation of an intent to give a broader meaning to the general category than the
    doctrine requires. Thus, we interpret the Recording and Distribution exclusion to cover
    conduct that is alleged to violate, in addition to the specified statutes, other statutes or
    regulations that protect consumers from the types of harm addressed by the enumerated
    statutes: unwanted solicitations and the improper collection and distribution of financial
    information.
    9
    This use of “spam” comes from a sketch by the British comedy troupe Monty
    Python about a group of Vikings singing “a chorus of ‘spam, spam, spam . . . ’” about the
    meat product SPAM “in an increasing crescendo, drowning out other conversation.” Thus,
    “the analogy applied because [spam email] was drowning out normal discourse on the
    Internet.” MaryCLE, LLC v. First Choice Internet, Inc., 
    166 Md. App. 481
    , 496 n.14
    (2006) (internal quotations omitted).
    25
    The history of this provision supports our interpretation. The 04 Policy Form
    contained a “Distribution of Material in Violation of Statutes” exclusion, which was similar
    to the Recording and Distribution exclusion except that it did not: (1) list the FCRA as a
    specific statute covered; or (2) include “printing, dissemination, disposal, collecting, [or]
    recording” in the general category that followed the listing of specific statutes. The
    addition of the FCRA was thus linked to the addition of these new terms in the general
    category when the new exclusion appeared by endorsement in the 2014 Policy. The FCRA
    is intended to promote fair and accurate credit reporting by, among other things, regulating
    the creation, collection, dissemination, disposal, and reporting of credit information, see
    generally 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681 – 1681x.         Especially considering the structure of this
    exclusion, it is apparent that the additional terms, including “recording,” were intended to
    bring within the scope of the exclusion claims alleging the violation of laws similar to the
    FCRA. We discern no basis for reading such a provision so broadly as to encompass the
    type of “recording” at issue here.
    II.   HARLEYSVILLE DID NOT HAVE A DUTY TO DEFEND AGAINST CLAIMS
    THAT MR. MUEHLHAUSER INVADED THE UNDERLYING PLAINTIFFS’
    RIGHT OF PRIVATE OCCUPANCY OF THE RAMS HEAD TAVERN’S
    RESTROOM.
    Our analysis with respect to the general applicability of Coverage B and the lack of
    application of the Recording and Distribution exclusion applies equally to Mr.
    Muehlhauser’s claim for coverage as it does to Rams Head’s claim for coverage. However,
    Harleysville raises additional defenses to Mr. Muehlhauser’s claims, including that:
    (1) Mr. Muehlhauser is not an “insured” under the policy for purposes of the underlying
    26
    claims; and (2) the Knowing Violation and Criminal Acts exclusions preclude coverage.
    We disagree as to the first argument, but agree that the Criminal Acts exclusion applies
    and bars coverage for Mr. Muehlhauser.
    A.     Mr. Muehlhauser Was an Insured Under the Policy for Purposes
    of the Duty to Defend.
    The policies define an insured to include the members of a named insured, “but only
    with respect to the conduct of your business,” as well as the managers of a named insured,
    “but only with respect to their duties as your managers.” Harleysville contends that Mr.
    Muehlhauser was not an insured for purposes of the Clar and Castle claims because the
    activities he is alleged to have engaged in were not “with respect to the conduct of [Rams
    Head’s] business.” Mr. Muehlhauser responds that, at least for purposes of the duty to
    defend, he qualifies as an insured because both complaints expressly alleged that he was
    acting within the scope of his duties as a manager and owner of Rams Head.
    Before we address the merits of this claim we must first address Harleysville’s
    contention that the circuit court erred in refusing to consider evidence outside the pleadings
    that would have established conclusively that Mr. Muehlhauser was not acting with respect
    to the conduct of Rams Head’s business.           Harleysville argues that the parties to a
    declaratory judgment action regarding the duty to defend are not restricted to the
    allegations of the underlying complaints when considering who is an insured under the
    policy. Although that is true in certain circumstances, those are limited to cases in which
    the resolution of the question of who an insured is would not affect the defense of the
    underlying claims. That is not the case here.
    27
    As already discussed, the general rule is that whether an insurer has a duty to defend
    is determined exclusively by comparing the coverage provisions of the policy against the
    allegations of the claim. Blackstone Int’l 
    Ltd., 442 Md. at 696
    . Where coverage questions
    are entirely separate and distinct from the defense of the underlying action, such as the
    resolution of an ambiguity in policy language, they may be resolved while the underlying
    action is pending. 
    Pryseski, 292 Md. at 194
    . In such circumstances, the court must resolve
    the coverage questions “in favor of the insured before it can conclude that the insurer has
    or had an obligation to provide a tort defense.” 
    Id. On the
    other hand, where an insurer
    contests coverage based on a contention that is to be resolved in the underlying litigation—
    i.e., where the coverage and underlying liability issues are in some way intertwined—it is
    inappropriate to resolve that issue in a separate coverage action while the underlying action
    remains pending.
    This rule serves the important purpose of preventing an insurer that is attempting to
    avoid a coverage obligation from prejudicing the defense of its insured in the underlying
    action in the process. Thus, as the Court of Appeals observed in Brohawn, where an
    insurance company’s claim is that there is no coverage because the insured failed to comply
    with the requirements of the policy, a preliminary declaratory judgment action to determine
    coverage issues may be 
    appropriate. 276 Md. at 405
    . “But where, as here, the question to
    be resolved in the declaratory judgment action will be decided in pending actions, it is
    inappropriate to grant a declaratory judgment.” 
    Id. at 406.
    In Brohawn, because the issue
    of whether the tort defendant/coverage claimant acted “with intent to cause injury” was
    28
    relevant to both the coverage determination and the underlying action, it could not be
    resolved through the declaratory judgment action. 
    Id. at 400,
    405-06.
    If the circuit court here were to have taken evidence to determine whether Mr.
    Muehlhauser really had acted within the scope of his duties for Rams Head, as alleged in
    the underlying complaints, it would have been deciding an issue that still needed to be
    resolved in the underlying actions. That it was not permitted to do.10 As the circuit court
    correctly observed, if that issue had remained unresolved by the underlying litigation, it
    could have been litigated in a separate, later declaratory judgment action. See, e.g., Allstate
    Ins. Co. v. Atwood, 
    319 Md. 247
    , 263 (1990). The court thus did not err in declining to
    consider matters outside the “eight corners” of the underlying complaints and the policies.
    See Montgomery Cty. Bd. of Educ. v. Horace Mann Ins. Co., 
    154 Md. App. 502
    , 511
    (2003), aff’d, 
    383 Md. 527
    (2004) (under the “eight corners rule,” a court is required “to
    analyze only the complaint and the insurance policy when determining whether a claim
    could potentially come within the coverage and, consequently, [to] disregard any extrinsic
    evidence”).
    Turning to the merits, we also concur with the circuit court’s conclusion that, based
    on the allegations of the underlying complaints and the policies’ definition of an insured,
    Mr. Muehlhauser was an insured for purposes of the duty to defend. Both sides rely on the
    10
    The Court of Appeals has recognized a further exception allowing courts to
    entertain declaratory judgment actions prior to trial of the underlying action “where the
    allegations in the underlying tort claims ‘obviously constitute a patent attempt to
    recharacterize, as negligent, an act that is clearly intentional . . . .’” Pettit v. Erie Ins. Exch.,
    
    349 Md. 777
    , 780 (1998) (quoting Allstate Ins. Co. v. Atwood, 
    319 Md. 247
    , 253 (1990)).
    Harleysville does not contend that this exception applies here.
    29
    Court of Appeals’s decision in Pryseski, which we agree is dispositive. There, a plaintiff
    filed suit against an insurance broker whose “duties included the collection of monthly
    premiums” at customers’ 
    residences. 292 Md. at 190
    . The plaintiff alleged in relevant part
    that “in the course of his employment as an agent,” Mr. Pryseski entered her home “for the
    purpose of collecting” a premium before making sexual advances on her. 
    Id. She alleged
    that this incident occurred “during the course of and while acting in the scope of [Mr.
    Pryseski’s] employment,” which his employer then ratified. 
    Id. The employer’s
    insurer
    refused to provide a defense for Mr. Pryseski and initiated a declaratory judgment action
    to contest coverage on the ground that Mr. Pryseski had not acted within the scope of his
    employment. 
    Id. at 191.
    The Court of Appeals held that, for the purpose of the declaratory
    judgment action, the lower courts should have construed the policy language at issue,
    including the meaning of policy terms, but that it would have been inappropriate to decide
    in the declaratory judgment action whether Mr. Pryseski was acting in the scope of his
    employment. 
    Id. at 196.
    As with Mr. Pryseski, whether Mr. Muehlhauser was actually acting within his
    scope of employment was a question for the factfinder in the underlying tort actions. See
    Sawyer v. Humphries, 
    322 Md. 247
    , 254-61 (1991) (discussing factors to be considered in
    determining whether an employee’s conduct was within the scope of employment). The
    tort plaintiffs alleged that he was acting within the scope of his employment, and made
    claims that, if true, had the potentiality to establish Mr. Muehlhauser as an insured. The
    circuit court thus did not err in treating Mr. Muehlhauser as an insured for purposes of the
    duty to defend.
    30
    B.       The Criminal      Acts    Exclusion    Bars    Coverage      for   Mr.
    Muehlhauser.
    We now turn to our one point of departure from the thorough analysis of the circuit
    court, the applicability of the Criminal Acts exclusion. Coverage B does not apply to
    injuries “arising out of a criminal act committed by or at the direction of the insured.”
    Harleysville contends that this exclusion bars coverage for Mr. Muehlhauser because the
    acts he is alleged to have committed are criminal. Mr. Muehlhauser argues that the
    application of this exclusion would render meaningless the coverage grant and run afoul of
    the rule established in Bailer, which prohibits giving effect to an exclusion that would
    swallow the coverage 
    grant. 344 Md. at 525
    . Harleysville disagrees, asserting that, unlike
    the “expected or intended” exclusion at issue in Bailer, giving force to the Criminal Acts
    exclusion would not negate the coverage provided by Coverage B. We agree with
    Harleysville.
    The starting point for our analysis is Bailer. The Bailers’ au pair, after learning that
    Mr. Bailer had secretly videotaped her while she showered, sued for invasion of privacy.
    
    Id. at 518.
    The Bailers called upon their personal catastrophe liability policy for a defense.
    The policy covered “invasion of privacy” as a “[p]ersonal injury,” but excluded “personal
    injury . . . expected or intended by anyone we protect.” 
    Id. at 520-21.
    Based on that
    exclusion, the insurer denied coverage. 
    Id. at 521.
    The Court of Appeals, construing the
    au pair’s claim as one for unreasonable intrusion on seclusion, 
    id. at 526,
    held that the
    insurer could not rely on the expected or intended exclusion to deny coverage, 
    id. at 533-34.
    That is because an “[i]ntrusion upon seclusion must always be intentional in order to be
    31
    tortious.” 
    Id. at 534.
    As a result, applying the expected or intended exclusion to that claim
    would render the coverage grant itself illusory. 
    Id. at 525.
    The Court thus refused to give
    effect to the exclusion. 
    Id. at 533-34.
    Although a claim for an unreasonable intrusion upon seclusion can, as here, be based
    on conduct that is criminal, it need not be.11 Such a claim involves an intentional intrusion,
    “physical[] or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his private affairs or
    concerns.” 
    Id. at 526
    (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652B); see 
    Pemberton, 66 Md. App. at 163
    (defining intrusion upon seclusion without requiring criminal intent);
    
    Furman, 130 Md. App. at 73
    (same). Criminal intent is not required. Thus, nonconsensual
    video surveillance in a private place without prurient intent may still constitute an
    unreasonable intrusion upon seclusion while not running afoul of Criminal Law § 3-902.
    Such a claim would thus trigger Coverage B without being precluded by the Criminal Acts
    exclusion. As a result, the exclusion does not render coverage illusory and we are not
    permitted to disregard it. Harleysville “contracted to underwrite” coverage for its insured
    that excluded coverage for criminal acts; it will “not subsequently be expected to assume
    11
    The Court in Bailer examined the potential conflict between the coverage grant
    and the exclusion at the level of the particular type of coverage potentially implicated. The
    policy provided coverage for “personal injury,” one component of which was “invasion of
    privacy.” 
    Id. at 520.
    Under Maryland law, invasion of privacy itself encompasses four
    different claims, one of which is unreasonable intrusion upon seclusion. 
    Id. at 525-26.
    In
    examining the application of the exclusion, the Court examined only whether it would
    negate coverage for unreasonable intrusion upon seclusion claims, not all invasion of
    privacy claims, much less all personal injury claims. 
    Id. at 533-34.
    32
    liability for a risk” that it has “expressly excluded.” Parker v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    Co., 
    263 Md. 206
    , 216 (1971).12
    Because the Criminal Acts exclusion cannot be disregarded, it precludes coverage
    under the policies for the claims against Mr. Muehlhauser. The complaints both allege that
    Mr. Muehlhauser acted with prurient intent in surreptitiously videotaping women who were
    using the restroom. Neither complaint includes any alternative factual allegations under
    which Mr. Muehlhauser’s conduct might not be criminal. This is not a case in which the
    allegations of the complaints allow the possibility that there was tortious-but-not-criminal
    conduct by Mr. Muehlhauser that would give rise to a potentiality of coverage for him.
    Harleysville thus did not have a duty to defend Mr. Muehlhauser in connection with the
    Castle and Clar complaints.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s order as to Harleysville’s
    duty to defend Rams Head, but reverse its determination that Harleysville had a duty to
    defend Mr. Muehlhauser. We remand to the circuit court for entry of a declaratory
    judgment that is consistent with this opinion.
    12
    Harleysville’s declaratory judgment complaint argued that the Knowing Violation
    exclusion precluded coverage for both Rams Head and Mr. Muehlhauser. On appeal,
    Harleysville has limited its argument regarding that exclusion to Mr. Muehlhauser.
    Because we find coverage for Mr. Muehlhauser precluded by the Criminal Acts exclusion,
    we need not separately address the Knowing Violation exclusion. If we were to address
    that exclusion, we would conclude that it does not apply for the same reasons that the
    “expected or intended” exclusion did not apply in Bailer. Although an action that
    constitutes an unreasonable intrusion upon seclusion need not be criminal, it must, by
    definition, be intentional. See 
    Pemberton, 66 Md. App. at 163
    (defining tort as “the
    intentional intrusion upon the solitude or seclusion of another . . .”).
    33
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR HOWARD COUNTY AFFIRMED IN
    PART AND REVERSED IN PART. CASE
    REMANDED FOR ENTRY OF A
    DECLARATORY            JUDGMENT
    CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION.
    COSTS   TO  BE   PAID   80%  BY
    APPELLANTS AND 20% BY APPELLEES.
    34