Fangman v. Genuine Title, LLC , 447 Md. 681 ( 2016 )


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  • Edward J. and Vicki Fangman, et al. v. Genuine Title, LLC, et al., Misc. No. 19, September
    Term, 2015
    MD. CODE ANN., REAL PROP. (1974, 2015 REPL. VOL.) § 14-127 – PRIVATE
    RIGHT OF ACTION – Court of Appeals held that Md. Code Ann., Real Prop. (1974,
    2015 Repl. Vol.) (“RP”) § 14-127 does not contain express or implied private right of
    action, as neither RP § 14-127’s plain language, legislative history, nor legislative purpose
    demonstrates any intent on General Assembly’s part to create private right of action.
    United States District Court for
    the District of Maryland
    Civil Action No. RDB-14-0081
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Argued: March 31, 2016
    OF MARYLAND
    Misc. No. 19
    September Term, 2015
    ______________________________________
    EDWARD J. AND VICKI FANGMAN, ET
    AL.
    v.
    GENUINE TITLE, LLC, ET AL.
    ______________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.
    *Battaglia
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Watts, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: May 20, 2016
    *Battaglia, J., now retired, participated in the
    hearing and conference of this case while an
    active member of this Court; after being recalled
    pursuant to the Constitution, Article IV, Section
    3A, she also participated in the decision and
    adoption of this opinion.
    This case involves a purported class action lawsuit in the United States District
    Court for the District of Maryland (“the federal court”) against a settlement and title
    services company, various mortgage lenders, and alleged sham companies that were
    formed by the settlement and title services company, for allegedly engaging in a home
    mortgage kickback scheme in which the settlement and title services company, by itself
    and through the sham companies, provided cash payments and marketing materials to
    mortgage brokers who referred clients to the settlement and title services company for
    settlement services. The federal court certified to this Court the following question of law:
    “Does Md. Code Ann., Real Prop. [(1974, 2015 Repl. Vol.) (“RP”)] § 14-127 imply a
    private right of action?”
    We answer the certified question of law “no” and hold that RP § 14-127 does not
    contain an express or implied private right of action, as neither RP § 14-127’s plain
    language, legislative history, nor legislative purpose demonstrates any intent on the
    General Assembly’s part to create a private right of action.
    BACKGROUND
    In a memorandum opinion accompanying the certification order, the federal court
    stated the following facts,1 which we summarize.
    1
    “Where another court certifies a question of law to this Court, this Court accepts
    the statement of facts in the certification order.” NVR Mortg. Fin., Inc. v. Carlsen, 
    439 Md. 427
    , 429 n.2, 
    96 A.3d 202
    , 203 n.2 (2014) (citation, brackets, and internal quotation
    marks omitted)). See also Parler & Wobbler v. Miles & Stockbridge, 
    359 Md. 671
    , 681,
    
    756 A.2d 526
    , 531 (2000) (“[W]e accept the facts as submitted by the certifying court.”
    (Citations omitted)).
    Edward J. Fangman and Vicki Fangman (collectively “the Fangmans”) seek to
    represent a class of approximately 4,000 to 5,000 individuals (collectively “Appellants”)
    who, from 2009 to 2014, retained Genuine Title, LLC (“Genuine Title”) for settlement and
    title services and utilized various lenders (collectively “the Lender Appellees”) (together
    with Genuine Title, “Appellees”)2 for the purchase and/or refinancing of their residences.
    All Appellants allegedly used Genuine Title’s settlement and title services as a result of
    referrals from the Lender Appellees. All of the Lender Appellees are servicers of federally
    related mortgage loans.
    In the second amended complaint,3 the Fangmans alleged that they and all other
    class members “were victims of an illegal kickback scheme” in which the Lender Appellees
    received unearned fees and kickbacks from Genuine Title and “sham companies” that were
    created by Genuine Title (collectively, “the Genuine Title Appellees”) for the purpose of
    2
    For purposes of proceedings in this Court, the Fangmans and other purported class
    members have been designated as “Appellants” and Genuine Title and the Lender
    Appellees have been designated as “Appellees.” The Lender Appellees include: Wells
    Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc.; Wells Fargo, N.A.; West Town Bank & Trust; Emery Federal
    Credit Union; PNC Mortgage; PNC Bank, N.A.; MetLife Home Loans, LLC; MetLife
    Bank, N.A.; Net Equity Financial; Eagle National Bank; E Mortgage Management; and JP
    Morgan Chase Bank.
    3
    In the federal court, the Fangmans have filed three amended complaints, adding
    various plaintiffs and defendants. The third amended complaint corrected one
    typographical error and removed allegations against two defendants. As the federal court
    stated, however, the second amended complaint is the operative complaint because it was
    the subject of eleven pending motions to dismiss. The motions to dismiss are discussed
    below. In the second amended complaint, the Fangmans also identified Maverick Funding
    Corp. and Bank of America, N.A. as defendants; claims against those two defendants,
    however, were dismissed by separate orders.
    -2-
    distributing the kickbacks.4 According to the second amended complaint, the Lender
    Appellees’ employees and/or agents received and accepted cash payments, free marketing
    materials, and other things of value from the Genuine Title Appellees in exchange for
    referring borrowers to Genuine Title for settlement and title services.5 The Genuine Title
    Appellees and Lender Appellees allegedly concealed these payments from Appellants and
    failed to disclose the payments on Appellants’ HUD-1 settlement statements.
    Additionally, Appellants alleged that Genuine Title and the Lender Appellees failed to
    disclose that Genuine Title was participating with referring loan officers/banks and with
    the Genuine Title Appellees, and also failed to disclose their affiliated business
    relationships.
    As some point, regulators began to investigate the alleged scheme. Appellants
    alleged that, once the investigation began, Genuine Title drafted and back-dated sham title
    services agreements for the purpose of disguising cash payments as legitimate fees for
    alleged services provided. Appellants alleged that cash payments were not made in
    accordance with the fee schedule contained in the title services agreement. For example,
    in some instances, pursuant to the sham title services agreements, Genuine Title agreed to
    4
    The alleged sham companies that were created by Genuine Title, also Appellees in
    this case, include: Brandon Glickstein, Inc.; Dog Days Marketing, LLC; and Competitive
    Advantage Marketing Group, LLC. In the second amendment complaint, the Fangmans
    alleged that these companies do not have their own office space, and that they share a
    resident agent, principal, and/or employee with Genuine Title.
    5
    In the second amended complaint, for all but one of the Lender Appellees,
    Appellants specifically identified by name at least one referring mortgage broker who they
    alleged received payments and marketing materials from Genuine Title through the
    kickback scheme.
    -3-
    make cash payments to referring mortgage brokers for title services that were not actually
    performed. Appellants alleged that, as a result of the kickback scheme, they were deprived
    of “kickback[-]free settlement services and process” and their settlement fees would have
    been “much lower” had the kickback scheme not been in place.
    On December 6, 2013, the Fangmans filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County
    an initial class action complaint against Genuine Title. Genuine Title then removed the
    case to the federal court.6 On January 2, 2015, the Fangmans, along with thirty other
    Appellants, filed the first amended complaint on behalf of themselves and the alleged class,
    adding as defendants the Genuine Title Appellees and all but one of the Lender Appellees.
    On May 20, 2015, Appellants filed the second amended complaint, adding as a defendant
    one Lender Appellee and adding sixteen additional plaintiffs.7 In the second amended
    complaint, Appellants alleged that the Genuine Title Appellees and Lender Appellees
    violated 12 U.S.C. § 2607(a) and (b), part of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
    (“RESPA”);8 RP § 14-127; and Md. Code Ann., Com. Law (1975, 2013 Repl. Vol.) (“CL”)
    6
    The federal court’s docket, included in the record in this case, states that the notice
    of removal to the federal court was filed in the federal court on January 10, 2014.
    7
    Thus, there were forty-eight identified plaintiffs—the Fangmans and forty-six other
    plaintiffs.
    8
    12 U.S.C. § 2607(a) and (b) of RESPA provide:
    (a) Business referrals
    No person shall give and no person shall accept any fee, kickback, or thing of
    value pursuant to any agreement or understanding, oral or otherwise, that
    business incident to or a part of a real estate settlement service involving a
    federally related mortgage loan shall be referred to any person.
    (b) Splitting charges
    -4-
    § 13-301, part of the Maryland Consumer Protection Act.9
    In response to the second amended complaint, the Genuine Title Appellees and
    Lender Appellees filed in the federal court eleven separate motions to dismiss. On
    November 24, 2015, the federal court conducted a hearing on the motions to dismiss.10 On
    December 9, 2015, the federal court issued a memorandum opinion in which the federal
    court, with one exception,11 denied the motions to dismiss the RESPA claims, granted the
    motions to dismiss the Maryland Consumer Protection Act claims, and stayed the motions
    to dismiss the RP § 14-127 claims so that this Court could determine whether RP § 14-127
    permits a private right of action.12 As to the RP § 14-127 claims, the federal court observed
    “that no Maryland state court decision has resolved the present issue,” and thus it was
    certifying the question of law to this Court. On the same day, December 9, 2015, the
    No person shall give and no person shall accept any portion, split, or
    percentage of any charge made or received for the rendering of a real estate
    settlement service in connection with a transaction involving a federally
    related mortgage loan other than for services actually performed.
    9
    CL § 13-301(k) of the Maryland Consumer Protection Act defines unfair or
    deceptive trade practices.
    10
    Genuine Title was not represented at the hearing. Apparently, Genuine Title has
    ceased doing business. Appellants alleged that Jay Zuckerberg was the owner of Genuine
    Title. According to the federal court, Zuckerberg is listed as an interested party in the case.
    11
    Because Bank of America, N.A. had previously been dismissed from the case, the
    federal court denied Bank of America, N.A.’s motion to dismiss as moot.
    12
    The federal court noted that Appellants and three Appellees—Wells Fargo Home
    Mortgage, Inc., Wells Fargo, N.A., and JP Morgan Chase Bank—filed joint consent
    motions to suspend consideration of the respective Appellees’ “pending motions while they
    document a proposed resolution to the claims asserted against” those Appellees. The
    federal court granted in part and denied in part the joint consent motions, suspending
    consideration of “all pending motions” filed by Appellees, staying the motions to dismiss
    as to the RP § 14-127 claims, and granting the motions to dismiss as to the Maryland
    Consumer Protection Act claims.
    -5-
    federal court issued a certification order and stayed Appellants’ claims as to RP § 14-127
    in the federal court pending this Court’s response.
    DISCUSSION
    The Parties’ Contentions
    Appellants contend that RP § 14-127 provides an implied private right of action.
    Appellants argue that RP § 14-127 was enacted to protect a narrow class of individuals—
    namely, consumers of residential title and settlement services—and that Appellants are in
    that class for whose benefit RP § 14-127 was enacted; i.e., they are consumers of residential
    title and settlement services. Appellants assert that the injuries that they suffered—
    including overcharges, lack of impartiality in the referral, and a reduction of competition
    among settlement service providers—constitute the exact type of harm that RP § 14-127
    was designed to prevent. Appellants maintain that RP § 14-127’s language focuses on, and
    RP § 14-127’s purpose is, the protection of consumers in real estate transactions involving
    land in Maryland. According to Appellants, implying a private right of action under RP §
    14-127 is consistent with RP § 14-127’s language and purpose.
    Appellees13 respond that there is no evidence that the General Assembly intended
    to create a private right of action under RP § 14-127 and that there is no basis in law or fact
    for implying a private right of action. Appellees contend that RP § 14-127 neither identifies
    13
    As mentioned above, see supra note 10, Genuine Title apparently has ceased doing
    business. As such, we note that the following Appellees filed in this Court a joint brief:
    Eagle National Bank; PNC Bank, N.A.; Brandon Glickstein, Inc.; Competitive Advantage
    Media Group, LLC; Dog Days Marketing, LLC; MetLife Bank, N.A.; MetLife Home
    Loans, LLC; West Town Bank and Trust a/k/a West Town Savings Bank; and Net Equity
    Financial, Inc. We now refer to these parties as “Appellees.”
    -6-
    a specific class of protected individuals nor confers a beneficial right on any specific class
    of individuals, let alone Appellants. Appellees argue that, on its face, RP § 14-127 does
    not confer any right at all, and instead is a broad prohibition on individuals who are
    involved in real estate transactions in Maryland from paying or receiving anything in
    exchange for settlement business. According to Appellees, RP § 14-127 simply prohibits
    a certain type of conduct and is designed to protect the public at large, not a narrow, specific
    class of individuals. Appellees assert that neither RP § 14-127’s plain language nor its
    legislative history supports the position that RP § 14-127’s purpose was to create a private
    right of action. Appellees point out that, when RP § 14-127 was amended in 2010, the
    General Assembly was aware that RESPA provided a private right of action, yet chose not
    to provide a similar private right of action under RP § 14-127. Appellees maintain that RP
    § 14-127’s purpose is to criminalize certain conduct; in other words, according to
    Appellees, RP § 14-127 is a criminal statute with no private right of action.
    Standard of Review
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, Md. Code
    Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. (1973, 2013 Repl. Vol.) (“CJP”) §§ 12-601 to 12-613, this Court
    has the power to “answer a question of law certified to it by a court of the United States . .
    . if the answer may be determinative of an issue in pending litigation in the certifying court
    and there is no controlling appellate decision, constitutional provision, or statute of this
    State.” CJP § 12-603. In considering a certified question of law, “this Court’s statutorily
    prescribed role is to determine only questions of Maryland law, not questions of fact. . . .
    [And], we confine our legal analysis and final determinations of Maryland law to the
    -7-
    questions certified.” Parler & Wobbler v. Miles & Stockbridge, 
    359 Md. 671
    , 681, 
    756 A.2d 526
    , 531 (2000) (citations omitted).
    As to statutory interpretation, in Montgomery Cnty. v. Phillips, 
    445 Md. 55
    , 62-63,
    
    124 A.3d 188
    , 192 (2015), we stated that “[t]he cardinal rule of statutory construction is to
    ascertain and effectuate the intent of the General Assembly[,]” explaining:
    [T]o determine that purpose or policy, we look first to the language of the
    statute, giving it its natural and ordinary meaning. . . . When the statutory
    language is clear, we need not look beyond the statutory language to
    determine the General Assembly’s intent. If the words of the statute,
    construed according to their common and everyday meaning, are clear and
    unambiguous and express a plain meaning, we will give effect to the statute
    as it is written. In addition, we neither add nor delete words to a clear and
    unambiguous statute to give it a meaning not reflected by the words the
    General Assembly used or engage in forced or subtle interpretation in an
    attempt to extend or limit the statute’s meaning. . . .
    If the language of the statute is ambiguous, [] then courts consider not
    only the literal or usual meaning of the words, but their meaning and effect
    in light of the setting, the objectives and purpose of the enactment under
    consideration. . . .
    If the true legislative intent cannot be readily determined from the
    statutory language alone, [] we may, and often must, resort to other
    recognized indicia—among other things, the structure of the statute,
    including its title; how the statute relates to other laws; the legislative history,
    including the derivation of the statute, comments and explanations regarding
    it by authoritative sources during the legislative process, and amendments
    proposed or added to it; the general purpose behind the statute; and the
    relative rationality and legal effect of various competing instructions.
    (Citation and brackets omitted).
    RP § 14-127
    Unabridged, RP § 14-127 currently provides:
    (a) Definitions. — (1) In this section the following words have the meanings
    indicated.
    -8-
    (2) “Consideration” includes:
    (i) A fee;
    (ii) Compensation;
    (iii) A gift, except promotional or advertising materials for
    general distribution;
    (iv) A thing of value;
    (v) A rebate;
    (vi) A loan; or
    (vii) An advancement of a commission or deposit money.
    (3) “License” has the meaning stated in § 10-101 of the Insurance
    Article.
    (4) “Residential real estate transaction” means a transaction involving
    a federally related mortgage loan as defined in 12 U.S.C. § 2602 and 12
    C.F.R. § 1024.2.
    (5) “Title insurance producer” has the meaning stated in § 10-101 of
    the Insurance Article.
    (b) Scope of section. — This section does not prohibit:
    (1) The payment of a commission to a title insurance producer who
    has a license; or
    (2) The referral of a real estate settlement business or a professional
    fee arrangement between attorneys, if the referral or professional fee
    arrangement does not violate § 17-605 of the Business Occupations and
    Professions Article.
    (c) Payment or receipt of consideration prohibited. — (1) A person who has
    a connection with the settlement of real estate transactions involving land in
    the State may not pay to or receive from another any consideration to solicit,
    obtain, retain, or arrange real estate settlement business.
    (2) A person may not be considered to be in violation of paragraph (1)
    of this subsection solely because that person is a participant in an affiliated
    business arrangement, as defined in 12 U.S.C. § 2602, and receives
    consideration as a result of that participation as long as that person complies
    with 12 U.S.C. § 2607(c)(4), 12 C.F.R. § 1024.15, and Appendix D to 12
    C.F.R. Part 1024.
    -9-
    (d) Compliance with federal law regarding disclosure. — A person who
    offers settlement services in connection with residential real estate
    transactions involving land in the State shall comply with 12 U.S.C. §
    2607(c)(4), 12 C.F.R. § 1024.15, and Appendix D to 12 C.F.R. Part 1024, as
    applicable, regarding disclosures of affiliated business arrangements, as
    defined in 12 U.S.C. § 2602.
    (e) Violation; penalties. — A person who violates this section is guilty of a
    misdemeanor and on conviction is subject to imprisonment not exceeding 6
    months or a fine not exceeding $ 1,000 or both.
    (f) Separate violations. — Each violation of this section is a separate
    violation.
    Implied Private Rights of Action
    In Baker v. Montgomery Cnty., 
    427 Md. 691
    , 708-11, 
    50 A.3d 1112
    , 1122-23
    (2012), we discussed in detail how to assess whether a State statute contains an implied
    private right of action, stating:
    A private cause of action in favor of a particular plaintiff or class of plaintiffs
    does not exist simply because a claim is framed that a statute was violated
    and a plaintiff or class of plaintiffs was harmed by it. Rather, the issue is a
    matter of statutory construction. . . .
    The U.S. Supreme Court fashioned the prevailing test for determining
    whether a statute contains implicitly a private cause of action:
    In determining whether a private remedy is implicit in a statute
    not expressly providing one, several factors are relevant. First,
    is the plaintiff one of the class for whose especial benefit the
    statute was enacted[?] Second, is there any indication of
    legislative intent, explicit or implicit, either to create such a
    remedy or to deny one? Third, is it consistent with the
    underlying purposes of the legislative scheme to imply such a
    remedy for the plaintiff?
    Cort v. Ash, 
    422 U.S. 66
    , 78, 
    95 S. Ct. 2080
    , 2087-88, 
    45 L. Ed. 2d 26
    , 36
    (1975) (internal citations omitted). This Court utilized the Cort test in Erie
    Ins[.] Co[. v. Chops], 322 Md. [79,] 90-91, 585 A.2d [232,] 237 [(1991)],
    which dealt with a Maryland statute. . . .
    - 10 -
    Touche Ross [& Co. v. Redington, 
    442 U.S. 560
    , 575-76 (1979)]
    emphasized that the central inquiry remains whether the legislative body
    intended to create, either expressly or by implication, a private cause of
    action. Courts discern . . . whether a private cause of action was intended by
    analyzing the language of the statute to identify its purpose and intended
    beneficiaries, reviewing the statute’s legislative history, and determining
    whether the statute provides otherwise an express remedy. As a result, in a
    case in which neither the statute nor the legislative history reveals a
    legislative intent to create a private right of action for the benefit of the
    plaintiff, we need not carry the Cort v. Ash inquiry further.
    Thus, our analysis begins with the language of the statute at hand and
    whether it confers a beneficial right upon a particular class of persons. If a
    statute’s language provides a right to a particular class of persons, there is a
    strong inference that the legislature intended the statute to carry an implied
    cause of action. Conversely, that inference becomes attenuated when the
    statute is framed as a general prohibition or a command to a governmental
    entity or other group or confers a generalized benefit. For example, in
    Cannon [v. Univ. of Chicago, 
    441 U.S. 677
    , 693 n.13 (1979),] the Supreme
    Court listed several statutory schemes that conferred a right on a class of
    persons and created an implied private cause of action: “All citizens of the
    United States shall have the same right . . . as is enjoyed by white citizens
    thereof,” “no person shall be denied the right to vote,” and “employees shall
    have the right to organize and bargain collectively.”
    (Internal quotation marks, footnote, brackets, and most citations omitted) (last ellipsis in
    original).14 To reiterate, in assessing whether a State statute contains an implied private
    right of action, we are concerned with three specific inquiries: (1) Is the plaintiff one of the
    class for whose special benefit the statute was enacted? (2) Is there any indication of
    14
    In 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 709
    n.15, 50 A.3d at 1122 
    n.15, this Court noted that, “[w]hen
    a court determines whether a federal statute contains a private cause of action, there is a
    fourth factor . . . : ‘Is the cause of action one traditionally relegated to state law, in an area
    basically the concern of the States, so that it would be inappropriate to infer a cause of
    action based solely on federal law.’” (Quoting 
    Cort, 422 U.S. at 78
    ) (brackets omitted).
    This fourth factor is not implicated in this case because this case does not involve
    determining whether a federal statute contains an implied private right of action.
    - 11 -
    legislative intent, explicit or implicit, either to create such a remedy or to deny one? (3) Is
    it consistent with the underlying purposes of the legislative scheme to imply such a remedy
    for the plaintiff? 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 709
    , 50 A.3d at 1122; see also Scull v. Groover,
    Christie & Merritt, P.C., 
    435 Md. 112
    , 122, 
    76 A.3d 1186
    , 1191 (2013).
    This Court has applied the three-factor test from Cort in several cases to determine
    whether an implied private right of action existed. For example, in Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 91-92
    , 
    83, 585 A.2d at 238
    , 233, we held that there was no express or implied private
    right of action under Md. Code Ann., Transp. (1977, 1987 Repl. Vol.) (“TR”) § 17-106(b),
    which provided: “After July 1, 1983, each insurer or other provider of required security
    immediately shall notify the [Motor Vehicle] Administration [(“the MVA”)] of only those
    terminations or other lapses that are final and occur within the first 6 months of any required
    security issued to or provided for a resident of this State.” In Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 81
    ,
    585 A.2d at 233, a husband and wife, the Chopses, were injured in an automobile accident
    that occurred in West Virginia; the accident was solely the fault of Carol Iser (“Iser”), who
    was driving a vehicle that she owned and that was registered in Maryland. At the time of
    the accident, Iser’s vehicle was uninsured because, two months prior to the accident, Erie
    Insurance Company (“Erie”) had cancelled Iser’s automobile liability insurance policy for
    nonpayment of the premium. See 
    id. at 81-82,
    585 A.2d at 233. Despite the lack of
    insurance, the Chopses sued Erie, alleging that Erie was liable because it had breached the
    duty that it owed under TR § 17-106(b) to notify the MVA that it had cancelled Iser’s
    automobile liability insurance policy. See Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 82
    , 585 A.2d at 233.
    In the trial court, the Chopses argued that Erie’s violation of TR § 17-106(b) made it liable
    - 12 -
    as though Iser’s automobile liability insurance policy had not been cancelled or,
    alternatively, that Erie’s violation of TR § 17-106(b) was evidence of negligence that was
    a proximate cause of the Chopses’ damages. See Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 82
    , 585 A.2d at
    233. Following a trial, the Chopses were granted judgment against Erie; Erie appealed;
    and, before the case was considered by the Court of Special Appeals, this Court issued a
    writ of certiorari on its own motion. See id. at 
    82, 585 A.2d at 233
    .
    Upon review, we determined that, because Erie did not notify the MVA until forty
    days after it cancelled Iser’s policy, the evidence supported the trial court’s finding that
    Erie had failed to notify the MVA of the cancellation of Iser’s policy within the time
    required by TR § 17-106(b), which required immediate notification. See Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 83-84
    , 585 A.2d at 234. Nonetheless, this Court held that the duty that was imposed
    on Erie by TR § 17-106(b) was not a “tort duty” because TR § 17-106(b) “did not create a
    legally cognizable duty running from Erie to all persons who might thereafter suffer
    economic damage by reason of involvement in an accident with an uninsured motorist upon
    Erie’s failure to give immediate notice to the MVA of the termination of coverage.” Erie
    Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 86
    , 585 A.2d at 235. We also held that the General Assembly “did
    not intend to create a new cause of action imposing strict liability on an insurer who failed
    to give immediate notice of cancellation to the MVA.” Id. at 
    86, 585 A.2d at 235
    . As to
    the latter holding, applying the test set forth in Cort, we explained:
    Although the Chops[es] may properly be said to be within the class of
    persons in whose favor [TR § 17-106(b)] was intended, it seems equally
    apparent that the principal focus of the uninsured motorist laws is for the
    general protection of the public. Additionally, while permitting recovery by
    the [Chopses] would not be inconsistent with the underlying purpose of the
    - 13 -
    legislative scheme, we do not believe such a broad extension of existing laws
    is necessary to properly implement the legislation. We note that the [General
    Assembly] has provided other remedies for those who are involved in
    accidents with uninsured motorists, including the requirement of uninsured
    motorist coverage in every automobile liability policy issued, sold, or
    delivered in this State, and the establishment of a fund for payment of claims
    arising out of accidents with uninsured motorists occurring in this State.
    Finally, as we have noted, the [General Assembly] did not expressly or
    impliedly establish the sanction sought by the [Chopses], even though the
    [General Assembly] has done so in other related matters involving insurance.
    Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 91-92
    , 585 A.2d at 238 (citations omitted). Indeed, as to TR §
    17-106(b)’s legislative history, we stated that TR § 17-106(b) and other related statutes
    sought “to insure that there w[ould] be at least minimum limits of financial responsibility
    in the event [that] an accident [] occur[red,]” and that “the principal risk against which [TR
    § 17-106(b) was] directed [was] the risk of economic loss, and not the risk of personal
    injury.” Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 87
    , 585 A.2d at 236. We stated that there was “no
    suggestion that the [General Assembly] intended the application of a strict sanction [that]
    it did not spell out” in TR § 17-106(b); thus, we concluded that, in light of TR § 17-106(b)’s
    legislative history, “no such sanction should be implied[.]” Erie Ins. 
    Co., 322 Md. at 90
    ,
    585 A.2d at 237.
    As another example, in 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 697-98
    , 
    699-700, 50 A.3d at 1115
    , 1117,
    we held that there was no express or implied private right of action under TR § 21-809(j),15
    which provided: “If a contractor operates a speed monitoring system on behalf of
    Montgomery County, the contractor’s fee may not be contingent on the number of citations
    15
    In 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 696
    , 50 A.3d at 1115, we cited the 2009 Replacement
    Volume of the Transportation Article.
    - 14 -
    issued or paid.” In 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 695-96
    , 50 A.3d at 1114, certain local governments
    of Montgomery County, including Montgomery County itself, established speed cameras,
    which recorded, among many others, the plaintiffs traveling in their vehicles at least ten
    miles per hour over posted speed limits on certain roads. The local governments issued
    citations to the plaintiffs, each carrying a maximum civil penalty of $40. See 
    id. at 696,
    50
    A.3d at 1114. The plaintiffs paid the penalties and then filed a complaint against the local
    governments, asserting that the local governments’ contracts with the speed monitoring
    system contractor, ACS State and Local Solutions, Inc. (“ACS”), violated TR § 21-809(j).
    See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 696
    , 50 A.3d at 1114-15. The trial court concluded that the local
    governments, not ACS, operated the speed cameras within the meaning of TR § 21-809(j),
    and that, in any event, TR § 21-809(j) applied only to Montgomery County, not the other
    local governments. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 696
    , 50 A.3d at 1115. The trial court also
    concluded that, even if ACS operated the speed cameras, TR § 21-809(j) did not contain a
    private right of action to support the plaintiffs’ tort claims. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 696
    , 50
    A.3d at 1115. The trial court further concluded that the plaintiffs had waived their ability
    to file a complaint when they voluntarily paid the penalties; accordingly, the trial court
    granted summary judgment in the local governments’ favor. See id. at 
    696, 50 A.3d at 1115
    . The plaintiffs appealed; the Court of Special Appeals affirmed; and this Court
    granted certiorari. See id. at 
    696, 50 A.3d at 1115
    .
    We affirmed, holding in relevant part that TR § 21-809(j) did “not provide an
    express or implied private cause of action in tort” for two reasons: (1) TR § 21-809(j) “is a
    general welfare statute that does not benefit a particular class of persons, let alone” the
    - 15 -
    plaintiffs; and (2) TR § 21-809(j) “provides a remedy in the District Court for challenging
    speed monitoring system citations.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 697
    , 50 A.3d at 1115. We
    explained that these two reasons, “combined with the lack of supporting legislative history
    endorsing an implied private right of action, establish[ed] that [TR] § 21-809(j) does not
    create a private cause of action.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 697-98
    , 50 A.3d at 1115. In so
    concluding, we applied the three factors set forth in Cort. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 711-15
    ,
    50 A.3d at 1123-26. As to whether the plaintiffs were members of a class for whose benefit
    TR § 21-809(j) was enacted, we determined that TR § 21-809(j) was “framed as a
    prohibitive command and d[id] not confer rights on a class of persons” and did not
    “unmistakably focus on a particular class of persons who benefit from it.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 711-12
    , 50 A.3d at 1123-24 (citation, footnote, and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Moreover, TR § 21-809(j)’s legislative history “fail[ed] to reveal an intent to benefit a
    particular class of persons.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 712
    , 50 A.3d at 1124. We stated that, even
    if the General Assembly had intended TR § 21-809(j) “to benefit recipients of citations,
    issued according to speed monitoring systems established pursuant to the statutory scheme,
    whether it intended also that [TR] § 21-809(j) create an implied private cause of action
    [was] a separate issue.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 712
    , 50 A.3d at 1124.
    As to TR § 21-809’s purpose, we concluded that TR § 21-809(j) “create[d] rules
    and procedures for Montgomery County (and perhaps its municipalities) to operate a speed
    monitoring system” and established “a remedy for challenging a speed monitoring system
    citation.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 713
    , 50 A.3d at 1124. TR § 21-809(j) did not expressly
    provide a private right of action, and instead set forth provisions under which citation
    - 16 -
    recipients could challenge the citation on the basis that the local government had violated
    TR § 21-809(j). See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 713
    , 50 A.3d at 1124-25. Finally, as to TR § 21-
    809’s legislative history, we determined that the legislative history failed to reveal any
    intent on the General Assembly’s part to create an implied private right of action. See
    
    Baker, 427 Md. at 714
    , 50 A.3d at 1125. We concluded by explaining:
    [T]he lack of discernible legislative intent to create an implied cause of action
    in the plain language and structure of the statute, its legislative history, or
    some other legitimate and reliable source cements the conclusion that the
    [General Assembly], in enacting [TR] § 21-809, did not contemplate an
    implied private cause of action. Our conclusion is reinforced by the
    assumption that legislative bodies know how to “salt the mine” for the
    enablement of implied private causes of action.
    
    Baker, 427 Md. at 714
    -15, 50 A.3d at 1126 (citations omitted).
    More recently, in 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 115
    , 76 A.3d at 1187, we held that there was no
    implied private right of action under the Maryland Health Maintenance Organization
    (“HMO”) Act, Md. Code Ann., Health-Gen. (“HG”) §§ 19-701 to 19-735, where an HMO
    member has been billed by a health care provider for a covered service. In particular, HG
    § 19-710(p) of the HMO Act prohibited a health care provider from billing an HMO
    member for amounts beyond those that were provided in the HMO’s plan, a practice
    commonly known as “balance billing,” providing: “A health care provider or any
    representative of a health care provider may not collect or attempt to collect from any
    subscriber or enrollee any money [that is] owed to the health care provider by a[n HMO
    that has been] issued a certificate of authority to operate in this State.” 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 119-20
    , 76 A.3d at 1190. In Scull, id. at 
    115, 76 A.3d at 1187
    -88, the plaintiff, an HMO
    member, visited Groover, Christie & Merritt, P.C. (“GCM”) for a knee x-ray, and nearly a
    - 17 -
    year later, GCM sent the plaintiff a bill for $121 for the x-ray. The plaintiff sued GCM,
    alleging that the bill from GCM was “an illegal attempt to ‘balance bill’ an HMO member
    in violation of State law.” 
    Id. at 116-17,
    76 A.3d at 1188. In the first count of the
    complaint, the plaintiff sought judicial recognition of an implied private right of action
    under HG § 19-710(p). See 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 117
    , 76 A.3d at 1188. GCM filed a motion
    to dismiss the complaint, which the trial court granted; the plaintiff filed an amended
    complaint, and the trial court dismissed the amended complaint with prejudice. See id. at
    
    117, 76 A.3d at 1188
    -89. The plaintiff appealed; the Court of Special Appeals affirmed;
    and this Court granted certiorari. See 
    id. at 118,
    76 A.3d at 1189.
    We held, in pertinent part, “that there is not an implied private right of action under
    the HMO [Act].” Id. at 
    118, 76 A.3d at 1189
    . We began our analysis by observing that
    the HMO Act did not provide an express private right of action for an HMO member who
    was allegedly harmed by a violation of the prohibition against balance billing; thus, we
    turned to whether there was an implied private right of action. See 
    id. at 121,
    76 A.3d at
    1191. We then applied and analyzed the three factors set forth in Cort in the context of the
    HMO Act. See 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122-24
    , 76 A.3d at 1191-92. As to whether the plaintiff
    was a member of the class for whose benefit HG § 19-710(p) was enacted, we stated that,
    on its face, HG § 19-710(p) “strongly suggest[ed] an intent to protect a specific class of
    persons, namely enrollees and subscribers of HMOs, from the practice of balance billing.”
    
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122
    , 76 A.3d at 1191. Thus, as an HMO member, the plaintiff was a
    member of the class that was intended to be protected by HG § 19-710(p). 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122
    , 76 A.3d at 1191.
    - 18 -
    Nonetheless, despite the plaintiff’s being a member of the class that was intended
    to be protected by HG § 19-710(p), we concluded that the legislative intent and statutory
    scheme or purpose militated against implying a private right of action. 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122-24
    , 76 A.3d at 1191-93. As to legislative intent to create or deny a remedy, we
    reiterated that there was nothing expressly in HG § 19-710(p) concerning a private right of
    action for a violation of the prohibition against balance billing; and, we further concluded
    that “nothing in the text of the balance billing prohibition in HG § 19-710(p) suggest[ed]
    that the [General Assembly] believed that it was creating a new cause of action on behalf
    of HMO subscribers against health care providers—as opposed to creating a structure to
    foster HMO plans.” 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122
    , 76 A.3d at 1191-92. We also observed that
    HG § 19-710(p)’s legislative history was “devoid of any mention of an intent to create a
    private cause of action on behalf of patients against health care providers”; i.e., the
    legislative history was silent on the matter. 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122
    -23, 76 A.3d at 1192
    (footnote omitted).    Finally, as to the statutory scheme and legislative purpose, we
    explained:
    [T]he statutory scheme largely concerns the structure and operation of
    [HMO]s, not the billing practices of health care providers. In that sense, the
    statute is intended to confer a general benefit on the public at large by
    providing a foundation for a particular form of health care coverage. The
    [HMO] Act is primarily focused on the operation and regulation of an HMO
    and its relationship with the providers that serve its members. Notably, the
    explicit private cause of action that does appear in the [HMO] Act is on
    behalf of a health care provider against an HMO that fails to carry out the
    HMO’s obligations under the [HMO] Act. While the prohibition against
    balance billing of HMO members is an important part of the overall scheme,
    the [HMO] Act provides for its enforcement through “hold harmless”
    contract provisions required by [the HMO Act]. And there is already in place
    a cause of action for a patient to obtain relief for violations of unlawful billing
    - 19 -
    practices[, namely, under the Maryland Consumer Protection Act.]
    
    Id. at 123-24,
    76 A.3d at 1192 (citations omitted). Accordingly, we held “that an HMO
    member does not have an implied private right of action under the HMO [Act] with respect
    to a violation of the balance billing prohibition.” 
    Id. at 124,
    76 A.3d at 1192 (footnote
    omitted).
    Analysis
    Returning to the instant case, we hold that RP § 14-127 does not provide an express
    or implied private right of action. As stated above, RP § 14-127(c)(1) prohibits “[a] person
    who has a connection with the settlement of real estate transactions involving land in the
    State” from “pay[ing] to or receiv[ing] from another any consideration to solicit, obtain,
    retain, or arrange real estate settlement business.” Nothing within RP § 14-127 generally,
    or RP § 14-127(c)(1) specifically, expressly provides a private right of action for anyone
    who is allegedly harmed by a violation of RP § 14-127(c)(1). Thus, the key question in
    this case—indeed, the question that the federal court certified to this Court—is whether RP
    § 14-127 contains an implied private right of action. We hold that it does not, as neither
    RP § 14-127’s plain language, legislative history, nor legislative purpose demonstrates any
    intent on the General Assembly’s part to create a private right of action.
    Class
    As to whether Appellants are members of the class for whose benefit RP § 14-127
    was enacted, RP § 14-127(c)(1) provides that “[a] person who has a connection with the
    settlement of real estate transactions involving land in the State may not pay to or receive
    from another any consideration to solicit, obtain, retain, or arrange real estate settlement
    - 20 -
    business.” On its face, RP § 14-127(c)(1) does not specifically identify a class for whose
    benefit it was enacted. Nonetheless, there is a group who could receive the benefit of RP
    § 14-127—consumers of residential and commercial settlement services.16 In other words,
    RP § 14-127(c)(1) could inure to the benefit of consumers or members of the public who
    use residential and commercial settlement services because the prohibition in RP § 14-
    127(c)(1) could theoretically keep costs down by eliminating hidden costs and excess fees
    that may be associated with the solicitation, obtainment, or arrangement of real estate
    settlement business. As consumers of settlement services, Appellants are members of a
    class that would conceivably benefit from RP § 14-127, although there is no evidence that
    RP § 14-127 was designed specifically to protect consumers of settlement services.
    Our conclusion that RP § 14-127(c)(1) inures to the benefit of consumers of
    residential and commercial settlement services is consistent with an opinion from the
    Maryland Attorney General concerning whether RP § 14-127’s predecessor, Md. Code
    Ann., Art. 27 (“Art. 27”), § 465A, had been preempted by the revised Regulation X of the
    16
    For two reasons, we identify the class as including consumers of both residential
    and commercial settlement services, and not just consumers of residential settlement
    services, such as Appellants. First, RP § 14-127(c)(1) does not limit the prohibition against
    paying or receiving “any consideration to solicit, obtain, retain, or arrange real estate
    settlement business” to residential real estate settlement business. Instead, RP § 14-
    127(c)(1) refers broadly to “real estate transactions” and “real estate settlement business”
    without specifying only residential real estate transactions and residential real estate
    settlement business. Second, in contrast to RP § 14-127(c)(1), RP § 14-127(d) applies only
    to “residential real estate transactions[,]” which RP § 14-127(a)(4) defines as “a transaction
    involving a federally related mortgage loan as defined in 12 U.S.C. § 2602 and 12 C.F.R.
    § 1024.2.” In other words, had the General Assembly intended the prohibition in RP § 14-
    127(c)(1) to apply only to residential real estate transactions, it would have said so, as
    evidenced by RP § 14-127(d); however, the General Assembly did not limit RP § 14-
    127(c)(1) in such a manner.
    - 21 -
    United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. In the opinion, the
    Maryland Attorney General stated:
    Although we are not aware of any legislative history bearing on the purpose
    of [Art. 27, § 465A], it is evidently intended to prevent a real estate broker,
    for example, from having a financial incentive to steer a purchaser of real
    property to a particular provider of settlement services. Presumably, the
    General Assembly perceived that the purchaser would be better served
    if advice about settlement services was free of such bias.
    78 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 86, 86-87 (1993), available at https://www.oag.state.md.us/Opinio
    ns/1993/78oag86.pdf      [https://perma.cc/DA5N-7KEN]       (emphasis    added).         Stated
    otherwise, the Maryland Attorney General also found no specific class of individuals
    intended to be protected by RP § 14-127, but opined that purchasers—i.e., consumers—of
    settlement services would receive the benefit of RP § 14-127 by receiving settlement
    services free of bias.
    Nevertheless, we reiterate that RP § 14-127 does not expressly provide a right to a
    particular class of persons. For example, the prohibition in RP § 14-127(c)(1) is not
    phrased along the lines of “all consumers of settlement services have the right to have
    kickback-free settlement services.” Cf. 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 711
    , 50 A.3d at 1123 (“[T]he
    Supreme Court listed several statutory schemes that conferred a right on a class of persons
    and created an implied private cause of action: ‘All citizens of the United States shall have
    the same right . . . as is enjoyed by white citizens thereof,’ ‘no person shall be denied the
    right to vote,’ and ‘employees shall have the right to organize and bargain collectively.’”
    (Citation and brackets omitted) (ellipsis in original)). Rather, RP § 14-127(c)(1) contains
    a general prohibition—namely, that persons connected “with the settlement of real estate
    - 22 -
    transactions involving land in the State may not pay to or receive from another any
    consideration to solicit, obtain, retain, or arrange real estate settlement business.” And, RP
    § 14-127(c)(1) appears to confer only, as a result of the prohibition, a generalized benefit
    that inures to consumers of settlement services. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 710-11
    , 50 A.3d at
    1123 (“If a statute’s language provides a right to a particular class of persons, there is a
    strong inference that the [General Assembly] intended the statute to carry an implied cause
    of action. Conversely, that inference becomes attenuated when the statute is framed as a
    general prohibition or a command to a governmental entity or other group or confers a
    generalized benefit.” (Citations and internal quotation marks omitted)). Significantly, RP
    § 14-127 does not mention, let alone identify, consumers or the public in general as a class
    who benefits from the provisions of the statute.
    In any event, as we stated in Baker, 427 Md.at 
    708-09, 50 A.3d at 1122
    , “[a] private
    cause of action in favor of a particular plaintiff or class of plaintiffs does not exist simply
    because a claim is framed that a statute was violated and a plaintiff or class of plaintiffs
    was harmed by it.” (Citation omitted). Rather, the question of whether a private right of
    action exists is a matter of statutory construction. See id. at 
    709, 50 A.3d at 1122
    . As such,
    although Appellants are in a class of individuals who arguably receive the benefit of RP §
    14-127, we still must examine RP § 14-127’s plain language, legislative history, and
    legislative scheme/purpose to determine whether the General Assembly intended to create
    a private right of action under RP § 14-127. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 710
    , 50 A.3d at 1123
    (“Courts discern legislative intent whether a private cause of action was intended by
    analyzing the language of the statute to identify its purpose and intended beneficiaries,
    - 23 -
    reviewing the statute’s legislative history, and determining whether the statute provides
    otherwise an express remedy.” (Citations omitted)); see also 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 122-24
    , 76
    A.3d at 1191-92 (Although concluding that the plaintiff was a member of the class for
    whose benefit the statute at issue was enacted, we also analyzed legislative intent and
    purpose before concluding that no implied private right of action existed.).
    Legislative History/Intent
    As to whether there is any indication of legislative intent, either explicit or implicit,
    to create or deny a private right of action, we conclude that RP § 14-127’s legislative
    history fails to reveal any intent on the General Assembly’s part to create a private right of
    action, either expressly or impliedly. As stated above, nothing in RP § 14-127’s plain
    language expressly provides a private right of action for anyone allegedly harmed by a
    violation of the prohibition in RP § 14-127(c)(1). Thus, we look to RP § 14-127’s
    legislative history to determine whether an implied private right of action exists.
    RP § 14-127’s predecessor, Art. 27, § 465A, was enacted in 1967; on June 1, 1967,
    Article 27, § 465A became effective. See 1967 Md. Laws 1662-63 (Vol. II, Ch. 756, H.B.
    1075); 78 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. at 86 (“This prohibition was enacted as Chapter 756 of the
    Laws of Maryland 1967 in essentially” the same form as it existed in 1993.). The purpose
    for enacting Art. 27, § 465A was stated as follows:
    AN ACT to add new Section 465-A to Article 27 of the Annotated Code of
    Maryland (1957 Edition), titled “Crimes and Punishments,” subtitle “Real
    Estate Settlements,” to follow immediately after Section 465 thereof,
    prohibiting the payment by any person, firm, or corporation to any other
    person, firm, or corporation connected with the settlement of a real estate
    transaction affecting land situated and lying in this State, of any fee or other
    consideration to obtain any real estate settlement or real estate settlement
    - 24 -
    business prohibiting the receipt of any such fee or thing of value for such
    purpose; CREATING CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS FROM THIS ACT and
    providing penalties for violation of such provisions.
    1967 Md. Laws 1662 (Vol. II, Ch. 756, H.B. 1075) (capitalization in original).
    Although not part of Art. 27, § 465A’s legislative history, a series of newspaper
    articles published in 1967 and 1968 provides some context to the circumstances leading up
    to Art. 27, § 465A’s enactment. Apparently, a real estate settlement and title insurance
    scandal occurred in Montgomery County and Prince George’s County “in which more than
    70 home owners face[d] the possibility of double mortgages against their property as a
    result of misuse of settlement funds by title lawyers.” Bart Barnes, Md. Bar Now Asks for
    Rapid Revision of Title Escrow Laws, The Washington Post, Times Herald, Mar. 9, 1967,
    at C2. In response, then-State Insurance Commissioner Norman Polovoy proposed a three-
    bill package that “would make title insurance companies financially liable for any misuse
    of funds changing hands in real estate settlements, outlaw kickbacks from lawyers to
    brokers steering business their way[,] and require lawyers to explain to home buyers the
    difference between mortgage title insurance, protecting only the lender, and home owners
    title insurance.” Id.; see also Staff Writer, Escrow Bills Advance at Annapolis, The
    Washington Post, Times Herald, Mar. 17, 1967, at B1. The House Banking and Insurance
    Committee endorsed all three bills. See Sandy Royner, Polovoy Bill Gains in Part, The
    Sun, Mar. 16, 1967, at C12; Staff 
    Writer, supra
    , at B1. Thereafter, House Bill 1075,
    outlawing kickbacks, was enacted as Art. 27, § 465A. See 1967 Md. Laws 1662-63 (Vol.
    II, Ch. 756, H.B. 1075). An article dated February 1, 1968 noted, however, that “a stronger
    measure that failed to pass in the 1967 General Assembly” would be reintroduced, namely,
    - 25 -
    a “bill [that] would hold title insurance companies liable for defalcations by their ‘approved
    attorneys.’” Peter A. Jay, Proposed Realty-Closing Controls Hit, The Washington Post,
    Times Herald, Feb. 1, 1968, at B5.17
    A “Report of the Committee to Study the Problem of Delayed Disbursements of
    Real Estate Settlements,” included in the Report of the 72nd Annual Meeting of the
    Maryland State Bar Association (1967 Md. State Bar Ass’n Transaction Report, at 211-
    13), provided a fuller report on the three bills, stating:
    As a result of defalcations by various attorneys handling real estate
    settlements in which buyers and sellers of real property in Montgomery and
    Prince George’s Counties lost well over $1,000,000, a large number of bills
    were introduced in the 1967 Session of the General Assembly dealing with
    various aspects of the problem. The State Insurance Commissioner . . .
    prepared for introduction three bills known as House Bills 1073, 1074, and
    1075. . . . The three bills, which came to be known as the “Polovoy Package”,
    would attempt to solve the problem in the following manner:
    H.B. 1073 provided that[,] whenever a title insurance company shall
    issue a policy of insurance insuring the title to such property for the benefit
    of any mortgagee, the title company or the title attorney shall, prior to the
    disbursement of the settlement funds, notify the mortgagor of his right to
    purchase insurance insuring title to the property for his benefit and of the cost
    of such insurance. Substantially similar proposed legislation was included
    in H.B. 41[.]
    H.B. 1074 would have, in effect, placed an “absolute and unqualified
    liability” as to the proper disbursement of settlement funds upon a title
    company [that] issued a binder or policy insuring title to the property for the
    17
    Before this Court, Appellees moved to strike two newspaper articles from The Sun
    that were included in the appendix to Appellants’ reply brief, as well as all references to
    the newspaper articles contained in Appellants’ reply brief, on the ground that the
    newspaper articles are not part of the record. We deny the motion to strike. Even if the
    newspaper articles were not included in the record, in reviewing RP § 14-127’s legislative
    history, this Court would have undoubtedly uncovered the newspaper articles, which
    provide useful context concerning the circumstances surrounding the enactment of Art. 27,
    § 465A, RP § 14-127’s predecessor.
    - 26 -
    benefit of any party to the settlement. To accomplish this, the title insurance
    company would be conclusively presumed to have constituted and
    designated its so-called approved attorney as its agent for the closing of the
    transaction and the presumption and liability so imposed by statute would
    extend for the benefit of all parties to the settlement.
    H.B. 1075, the “Anti-Kick Back Bill[,]” would have amended Article
    27 of the Code[,] making it a criminal offense to pay or receive anything of
    value for the purpose of soliciting, obtaining, retaining[,] or arranging any
    real estate settlement or real estate settlement business.
    ...
    H.B. 41 was enacted by the General Assembly and has been signed
    by the Governor. This Bill, for practical purposes, accomplishes the same
    result as H.B. 1073.
    H.B. 1075 was enacted by the General Assembly and has been signed
    by the Governor.
    H.B. 1074 failed of enactment and was referred to the Legislative
    Council for further study.
    Thus, as originally enacted, Art. 27, § 465A, criminalizing kickbacks, provided, in
    its entirety:
    No person, firm, or corporation having any connection whatsoever with the
    settlement of real estate transactions involving land situated and lying in this
    State shall, for the purpose of soliciting, obtaining, retaining, or arranging
    any real estate settlement or real estate settlement business, pay to or receive
    from, any other person, firm, or corporation any fee, compensation, gift
    (except promotional or advertising materials for general distribution), thing
    of value, rebate, or other consideration, including loans and advancements of
    commissions or deposit monies. Any person, firm, or corporation violating
    the terms of this section, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon
    conviction shall be subject to a fine not to exceed One Thousand Dollars
    ($1,000.00) or to imprisonment for not more than six (6) months or both.
    Every violation of this section shall constitute a separate offense and shall be
    punishable as such. Nothing herein contained shall be construed as
    preventing the payment of commissions to agents who have been duly
    licensed as such by the State Insurance Department. Nothing herein shall
    prohibit the referral of any such business from one attorney to another
    attorney, or prohibit any professional fee arrangement between attorneys in
    such cases.
    - 27 -
    1967 Md. Laws 1662-63 (Vol. II, Ch. 756, H.B. 1075) (italics and some capitalization
    omitted). Art. 27, § 465A remained largely unchanged until 2002.
    In 2002, pursuant to House Bill 11, as part of the Code Revision that created the
    Criminal Law Article, Art. 27, § 465A was recodified as RP § 14-127. See 2002 Md. Laws
    197, 202, 1089-90 (Vol. I–II, Ch. 26, H.B. 11). Specifically, House Bill 11 was enacted
    for the purpose of, among other things, “adding a new article to the Annotated Code of
    Maryland, to be designated and known as the ‘Criminal Law Article’, to revise, restate,
    and recodify the laws of the State relating to criminal law; [and] revising, restating, and
    recodifying certain provisions relating to . . . real estate settlements[.]” 2002 Md. Laws
    197 (Vol. I, Ch. 26, H.B. 11). At that time, RP § 14-127 was divided into subsections,
    including RP § 14-127(c) (now RP § 14-127(c)(1)), which provided then, as it does now,
    that “[a] person who has a connection with the settlement of real estate transactions
    involving land in the State may not pay to or receive from another any consideration to
    solicit, obtain, retain, or arrange real estate settlement business.” 2002 Md. Laws 1090
    (Vol. II, Ch. 26, H.B. 11). The Revisor’s Note stated that “subsections (a)(3) and (b)
    through (e)” of RP § 14-127 were “new language derived without substantive change from
    former Art. 27, § 465A.” 2002 Md. Laws 1090 (Vol. II, Ch. 26, H.B. 11). Two other notes
    in the Revisor’s Note pertained to RP § 14-127(c): (1) that “the former references to a
    ‘firm’ and ‘corporation’ [we]re deleted in light of the definition of ‘person’ in [RP] § 1-
    101(bb)”; and (2) “the former reference to land ‘situated and lying’ in the State [wa]s
    deleted as included in the comprehensive reference to ‘land in the State’.” 2002 Md. Laws
    - 28 -
    1090 (Vol. II, Ch. 26, H.B. 11).
    House Bill 11’s Fiscal Note explained the purpose of House Bill 11 as follows:
    This Code Revision bill revises, restates, and recodifies the laws of the State
    relating to criminal law. The new article is a nonsubstantive revision of
    statutes that relate to substantive crimes in the State of Maryland. It derives
    primarily from Article 27 – Crimes and Punishments, and includes related
    provisions from the Agriculture, Commercial Law, and Family Law Articles,
    and others.
    In the “Fiscal Summary” portion of House Bill 11’s Fiscal Note, it was noted that House
    Bill 11 simply “recodifie[d] specified existing laws without substantive change.” In the
    “Analysis” portion of House Bill 11’s Fiscal Note, it was noted that “House Bill 11 also
    revise[d] in several other articles a number of provisions relating to criminal law,
    regulatory, and enforcement matters originally codified in Article 27. These other articles
    include[d] . . . [the] Real Property Article[.]”
    In 2010, RP § 14-127 was amended through Senate Bill 1019 and House Bill 1471.
    At that time, among other things, certain definitions were added to RP § 14-127(a); RP §
    14-127(c) became RP § 14-127(c)(1); and RP § 14-127(c)(2) and (d) were added. See 2010
    Md. Laws 2417-19 (Vol. III, Ch. 373, S.B. 1019); 2010 Md. Laws 2419-21 (Vol. III, Ch.
    374, H.B. 1471). The stated purpose of the amendments was to “requir[e] a certain person
    who offers settlement services in connection with residential real estate transactions
    involving land in the State to comply with certain federal disclosure requirements; alter[]
    a certain provision relating to the payment of a commission to a certain person; repeal[] a
    certain definition; defin[e] certain terms; and generally relat[e] to real estate settlements.”
    2010 Md. Laws 2417 (Vol. III, Ch. 373, S.B. 1019); 2010 Md. Laws 2419 (Vol. III, Ch.
    - 29 -
    374, H.B. 1471). Senate Bill 1019’s and House Bill 1471’s Fiscal and Policy Notes
    explained that the purpose of the bills was as follows:
    Th[ese] bill[s] establish[] that a person who participates in an “affiliated
    business arrangement” as defined under the federal Real Estate Settlement
    Procedures Act (RESPA) is not a violation of a State law that otherwise
    prohibits affiliates from participating in a real estate settlement (1) solely
    because that person participates in an affiliated business arrangement; and
    (2) as long as that person complies with existing RESPA disclosure
    requirements. A person who does not comply is guilty, under existing
    penalty provisions, of a misdemeanor and subject to maximum penalties of
    six months imprisonment and/or a fine of $1,000.
    When RP § 14-127 was amended in 2010, it was the first time that RP § 14-127 included
    specific references and citations to RESPA, in RP § 14-127(a)(4), (c)(2), and (d). See 2010
    Md. Laws 2418-19 (Vol. III, Ch. 373, S.B. 1019); 2010 Md. Laws 2420-21 (Vol. III, Ch.
    374, H.B. 1471).
    RP § 14-127 was most recently amended this year. Specifically, the references to
    the Code of Federal Regulations in RP § 14-127(a)(4), (c)(2), and (d) were updated; the
    amendment became effective upon its enactment, and was approved by the Governor on
    March 14, 2016. See 2016 Md. Laws ___ (Vol. __, Ch. 8, S.B. 506).
    Upon consideration of the above-described circumstances, we conclude that RP §
    14-127’s legislative history fails to demonstrate that an implied private right of action
    exists. The legislative history of RP § 14-127’s prohibition against persons connected
    “with the settlement of real estate transactions involving land in the State . . . pay[ing] to
    or receiv[ing] from another any consideration to solicit, obtain, retain, or arrange real estate
    settlement business” is completely devoid of any mention whatsoever of an intent to create
    a private right of action on behalf of consumers of settlement services. There is simply
    - 30 -
    nothing in RP § 14-127’s legislative history from which we can glean any intent on the
    General Assembly’s part to create an implied private right of action. In other words, RP §
    14-127’s legislative history is silent as to any intent to create an implied private right of
    action. “[W]here the plain language of a provision weighs against implication of a private
    remedy, silence within the legislative history as to a private cause of action reinforces the
    decision not to find such a right implicitly.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 714
    , 50 A.3d at 1125
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see also 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 123
    , 76 A.3d at
    1192 (“While legislative silence is not conclusive, this certainly weighs against finding a
    private right of action.” (Citation and footnote omitted)).
    Indeed, in reviewing RP § 14-127’s legislative history, we observe that the only
    indication that the General Assembly even considered creating a private right of action was
    in connection with House Bill 1074, which was introduced as part of the Polovoy Package
    along with House Bill 1075 (which became Art. 27, § 465A, RP § 14-127’s predecessor).
    Significantly, House Bill 1075 was intended to prohibit and criminalize kickbacks in real
    estate settlements, and the General Assembly was silent as to any intent to create a private
    right of action on behalf of consumers of settlement services who were allegedly harmed
    by a violation of the new prohibition against kickbacks. See 1967 Md. Laws 1662-63 (Vol.
    II, Ch. 756, H.B. 1075). By contrast, House Bill 1074 “would [have] ma[d]e title insurance
    companies financially liable for any misuse of funds changing hands in real estate
    settlements[,]” 
    Barnes, supra
    , at C2, or, stated otherwise, “would [have] h[e]ld title
    insurance companies liable for defalcations by their ‘approved attorneys[,]’” 
    Jay, supra
    , at
    B5. Plainly put, a review of RP § 14-127’s legislative history and the articles providing
    - 31 -
    context for enactment of the prohibition against kickbacks in real estate settlements clearly
    shows that the General Assembly considered creating a private right of action only with
    respect to House Bill 1074, which was separate and distinct from House Bill 1075. The
    circumstance that the General Assembly considered creating a private right of action to
    hold title insurance companies financially liable for misuse of settlement funds, but
    apparently did not consider the same with respect to the prohibition against kickbacks,
    further bolsters our determination that RP § 14-127’s legislative history is devoid of
    anything from which we can conclude that the General Assembly intended to create a
    private right of action.18
    Legislative Scheme/Purpose
    Finally, we examine whether an implied private right of action would be consistent
    with the underlying purposes of the legislative scheme. As an initial matter, we observe
    18
    Additionally, we note that, in 2010, when the General Assembly amended RP §
    14-127 to provide specific references and citations to RESPA, it failed to include or
    otherwise incorporate a private right of action into RP § 14-127, even though RESPA
    contains an express private right of action. See 12 U.S.C. § 2607(d)(5) (“In any private
    action brought pursuant to this subsection, the court may award to the prevailing party the
    court costs of the action together with reasonable attorneys fees.” (Emphasis added)). We
    have stated, on many occasions, that “[t]he General Assembly is presumed to have had,
    and acted with respect to, full knowledge and information as to prior and existing law and
    legislation on the subject of the statute and the policy of the prior law.” Breslin v. Powell,
    
    421 Md. 266
    , 289, 
    26 A.3d 878
    , 892 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). To
    be sure, in amending RP § 14-127 in 2010, the General Assembly did not expressly state
    that it was rejecting a civil remedy. Nonetheless, that the General Assembly was aware
    that RESPA provides a private right of action for those who are harmed by violations of its
    provisions, and yet chose not to amend RP § 14-127 to similarly provide a private right of
    action for violations of RP § 14-127(c)(1), lends additional support to the determination
    that the General Assembly did not intend to create a private right of action under RP § 14-
    127.
    - 32 -
    that RP § 14-127 is not part of a larger statutory scheme concerning, for example, real
    estate settlement services in general; rather, it is currently a part of the “Miscellaneous
    Rules” title in the Real Property Article. Before it became RP § 14-127, the statute was in
    the “Crimes and Punishments” article of the Code of Maryland. Nonetheless, despite not
    necessarily being one statute in a larger statutory scheme, it is evident from RP § 14-127’s
    plain language and legislative history that its purpose is to criminalize kickbacks in relation
    to settlement services, not to protect a certain class of individuals or to create a private right
    of action on behalf of a specific class of individuals.
    Importantly, RP § 14-127’s predecessor, Art. 27, § 465A, was enacted and added to
    Article 27 of the Code of Maryland, entitled “Crimes and Punishments,” for the express
    purpose of prohibiting kickbacks in connection to settlement services. See 1967 Md. Laws
    1662 (Vol. II, Ch. 756, H.B. 1075). And, as enacted, Art. 27, § 465A “provid[ed] penalties
    for violation of such provisions[,]” by making a violation of the prohibition against
    kickbacks a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not exceeding $1,000, imprisonment for not
    more than six months, or both. 1967 Md. Laws 1662 (Vol. II, Ch. 756, H.B. 1075). Stated
    otherwise, RP § 14-127’s predecessor’s placement in a criminal law article is not consistent
    with the intent to create a private right of action, but rather supports the conclusion that RP
    § 14-127’s purpose is—and has always been—to criminalize behavior related to settlement
    kickbacks. Thus, as originally enacted, it is clear that Art. 27, § 465A’s purpose was
    criminal in nature in that it created a new crime and set forth the possible punishments for
    conviction of that crime.
    That Art. 27, § 465A was intended to be a criminal statute is confirmed by its
    - 33 -
    addition as RP § 14-127 through House Bill 11 in 2002. Indeed, in 2002, as part of the
    Code Revision that created the Criminal Law Article, Art. 27, § 465A was recodified as
    RP § 14-127. See 2002 Md. Laws 197, 202, 1089-90 (Vol. I–II, Ch. 26, H.B. 11). House
    Bill 11’s stated purpose was, among other things, to create the Criminal Law Article “to
    revise, restate, and recodify the laws of the State relating to criminal law; [and to] revis[e],
    restat[e], and recodify[] certain provisions relating to . . . real estate settlements[.]” 2002
    Md. Laws 197 (Vol. I, Ch. 26, H.B. 11). House Bill 11’s Fiscal Note stated that “House
    Bill 11 [] revise[d] in several other articles a number of provision relating to criminal law,
    regulatory, and enforcement matters originally codified in Article 27. These other articles
    include[d] . . . [the] Real Property Article[.]”
    From RP § 14-127’s plain language and legislative history, we have no difficulty in
    concluding that RP § 14-127’s purpose was criminal in nature, and not to create an implied
    private right of action on behalf of a specified protected class of individuals. Moreover,
    we note that, in addition to criminalizing kickbacks in connection with settlement services,
    RP § 14-127 effectively prevents practices that could increase the costs of settlement and
    limit competition among providers of settlement services; i.e., RP § 14-127 helps keep the
    costs of settlement down and provides consumers with a wider choice of providers of
    settlement services than would otherwise be available absent the prohibition against
    kickbacks.
    As a final matter, we point out that RP § 14-127 furnishes a penalty for violations
    of RP § 14-127(c)(1) and (d). Specifically, RP § 14-127(e) provides: “A person who
    violates [RP § 14-127] is guilty of a misdemeanor and on conviction is subject to
    - 34 -
    imprisonment not exceeding 6 months or a fine not exceeding $1,000 or both.” And,
    “[e]ach violation of [RP § 14-127] is a separate violation.” RP § 14-127(f). Thus, RP §
    14-127 does not prohibit certain conduct without providing any penalty or means of
    enforcement whatsoever; RP § 14-127 clearly provides a criminal penalty for violations.
    Cf. 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 713
    , 50 A.3d at 1125 (“An elemental canon of statutory construction
    is [that,] where a statute expressly provides a particular remedy or remedies, a court must
    be chary of reading others into it. Under [the statute at issue], citation recipients . . . may
    (but are not obliged to) defend against receiving a citation on the basis that the local
    government violated [the statute]. This militates against finding a separate, private cause
    of action to enforce the statute.” (Citations, brackets, footnotes, and internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    In sum, as we did in Baker, id. at 
    714-15, 50 A.3d at 1126
    , here, we conclude that
    “the lack of discernible legislative intent to create an implied [right] of action in the plain
    language and structure of [RP § 14-127], its legislative history, or some other legitimate
    and reliable source cements the conclusion that the [General Assembly], in enacting [RP §
    14-127], did not contemplate an implied private [right] of action.”
    Enforceable Duty
    Given that, as part of our analysis of whether RP § 14-127 contains a private right
    of action, we conclude that Appellants are members of a group who receive a benefit from
    RP § 14-127, we shall address whether there otherwise exists a duty under RP § 14-127
    pursuant to which Appellants may maintain a tort claim. Stated differently, we consider
    whether RP § 14-127 gives rise to an actionable duty that inures to the benefit of
    - 35 -
    Appellants. We determine that there is no such enforceable duty arising under RP § 14-
    127 and explain.
    In 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 711
    & 
    n.16, 50 A.3d at 1123
    & n.16, we determined that,
    because the statute at issue did “not confer rights on a class of persons[,]” the plaintiffs’
    “alternative argument that their causes of action are based on common law tort duties” was
    “foreclose[d,]” explaining:
    A statute creates an enforceable duty when the plaintiff is a member of the
    class of persons [whom] the statute was designed to protect and the injury
    was of the type [that] the statute was designed to prevent. Furthermore, the
    statute must set forth mandatory acts clearly for the protection of a particular
    class of persons rather than the public as a whole.
    In Gourdine [v. Crews, 
    405 Md. 722
    , 757, 
    955 A.2d 769
    , 790 (2008)],
    the plaintiff argued that the following language in the federal Food, Drug,
    and Cosmetic Act created an enforceable duty in the defendant drug
    manufacturer: “The following acts and the causing thereof are prohibited: (a)
    The introduction or delivery for introduction into interstate commerce of any
    food, drug, device, or cosmetic that is adulterated or misbranded.” We
    disagreed, noting that the statute was framed to protect the public in general.
    In Muthukumarana [v. Montgomery Cnty., 
    370 Md. 447
    , 499-500, 
    805 A.2d 372
    , 403 (2002)], a Maryland statute required all counties to have an
    operational 9-1-1 system to protect the safety and well-being of Marylanders.
    The plaintiff posited that the statute placed on a 9-1-1 operator a duty of care
    to an injured citizen utilizing that service. Again, we disagreed, stating that
    statutory language requiring broad emergency services did not evince a
    special benefit to a particular class of persons: “In our view, acting to protect
    or assist a specific group of individuals, sufficient to create a special
    relationship, involves more than general actions taken to serve members of
    the public at large in need of emergency telephone services.”
    The assertedly relevant portion of the present statute, like the statutes
    in Gourdine and Muthukumarana, protects the public in general by
    prohibiting certain contingency fees, without enumerating a particular class
    of persons. Therefore, no actionable tort duty inures from [the statute] to the
    benefit of [the plaintiffs].
    (Some citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    - 36 -
    By contrast, in Blackburn Ltd. P’ship v. Paul, 
    438 Md. 100
    , 111-12, 
    90 A.3d 464
    ,
    470-71 (2014), we explained that, pursuant to the Statute or Ordinance Rule, a plaintiff
    may demonstrate a prima facie case in negligence—a common law tort—by showing,
    among other things, the violation of a statute or ordinance that was intended to protect a
    particular class of people that includes the plaintiff. Specifically, in Blackburn, 
    id. at 128,
    90 A.3d at 480, we held that the defendants’ alleged violation of a Code of Maryland
    Regulation (“COMAR”) pertaining to barriers surrounding public swimming pools, “if
    proven, would demonstrate the breach of a duty from” the defendants to a three-year-old
    child who “entered the pool [of his apartment complex] by slipping through [an] allegedly
    defective gate”; that “[s]uch a duty, derived from statute, would apply irrespective of [the
    child]’s legal status on the property when the incident occurred”; and that “[a] reasonable
    trier of fact could find that such a duty existed, that [the defendant]s violated this duty, and
    that such violation was the cause of [the child]’s injuries.” In Blackburn, 
    id. at 110,
    90
    A.3d at 469-70, we acknowledged that the child was a trespasser, and that ordinarily a
    property owner owes a very limited common law tort duty to trespassers. However, we
    explained that “the Statute or Ordinance Rule” provided an exception to that limited duty,
    and that the “Rule can apply irrespective of a property owner’s duty to trespassers under
    the common law[.]” 
    Id. at 111,
    117, 90 A.3d at 470
    , 474. We explained that, under the
    Statute or Ordinance Rule,
    to make out a prima facie case in a negligence action, all that a plaintiff must
    show is: (a) the violation of a statute or ordinance designed to protect a
    specific class of persons [that] includes the plaintiff, and (b) that the violation
    proximately caused the injury complained of. Proximate cause is established
    by determining whether the plaintiff is within the class of persons sought to
    - 37 -
    be protected, and the harm suffered is of a kind [that] the drafters intended
    the statute to prevent. It is the existence of this cause and effect relationship
    that makes the violation of a statute prima facie evidence of negligence.
    
    Id. at 112,
    90 A.3d at 471 (citation, internal quotation marks, and asterisks omitted).
    Applying the Statute or Ordinance Rule, we held that “the COMAR regulations
    incorporate[d] the Model Barrier Code, which [] identif[ied] a specific class—namely,
    young children under the age of five years[,]” who were a “special class of young children
    that COMAR most assuredly recognize[d] as beneficiaries of the pool owner’s duty.” 
    Id. at 125,
    90 A.3d at 479. Under COMAR, the defendants “were required to provide a barrier
    that did not allow passage of a sphere 4 inches in diameter, except when the entrance gate
    was open.” 
    Id. at 125,
    90 A.3d at 479 (citation omitted). We explained that COMAR set
    forth requirements for pool owners that were specifically meant to protect the class that
    was identified in the Model Barrier Code—children under the age of five. See id. at 
    125, 90 A.3d at 479
    . We concluded that the child, who was three years old at the time of the
    accident, “was clearly a member of this protected class.” 
    Id. at 126,
    90 A.3d at 479. The
    holding in Blackburn gave rise to common law tort duty under the Statute or Ordinance
    Rule. Blackburn did not purport to establish a test for whether a statute gives rise to a
    private right of action for any and all actions that a plaintiff may seek to pursue.
    In this case, we hold that there is no enforceable common law duty arising under RP
    § 14-127. Among the inquiries in determining whether there is an enforceable common
    law duty under RP § 14-127 are whether Appellants are members of the class of persons
    whom RP § 14-127 was designed to protect and whether the injury was the type that RP §
    14-127 was designed to prevent. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 711
    n.16, 50 A.3d at 1123 
    n.16;
    - 38 -
    Blackburn, 438 Md. at 
    112, 90 A.3d at 471
    . The first inquiry is not satisfied in this case,
    as there is a difference between being a member of a group who arguably receives a benefit
    from a statute and being a member of a class whose injury the statute was designed to
    protect. A review of RP § 14-127’s plain language, legislative history, and legislative
    purpose does not reveal any indication on the General Assembly’s part to protect an
    identifiable class of persons. As discussed above, although Appellants, as consumers of
    settlements services, are members of a class who incidentally receive the benefit of RP §
    14-127, at core, RP § 14-127 is a criminal statute that fails to mention, let alone identify
    with any specificity, consumers of settlement services, the public in general, or some other
    group of persons who are intended to be protected by RP § 14-127. Rather, RP § 14-
    127(c)(1) simply contains a general prohibition that persons connected “with the settlement
    of real estate transactions involving land in the State may not pay to or receive from another
    any consideration to solicit, obtain, retain, or arrange real estate settlement business”; i.e.,
    RP § 14-127(c)(1) contains only a prohibition, the by-product of which is a benefit that
    inures to consumers of settlement services. And, RP § 14-127’s legislative history does
    not reveal that RP § 14-127 was enacted to create a tort duty that applies to persons who
    are connected with settlements.
    Blackburn and the regulations at issue in Blackburn are readily distinguishable from
    RP § 14-127 and the circumstances of this case. In Blackburn, 
    id. at 103,
    105, 
    126-27, 90 A.3d at 466
    , 467, 479, the plaintiff’s claim was grounded in the common law tort of
    negligence, but, due to the child’s status as a trespasser and because a property owner owes
    no affirmative duty of care to a trespasser, the plaintiff could not pursue such a claim; we
    - 39 -
    held that, under the Statute or Ordinance Rule, the plaintiff could establish that: the child
    was a member of a protected class, i.e., the class that COMAR was designed to protect; the
    fence failed to meet the requirements of COMAR; and there was sufficient circumstantial
    evidence of causation.     Stated otherwise, Blackburn is a case in which this Court
    specifically found the violation of an ordinance or statute could under certain
    circumstances serve as evidence of negligence. Moreover, in Blackburn, id. at 
    125, 90 A.3d at 479
    , the regulatory history of the relevant COMAR provisions demonstrated that
    they were specifically designed to protect a specific class of persons—namely, children
    under the age of five—who could be harmed by pool barriers not complying with the
    regulation. Thus, COMAR clearly created a duty that was specifically intended to protect
    young children. See id. at 
    125, 90 A.3d at 479
    .
    By contrast, here, Appellants do not bring a claim of negligence against Appellees;
    as such, this is not a case where a violation of RP § 14-127 could serve as evidence of
    Appellees’ negligence. First, as a practical matter, in the second amended complaint,
    Appellants allege a knowing and deliberate illegal kickback scheme—i.e., knowing
    violations of laws, including RP § 14-127—as opposed to negligence; thus, there is no
    underlying issue of duty. Even if a violation of RP § 14-127 could theoretically serve as
    evidence of Appellees’ negligence under Blackburn, such a conclusion is meaningless in
    the context of this case, where Appellants have not alleged that Appellees were negligent
    in the first instance, and where the nature of Appellants’ allegations would not support a
    negligence claim. At oral argument, Appellants’ counsel acknowledged that the conduct
    that was involved in this case was “intentional[,]” that Appellees could not “negligently
    - 40 -
    pay a kickback[,]” and that Appellants’ action was not a “negligence-based action[.]”
    Equally significant is our determination that RP § 14-127 does not, and was not intended
    or designed to, protect a specific class of persons. This determination is fatal to any
    contention that RP § 14-127 creates an enforceable duty.19
    Policy Considerations
    Before concluding, we pause to address policy considerations raised by Appellants.
    Specifically, Appellants contend that implying a private right of action, i.e., a civil remedy,
    19
    We are similarly unpersuaded by Appellants’ reliance on Horridge v. St. Mary’s
    Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    382 Md. 170
    , 
    854 A.2d 1232
    (2004) for the contention that,
    like the statutes at issue in Horridge, RP § 14-127 protects an identifiable class of persons.
    In 
    Horridge, 382 Md. at 187
    , 854 A.2d at 1241, we held that the General Assembly, through
    certain statutes of the Family Law Article of the Code of Maryland, “has created a duty
    flowing to children specifically identified to [the Department of Social Services] as being
    the subject of suspected abuse[.]” (Emphasis omitted). We further stated that there existed
    a common law tort duty under the statutes, explaining, in pertinent part:
    The legislative policy of preventing future harm to children already
    reported to have been abused is so abundantly clear as to be beyond cavil,
    and, given the statutory mandate to act and the general waiver of tort
    immunity when State employees fail to act in a reasonable way and harm
    ensues, we can see no great burden or consequence to regarding this existing
    statutory duty as a civil one from which tort liability may arise. . . . The
    [General Assembly] meant for [the Department of Social Services] and its
    social workers to act immediately and aggressively when specific reports of
    abuse or neglect are made, and the best way to assure that is done is to find
    that they do have a special relationship with specific children identified in or,
    upon reasonable effort, identifiable from, facially reliable reports of abuse or
    neglect and, subject to the State Tort Claims Act, to make them liable if harm
    occurs because they fail in their mandated duty.
    
    Id. at 193,
    854 A.2d at 1245 (emphasis omitted). Again, in contrast to Horridge, there is
    no legislative policy or legislative history identifying consumers of settlements services as
    a class of persons needing protection, such that we could conclude that RP § 14-127 creates
    a common law tort duty owed to those consumers.
    - 41 -
    is a more effective and efficient remedy than a criminal penalty alone because implying a
    private right of action “would provide an incentive for those subject to the statute’[s]
    mandatory acts to conform to the statute in regard to each potential liability[-]inducing
    event—i.e., in each and every real estate transaction.” Appellants argue that, absent a
    private right of action, they and other consumers will lack “access to [S]tate court” and will
    be forced to seek relief in the federal court, which they maintain is more expensive and less
    accessible.
    Appellees respond that whether a civil remedy is more effective and efficient is
    irrelevant where the General Assembly neither expressly nor by implication intended to
    create a private right of action. Appellees argue that whether or not an alleged victim can
    seek redress in State court has no bearing in determining whether a statute provides a
    private right of action. And, Appellees assert that, in any event, an alleged victim can bring
    a RESPA claim in State court. We agree with Appellees in all respects and explain.
    As discussed in detail above, whether a State statute contains an implied private
    right of action turns on three specific inquiries concerning class, legislative intent, and
    legislative purpose. See 
    Scull, 435 Md. at 121-22
    , 76 A.3d at 1191. That an implied private
    right of action allegedly would be a “better” remedy is simply not one of the considerations
    that we take into account, and, thus, such a consideration is irrelevant for purposes of
    determining whether a statute contains an implied private right of action. Indeed, we are
    concerned only with whether there is any basis from which we could conclude that the
    General Assembly, either expressly or impliedly, intended to create a private right of
    action. See 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 710
    , 50 A.3d at 1123 (“[T]he central inquiry remains
    - 42 -
    whether the legislative body intended to create, either expressly or by implication, a private
    cause of action.” (Citation, brackets, and internal quotation marks omitted)). Here, there
    is nothing from which we can glean any intent on the General Assembly’s part to create an
    express or implied private right of action under RP § 14-127. Additionally, we note that it
    is the General Assembly’s province to create private rights of action, as it is “legislative
    bodies [that] know how to ‘salt the mine’ for the enablement of implied private causes of
    action.” 
    Baker, 427 Md. at 715
    , 50 A.3d at 1126 (citations omitted). In other words, such
    policy considerations are best presented to the General Assembly, not this Court, and it
    would be up to the General Assembly to create a private right of action if it so chooses.
    As to lacking access to State court, we disagree with Appellants’ position. First,
    whether an alleged victim is able to redress his or her harm in a State court is not a
    consideration in determining whether a State statute contains an implied private right of
    action. Second, under RESPA, an alleged victim is permitted to bring a claim for violation
    of RESPA’s provisions in either State or federal court. See 12 U.S.C. § 2614 (“Any action
    pursuant to the provisions of section 2605, 2607, or 2608 of this title may be brought in the
    United States district court or in any other court of competent jurisdiction, for the district
    in which the property involved is located, or where the violation is alleged to have
    occurred[.]”); cf. R.A. Ponte Architects, Ltd. v. Investors’ Alert, Inc., 
    382 Md. 689
    , 691,
    
    857 A.2d 1
    , 2 (2004) (This Court held that “a private cause of action for damages, under
    the provisions of the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act, for the receipt of
    unsolicited commercial telephone facsimile messages . . . may be brought in courts of this
    State.” (Citation omitted)). That a case filed in State court, in which a plaintiff claims a
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    RESPA violation, subsequently can be removed to the federal court is of no consequence
    to whether that plaintiff still has a remedy for alleged violations of RESPA. See 28 U.S.C.
    § 1446(a) (“A defendant . . . desiring to remove any civil action from a State court shall
    file in the district court of the United States for the district and division within which such
    action is pending a notice of removal . . . and containing a short and plain statement of the
    grounds for removal[.]”).
    As a final matter, we observe that our holding in this case—that RP § 14-127 does
    not contain an express or implied private right of action—in no way deprives Appellants
    of a remedy altogether. As discussed above, RP § 14-127(e) provides criminal penalties
    for those who are convicted of violating RP § 14-127(c)(1)’s prohibition against kickbacks.
    And, under RESPA, Appellants are specifically provided a private right of action for the
    type of conduct prohibited under RP § 14-127. Specifically, 12 U.S.C. § 2607(a) prohibits
    persons from giving or accepting “any fee, kickback, or thing of value pursuant to any
    agreement or understanding, oral or otherwise, that business incident to or a part of a real
    estate settlement service involving a federally related mortgage loan shall be referred to
    any person.” And 12 U.S.C. § 2607(b) prohibits persons from giving or accepting “any
    portion, split, or percentage of any charge made or received for the rendering of a real estate
    settlement service in connection with a transaction involving a federally related mortgage
    loan other than for services actually performed.” 12 U.S.C. § 2607(d) provides both
    criminal and civil penalties, stating, in relevant part:
    (1) Any person or persons who violate the provisions of this section shall be
    fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned for not more than one year, or
    both.
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    (2) Any person or persons who violate the prohibitions or limitations of this
    section shall be jointly and severally liable to the person or persons charged
    for the settlement service involved in the violation in an amount equal to
    three times the amount of any charge paid for such settlement service.
    ...
    (5) In any private action brought pursuant to this subsection, the court may
    award to the prevailing party the court costs of the action together with
    reasonable attorneys fees.
    Thus, nothing in our holding today deprives Appellants of their private right of action
    against Appellees under RESPA.
    Conclusion
    In sum, we hold that RP § 14-127 does not contain an express or implied private
    right of action, as neither RP § 14-127’s plain language, legislative history, nor legislative
    purpose demonstrate any intent on the General Assembly’s part to create a private right of
    action. Accordingly, we answer the certified question of law “no.”
    CERTIFIED QUESTION OF LAW ANSWERED.
    COSTS TO BE DIVIDED EQUALLY BETWEEN
    THE PARTIES.
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