United Insurance v. MD Insurance Administration , 450 Md. 1 ( 2016 )


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  • United Insurance Company of America and the Reliable Life Insurance Company v. the
    Maryland Insurance Administration, et al., No. 101, September Term, 2015. Opinion by
    Hotten, J.
    INSURANCE LAW — RETROACTIVE ENFORCEMENT — ADMINISTRATIVE
    EXHAUSTION REQUIREMENT — Court of Appeals held that the administrative
    remedy afforded by the Insurance Article was primary, and thus, Petitioners were required
    to pursue and exhaust administrative remedies in challenging the constitutionality and
    retroactive enforcement of a newly-enacted insurance statute before seeking a declaratory
    judgment in the circuit court. Petitioners failed to rebut the presumption that the
    administrative remedy was primary because the Insurance Article provided a
    comprehensive remedial scheme that encompassed Petitioners’ claim, and Petitioners’
    claim depended upon the statutory scheme and the expertise of the administering agency,
    the Maryland Insurance Administration. The Court further held that Petitioners’ claim did
    not fall within the constitutional exception to the administrative exhaustion requirement,
    because Petitioners did not challenge the constitutionality of the statute as a whole, but
    only as applied retroactively to their in-force life insurance policies.
    Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
    Case No. 02-C-13-179785
    Argued: June 1, 2016
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 101
    September Term, 2015
    ______________________________________
    UNITED INSURANCE COMPANY OF
    AMERICA and THE RELIABLE LIFE
    INSURANCE COMPANY
    v.
    THE MARYLAND INSURANCE
    ADMINISTRATION, AND AL REDMER,
    JR., IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS
    COMMISSIONER
    ______________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.
    Greene,
    Adkins,
    McDonald,
    Watts,
    Hotten,
    Battaglia, Lynne A.
    (Retired, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Hotten, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: August 25, 2016
    We consider whether a party who challenges the constitutionality and retroactive
    effect of a newly-enacted Maryland statute must pursue and exhaust administrative
    remedies before seeking declaratory relief in the circuit court.          Petitioners, United
    Insurance Company of America and the Reliable Life Insurance Company, insurance
    providers in the State of Maryland, filed a declaratory action against Respondents, the
    Maryland Insurance Administration, et al., (“MIA”) in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel
    County, challenging the retroactive enforcement of Md. Code (2011 Repl. Vol., 2015
    Supp.) § 16-118 of the Insurance Article (“Ins.”). Section 16-118 imposes a duty on an
    insurer who “issues, delivers, or renews a policy of life insurance or an annuity contract . .
    .” in the State to “perform a comparison of [their] in-force life insurance policies, annuity
    contracts, and retained assets accounts against the latest version of a death master file to
    identify any death benefit payments that may be due. . . .” on a regular or semi-annual
    basis. Ins. § 16-118(c)(1)-(2)(i). Prior to this legislation, insurers were under no obligation
    to research whether a policyholder had died, and the statute did not indicate whether its
    provisions apply retroactively to existing insurance policies.
    The circuit court dismissed Petitioners’ action based on the failure to exhaust
    administrative remedies afforded by the Insurance Article. In an unpublished opinion, the
    Court of Special Appeals agreed, and affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. United
    Insurance Company of America et al. v. Maryland Insurance Administration et al., No.
    0020, Sept. Term 2014, 
    2015 WL 5968833
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Oct. 14, 2015). Thereafter,
    we granted certiorari. For the reasons that follow, we shall affirm the judgment of the
    Court of Special Appeals.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Petitioners’ in-force life insurance policies
    Petitioners offer life insurance policies to lower income individuals and families in
    the State of Maryland. The policies are subject to extensive regulation by the MIA, the
    agency that administers and regulates the State’s insurance market. As of December 2011,
    Petitioners retained a combined total of approximately 135,000 in-force policies in the
    State. The average face value of the policies was $5,000, with average monthly premiums
    of approximately $7.00. Petitioners calculated premium rates through a process that relies
    upon actuarial assumptions of an insured’s life expectancy, the timing and frequency of
    claims payments, the anticipated rate of return on invested assets, and financial projections
    concerning anticipated administrative costs incurred during the policy benefit period.
    The policies provided that insurance proceeds would be paid upon “receipt of due
    proof of death” of the insured. Specifically, United Insurance Company of America’s
    policies defined “due proof of death” as “a certified copy of the death certificate, a certified
    copy of a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction as to the finding of death or any other
    proof satisfactory to [the insurer].” Petitioners’ premium rates reflected costs savings
    realized by placing the obligation on beneficiaries to provide proof of death.
    The enactment of § 16-118 of the Insurance Article
    Maryland Senate Bill 77 (2012) was passed by the General Assembly, signed into
    law as § 16-118 of the Insurance Article, and became effective on October 1, 2013. The
    bill was introduced in response to the growing concern of questionable and unfair
    settlement practices by major life insurance companies, which allegedly often led to
    -2-
    “unknowing beneficiaries of life insurance policies” missing timely receipt of the
    settlements owed.1 See Testimony of Senator Delores G. Kelley on Senate Bill 77—Life
    Insurance and Annuities—Unfair Claim Settlement Practices—Failure to Cross-Check
    Death Master File Before the Senate Finance Committee on January 26, 2012, 430th Sess.
    (2012). The relevant provisions of Ins. § 16-118 provide:
    Duty of insurer to perform comparison of life insurance policies, annuity contracts,
    and retained asset accounts
    (c)(1) An insurer that issues, delivers, or renews a policy of life insurance or
    an annuity contract in the State shall perform a comparison of the insurer’s
    in-force life insurance policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset accounts
    against the latest version of a death master file[2] to identify any death benefit
    payments that may be due under the policies, contracts, or retained asset
    accounts as a result of the death of an insured, annuitant, or retained asset
    account holder.
    (2) An insurer shall perform the comparison required under paragraph (1) of
    this subsection:
    1
    Ins. § 16-118 is based on a model act adopted in 2011 by the National Conference
    of Insurance Legislators (“NCOIL”), an organization of state legislators that focuses
    primarily on insurance legislation and regulation. It is estimated that over one billion
    dollars in death benefits are held by insurance companies and unclaimed by the
    beneficiaries of deceased policy holders. See State ex rel. Perdue v. Nationwide Life Ins.
    Co., 
    236 W. Va. 1
    , 21, 
    777 S.E.2d 11
    (2015) (Ketchum, J. concurring) (citing Devin
    Hartley, A Billion Dollar Problem: The insurance industry’s widespread failure to escheat
    unclaimed death benefits to the states, 19 Conn. Ins. L.J. 363 (2012–2013)).
    2
    A “[d]eath master file” is defined as “the Social Security Administration’s Death
    Master File” or “any other database or service that is at least as comprehensive as the Social
    Security Administration’s Death Master File for determining that an individual reportedly
    has died.” Ins. § 16-118(a)(3)(i)-(ii). The Social Security Administration’s Death Master
    File is an “electronic database that contains [the agency’s] records of Social Security
    Numbers (SSN) assigned to individuals since 1936, and includes, if available, the deceased
    individual’s SSN, first name, middle name, surname, date of birth, and date of death.”
    Requesting       the     Full       Death      Master         File     (DMF),        SSA.GOV,
    https://www.ssa.gov/dataexchange/request_dmf.html (last visited June 29, 2016).
    -3-
    (i) at regular intervals, on at least a semiannual basis; and
    (ii) in good faith, using criteria reasonably designed to identify
    individuals whose death would require the payment of benefits by the insurer
    under a life insurance policy, annuity contract, or retained asset account.
    (3) For a group life insurance policy, an insurer is not required to perform the
    comparison required under paragraph (1) of this subsection unless the insurer
    provides full record-keeping services to the group life insurance policy
    holder.
    Ins. § 16-118 (c)(1)-(3).
    If the comparison reveals a match in the Social Security Administration’s Death
    Master File, an insurer is required to 1) “conduct a good faith effort to confirm the death
    of the insured, annuitant, or retained asset account holder using other available records and
    information;” 2) “determine whether benefits are due under the applicable life insurance
    policy, annuity contract, or retained asset account;” and 3) “use good faith efforts to locate
    the beneficiary” and “provide to the beneficiary the appropriate claims forms and
    instructions necessary to make a claim[,]” “if benefits are due under the policy, contract,
    or retained asset account.” Ins. § 16-118(d)(1)(i)-(iii)(1)-(2). The statute does not reflect
    whether insurers are required to perform the comparison for in-force policies prior to the
    statute’s effective date.
    Failure to comply with the requirements of Ins. § 16-118 constitutes an “unfair claim
    settlement practice[,]” Ins. § 27-303(10), punishable by civil penalties up to $2,500 per
    violation, Ins. § 27-305(a)(1) or restitutionary penalties, Ins. § 27-305(c)(1). For violations
    of Ins. § 27-304 (unfair claim settlement practices committed with frequency), the
    Commissioner is authorized to revoke or suspend an insurer’s license, Ins. §§ 27-305(b);
    -4-
    4-113; issue cease and desist orders, Ins. §§ 27-103; 4-114; or impose misdemeanor
    penalties, Ins. § 1-301.
    Petitioners’ challenge to Ins. § 16-118
    On February 28, 2013, Petitioners, through their representatives, attended a meeting
    with the then-Insurance Commissioner, Therese M. Goldsmith (“Commissioner
    Goldsmith”),3 who indicated her view that Ins. § 16-118 applied to all in-force policies,
    including those in effect prior to the statute’s effective date. Commissioner Goldsmith
    further advised that she would enforce the requirements of the statute against all of
    Petitioners’ in-force policies. Thereafter, in July 2013, Petitioners filed a civil action
    against the MIA and Commissioner Goldsmith in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel
    County, seeking a declaration that the statute was inapplicable to insurance policies issued
    prior to its effective date.
    3
    Effective February 27, 2015, Al Redmer, Jr. replaced Therese Goldsmith as
    Maryland Insurance Commissioner.
    -5-
    Petitioners advanced the following grounds for relief: 1) the retroactive enforcement
    of the statute violated Articles 194 and 245 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights and
    Article III, § 406 of the Maryland Constitution; 2) the retroactive enforcement of the statute
    abrogated their substantive contract rights in violation of those same provisions; and 3) the
    retroactive enforcement of the statute constituted an unconstitutional impairment of their
    contractual rights in violation of Article I, § 107 of the United States Constitution.
    4
    Article 19 provides:
    That every man, for any injury done to him in his person or property, ought
    to have remedy by the course of the Law of the Land, and ought to have
    justice and right, freely without sale, fully without any denial, and speedily
    without delay, according to the Law of the Land.
    5
    Article 24 provides:
    That no man ought to be taken or imprisoned or disseized of his freehold,
    liberties or privileges, or outlawed, or exiled, or, in any manner, destroyed,
    or deprived of his life, liberty or property, but by the judgment of his peers,
    or by the Law of the land (amended by Chapter 681, Acts of 1977, ratified
    Nov. 7, 1978).
    6
    Article III § 40 provides:
    The General Assembly shall enact no Law authorizing private property to be
    taken for public use without just compensation, as agreed upon between the
    parties, or awarded by a jury, being first paid or tendered to the party entitled
    to such compensation.
    7
    Article I § 10 provides, in pertinent part:
    No State shall . . . pass any . . . Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts[.]
    ...
    -6-
    Petitioners sought a judgment declaring that the statute did not apply retroactively
    to their in-force policies as of the effective date, or alternatively, that retroactive
    enforcement of the statute would be void because it violated one or more constitutional
    provisions. The MIA filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that the Insurance Article provided
    administrative remedies that Petitioners were required to exhaust before seeking relief in
    the circuit court. In granting MIA’s motion, the court held that the administrative remedy
    outlined in Ins. § 2-2108 must be exhausted before Petitioners pursued a declaratory
    judgment, given the strong presumption that the available remedy was primary, i.e., a
    remedy in which a claimant must first invoke and exhaust before seeking a judicial remedy,
    and the absence of factors weighing against that presumption.
    The court further held that Petitioners’ claim did not fall within the exception to the
    administrative exhaustion requirement, since the claim was not solely a constitutional
    challenge to the General Assembly’s authority to enact retroactive legislation, but was also
    a challenge to the MIA’s interpretation and application of the law regarding retroactivity.
    Thereafter, Petitioners noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.
    8
    Ins. § 2-210 provides, in relevant part:
    (a)(1) The Commissioner may hold hearings that the Commissioner
    considers necessary for any purpose under this article.
    (2) The Commissioner shall hold a hearing:
    (i) if required by any provision of this article; or
    (ii) except as otherwise provided in this article, on written demand by
    a person aggrieved by any act of, threatened act of, or failure to act by
    the Commissioner or by any report, regulation, or order of the
    Commissioner, except an order to hold a hearing or an order resulting
    from a hearing.
    -7-
    In considering the factors enunciated in Zappone v. Liberty Life Ins. Co., 
    349 Md. 45
    , 64-66, 
    706 A.2d 1060
    , 1069-70 (1998), which outlined the test for determining whether
    an administrative remedy is primary, the Court of Special Appeals held that Ins. § 2-210
    provided a primary administrative remedy for the following reasons: the statute was
    comprehensive and encompassed challenges to the MIA’s interpretation of Ins. § 16-118;
    Petitioner’s challenge was dependent upon the Insurance Article’s statutory scheme since
    it “pertain[ed] to how the [MIA] propose[d] to interpret and enforce the statutory scheme
    and how the [MIA’s] interpretation affects their constitutional rights[;]” and assessing the
    nature and extent of the alleged impairment of Petitioners’ contractual rights were matters
    within the purview of the agency’s expertise.
    The Court also accorded weight to the MIA’s view that it maintained primary
    jurisdiction over Petitioners’ challenge. Additionally, the Court observed that Petitioners’
    contention did not fall within the constitutional exception to the rule requiring exhaustion
    of administrative remedies, reasoning that “Petitioners assert[ed] a non-constitutional
    theory of relief, [in which] invocation of the constitutional exception [was] inappropriate.”
    This Court subsequently granted certiorari.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Whether a plaintiff must exhaust administrative remedies prior to bringing suit is a
    legal issue which the Court of Appeals reviews de novo. See Falls Road Community Ass’n,
    Inc. v. Baltimore County, 
    437 Md. 115
    , 134, 
    85 A.3d 185
    , 197-98 (2014); see also Forster
    v. State, Office of Public Defender, 
    426 Md. 565
    , 580, 
    45 A.3d 180
    , 189 (2012) (“In
    addition to Maryland Rule 8–131(a) indicating generally that we may consider issues
    -8-
    ‘raised in or decided by the trial court,’ we may consider, [sua sponte], whether available
    administrative remedies have been exhausted.”) (emphasis omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    I.    Petitioners are required to first pursue and exhaust available administrative
    remedies before seeking relief in the circuit court
    The doctrine of administrative exhaustion concerns “the relationship between
    legislatively created administrative remedies and alternative statutory, common law or
    equitable judicial remedies.” Prince George’s County. v. Ray’s Used Cars, 
    398 Md. 632
    ,
    644, 
    922 A.2d 495
    , 502 (2007). In Ray’s Used 
    Cars, 398 Md. at 644-45
    , 922 A.2d at 502,
    we observed that “[w]henever the [General Assembly] provides an administrative and
    judicial review remedy to resolve a particular matter or matters, the relationship between
    that administrative remedy and a possible alternative judicial remedy will ordinarily fall
    into one of three categories[:]”
    [T]he administrative remedy may be exclusive, thus precluding any resort to
    an alternative remedy. Under this scenario, there simply is no alternative
    cause of action for matters covered by the statutory administrative remedy.
    [T]he administrative remedy may be primary but not exclusive. In this
    situation, a claimant must invoke and exhaust the administrative remedy, and
    seek judicial review of an adverse administrative decision, before a court can
    properly adjudicate the merits of the alternative judicial remedy.
    [T]he administrative remedy and the alternative judicial remedy may be fully
    concurrent, with neither remedy being primary, and the plaintiff at his or her
    option may pursue the judicial remedy without the necessity of invoking and
    exhausting the administrative remedy.[9]
    9
    In the case at bar, it is undisputed that Ins. § 2-210 does not provide an exclusive
    remedy. Accordingly, our analysis will address only whether the statute provides a primary
    or a concurrent administrative remedy.
    -9-
    (quoting Zappone v. Liberty Life Ins. Co., 
    349 Md. 45
    , 60-61, 
    706 A.2d 1060
    , 1067-68
    (1998) (footnote omitted) (emphasis added); see also Carter v. Huntington Title & Escrow,
    LLC, 
    420 Md. 605
    , 616, 
    24 A.3d 722
    , 728-29 (2011) (“[W]e held that, where the [General
    Assembly] provides ‘[(1)] an administrative and judicial review remedy . . . and [(2)] a
    possible alternative judicial remedy’ for a ‘particular matter or matters,’ we must determine
    whether it intended the agency to have exclusive, primary, or concurrent jurisdiction.”)
    (citation omitted).
    In the absence of specific statutory language indicating the type of administrative
    remedy, there is a rebuttable presumption that an administrative remedy was intended to
    be primary. Zappone, 
    349 Md. 63
    , 706 A.2d at 1070. Thus, “a claimant cannot maintain
    the alternative judicial action without first invoking and exhausting the administrative
    remedy.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    See also Maryland Reclamation Associates, Inc. v.
    Harford County, 
    342 Md. 476
    , 493, 
    677 A.2d 567
    , 576 (1996) (“[T]his Court has
    ‘ordinarily construed the pertinent [legislative] enactments to require that the
    administrative remedy be first invoked and followed’ before resort to the courts.”); Clinton
    v. Board of Education of Howard County, 
    315 Md. 666
    , 678, 
    556 A.2d 273
    , 279 (1989)
    (“Ordinarily when there are two forums available, one judicial and the other administrative,
    . . . and no statutory directive indicating which should be pursued first, a party is often first
    required to run the administrative remedial course before seeking a judicial solution.”).
    - 10 -
    The remedial provision at issue, Ins. § 2-210(a)-(b), provides the following:
    In general
    (a)(1) The Commissioner may hold hearings that the Commissioner
    considers necessary for any purpose under this article.
    (2) The Commissioner shall hold a hearing:
    (i) if required by any provision of this article; or
    (ii) except as otherwise provided in this article, on written
    demand by a person aggrieved by any act of, threatened act of,
    or failure to act by the Commissioner or by any report,
    regulation, or order of the Commissioner, except an order to
    hold a hearing or an order resulting from a hearing.
    Demand for hearing
    (b)(1) A demand for a hearing shall state the grounds for the relief to be
    demanded at the hearing.
    (2) Within 30 consecutive days after receiving a demand for a hearing,
    the Commissioner shall:
    (i) grant and, unless postponed by mutual consent of the parties, hold
    the hearing; or
    (ii) issue an order refusing the hearing.
    (3) If the Commissioner does not grant or refuse a hearing within the 30-
    day period, the hearing is deemed to have been refused.
    Petitioners aver that administrative exhaustion is not required, since Ins. § 2-
    210(a)(2) provides a concurrent, rather than a primary remedy, in which they have the
    option to pursue administrative relief or a declaratory judgment. We disagree. The
    Insurance Article does not expressly or impliedly indicate whether Ins. § 2-210 is a
    concurrent remedy, and Petitioners’ argument fails to rebut the presumption that the
    available administrative remedy was not intended to be primary. We explain.
    - 11 -
    In determining whether the presumption that an administrative remedy is primary
    prevails, we consider the following four factors: 1) the comprehensiveness of the
    administrative remedy in addressing an aggrieved party’s claim; 2) the administrative
    agency’s view of its jurisdiction over the matter; 3) the claim’s dependence upon the
    statutory scheme; and 4) the claim’s dependence upon the administrative agency’s
    expertise. 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 64-66
    , 706 A.2d at 1069-70 (hereinafter “the Zappone
    factors”). See also 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 617
    , 24 A.3d at 729 (“[W]e weigh at least four
    germane factors, including: ‘the comprehensiveness of the administrative remedy,’ the
    ‘agency’s view of its own jurisdiction,’ the claim’s ‘depeden[ce] upon the statutory scheme
    which also contains the administrative remedy,’ and the claim’s ‘dependen[ce]’ upon the
    agency’s expertise.”).
    a. Factor One: The Insurance Article provides a comprehensive remedial
    scheme
    “A very comprehensive administrative remedial scheme is some indication that the
    [General Assembly] intended the administrative remedy to be primary, whereas a non-
    comprehensive administrative scheme suggests the contrary.” 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 64
    , 706
    A.2d at 1070 (citations omitted). In 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 627
    , 24 A.3d at 735, we observed
    that “the General Assembly created a comprehensive, if not complex, regulatory and
    remedial scheme [in the Insurance Article]. . . .” (quoting 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 64
    , 706
    A.2d at 1070).    Therefore, the relevant inquiry is whether the statutory scheme is
    sufficiently comprehensive, in that it encompasses any claim raised by an aggrieved party,
    and “preclude[s] resort to a fully independent common law remedy. . . .” Carter, 420 Md.
    - 12 -
    at 
    627, 24 A.3d at 735
    (quoting 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 67
    , 706 A.2d at 1071) (emphasis in
    original). See, e.g., 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 627
    -28, 24 A.3d at 735 (“The question, however, is
    whether [the Insurance Article’s] scheme is sufficiently comprehensive, such that the
    [General Assembly] displayed an intent for claims . . . to proceed first through the MIA.”).
    See generally Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of U.S. v. State Comm’n on Human Relations, 
    290 Md. 333
    , 337-39, 
    430 A.2d 60
    , 63-64 (1981) (rejecting an argument that the Unfair Trade
    Practices provision of the Insurance Article was entirely comprehensive to the extent that
    it precluded concurrent jurisdiction by the Commission of Human Relations in resolving
    an alleged unfair discriminatory practice in insurance sales).
    Where a claim alleges and depends upon a “statutory benchmark violation,”
    contemplated by the Insurance Article, the statutory remedy is deemed sufficiently
    comprehensive, and thus, the claim “should be considered first by the administering
    agency.” 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 628
    , 24 A.3d at 735. Notably, the fact that the Insurance
    Article may, under certain circumstances, “suggest that the administrative remedy is
    merely concurrent for truly and fully independent common law claims, . . .” does not negate
    the “primary jurisdictional grant for claims alleging what amounts to purely statutory
    violations.” 
    Id. - 13
    -
    We, therefore, disagree with Petitioners’ contention that Ins. § 2-210 fails to provide
    a comprehensive remedy, because it “does not encompass . . . [their] constitutional
    challenges to retroactive insurance legislation.”10 Section 2-210(a)(2)(ii) of the Insurance
    Article provides that the Commissioner “shall hold a hearing . . . on written demand by a
    person aggrieved by any act of, threatened act of, or failure to act by the Commissioner. .
    . .” (emphasis added). The Insurance Article does not specifically define “threatened act.”
    However, a plain reading of the statutory language unambiguously reveals that the remedy
    encompasses Petitioners’ constitutional challenges to retroactive legislation, since their
    claim was predicated upon Commissioner Goldsmith’s statement that the MIA would
    enforce the requirements of Ins. § 16-118 against Petitioners’ in-force policies.
    In interpreting the meaning of “threatened act,” we remain cognizant that “[t]he
    cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the
    [General Assembly].” Griffin v. Lindsey, 
    444 Md. 278
    , 287, 
    119 A.3d 753
    , 758 (2015)
    (citation omitted). Thus, in discerning the General Assembly’s intent, we consult the well-
    established canons of statutory construction:
    [W]e begin with the normal, plain meaning of the language of the statute. If
    the language of the statute is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the
    statute’s apparent purpose, our inquiry as to legislative intent ends ordinarily
    and we apply the statute as written, without resort to other rules of
    10
    Although we reject Petitioners’ argument on other grounds, we re-emphasize that
    the MIA is deemed fully competent to address issues regarding the constitutionality of
    statutes or ordinances, whether as applied or on its face. See Ray’s Used 
    Cars, 398 Md. at 650-51
    , 922 A.2d at 506 (“[I]t should be emphasized that ‘Maryland . . . administrative
    agencies are fully competent to resolve issues of constitutionality and the validity of
    statutes or ordinances in adjudicatory administrative proceedings which are subject to
    judicial review.’”) (quoting Montgomery County v. Broadcast Equities, Inc., 
    360 Md. 438
    ,
    451 n.8, 
    758 A.2d 995
    , 1002 n.8 (2000)).
    - 14 -
    construction. . . . We, however, do not read statutory language in a vacuum,
    nor do we confine strictly our interpretation of a statute’s plain language to
    the isolated section alone. Rather, the plain language must be viewed within
    the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs, considering the
    purpose, aim, or policy of the [General Assembly] in enacting the statute.
    
    Id. at 287,
    119 A.3d at 758 (citation omitted).
    A “threat” is defined, in part, as “a declaration, express or implied, of an intent to
    inflict loss or pain on another[.]” Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (emphasis
    added); Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition (defining a threat, in
    part, as “an indication of something impending[.]”). In Petitioners’ amended complaint,
    they alleged, in relevant part:
    [Petitioners] bring this action solely to challenge the retroactive application
    of [Ins. § 16-118]. The [MIA] has advised [Petitioners] that the [statute’s]
    requirements must be applied to [Petitioners’] existing, in-force policies. If
    applied to those policies, the [statute] would require [Petitioners] to assume
    substantial new obligations that were never contemplated or agreed to by
    [Petitioners], that are contrary to the long-standing allocation of rights and
    responsibilities under [Petitioners’] policies, and that undermine the actuarial
    and economic assumptions underlying those policies.
    ***
    [Ins. § 16-118] imposes substantial new obligations on life insurers licensed
    to issue policies in the State, including in particular, the obligation to perform
    a [Social Security Death Master File] search for all in-force policies within
    six months of the [statute’s] effective date, and to then confirm the insureds’
    deaths, determine whether benefits are payable, and locate beneficiaries.
    Failure to comply with any of the requirements of [Ins. § 16-118] constitutes
    an ‘unfair claim settlement practice’ under the Maryland Insurance Code Md.
    Ins. Code [§] 27-303(10). The Code prescribes severe civil penalties for such
    practices, including civil fines of $2,500 per violation, 
    id. [§] 27-305(a)(1),
           restitutionary penalties, 
    id. § 27-305(c)(1),
    and revocation or suspension of
    an insurer’s license, 
    id. § 4-113.
    . . .
    - 15 -
    [Commissioner Goldsmith] and the Principal Counsel for the Office of the
    Attorney General advised [Petitioners] in a meeting held on February 28,
    2013 at the offices of the [MIA] that [it] interprets [Ins. § 16-118] to apply
    to all in-force policies, including those issued prior to the [statute’s] effective
    date. The [MIA] further indicated that it would enforce the requirements of
    the [statute] against all of [Petitioners’] in-force policies, including those
    issued prior to the [statute’s] effective date. . . .
    Consistent with the plain meaning of the term “threat,” we conclude that
    Commissioner Goldsmith’s statement constituted a “threatened act,” within the meaning
    of Ins. § 2-210. As reflected in Petitioners’ complaint, the Commissioner expressly
    declared that the MIA would enforce the requirements of Ins. § 16-118 to all of Petitioners’
    in-force policies, including those policies issued prior to the statute’s effective date. If
    Petitioners failed to comply with the requirements, they would be in violation of the statute
    and subject to civil or criminal penalties (i.e., losses) for engaging in “unfair claim
    settlement practices.” See Ins. §§ 27-303(10); 27-305.            Commissioner Goldsmith’s
    statement constituted a threat to Petitioners because “enforc[ing] the requirements of [Ins.
    § 16-118] against all of [Petitioners’] in-force policies, including those issued prior to the
    [statute’s] effective date, . . .” would impose economic losses, or alternatively, civil or
    criminal penalties for non-compliance. Thus, by virtue of the Commissioner’s “threatened
    act,” Petitioners are the “person[s] aggrieved[,]” who upon written demand, can pursue
    relief by requesting a hearing before the Commissioner. Ins. § 2-210(a)(2)(ii).
    Accordingly, Petitioners’ assertion that Commissioner Goldsmith’s “informal”
    statement during a non-public meeting prior to the statute’s effective date was not a
    threatened act within the meaning of Ins. § 2-210, is unavailing. As an initial matter, a
    “threat” contemplates impending action, 
    see supra
    . Thus, the fact that the statement was
    - 16 -
    made prior to the statute’s effective date is of no consequence. Moreover, the context and
    location of Commissioner Goldsmith’s statement is not dispositive, because it does not
    negate the impending effect, which, in our view, was intended to further the statute’s
    purpose, and encourage Petitioners’ compliance.
    Additionally, as the Court of Special Appeals observed, the fact that the
    Commissioner is authorized to review both “acts” and “threatened acts,” see Ins. § 2-
    210(a)(2)(ii), under the statute is particularly significant, because it reveals the General
    Assembly’s intent to encompass imminent action, such as Commissioner Goldsmith’s
    declaration that Ins. § 16-118 would be enforced retroactively. See United Insurance, 
    2015 WL 5968833
    at *12.
    We are similarly not persuaded by Petitioners’ alternative argument concerning the
    scope of the remedy provided under Ins. § 2-210.            Petitioners aver that assuming
    Commissioner Goldsmith’s statement constituted a threat, administrative exhaustion was
    not required because they were entitled to request a hearing under Ins. § 2-210 at their
    discretion, which provided the “option,” and not an “obligation” to pursue administrative
    relief or a declaratory judgment (emphasis omitted).
    While the statute does not reflect that an aggrieved party must request a hearing, this
    does not mean that Ins. § 2-210 is a concurrent remedy. Petitioners’ focus on their right to
    “make[] the election” ignores long-standing Maryland precedent, which expressly provides
    that an administrative remedy is intended to be primary, unless the presumption is rebutted,
    or an aggrieved party’s claim is exempt from administrative exhaustion. See Zappone, 349
    Md. at 
    63, 706 A.2d at 1070
    ; Prince George’s County v. Blumberg, 
    288 Md. 275
    , 284-85,
    - 17 -
    
    418 A.2d 1155
    , 1161 (1980) (outlining the five exceptions to the administrative exhaustion
    requirement).
    b. Factor Two: The MIA’s view of its primary jurisdiction over
    Petitioners’ claim is instructive
    Relevant to this factor is determining whether “the General Assembly has provided
    a special form of remedy and established a statutory procedure before an administrative
    agency for a special kind of case[.]” 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 629
    , 24 A.3d at 736 (quoting Muhl
    v. Magan, 
    313 Md. 462
    , 480-81, 
    545 A.2d 1321
    , 1330 (1988)). A “special form of remedy”
    is generally an indication that “a litigant must ordinarily pursue that form of remedy and
    not by[-]pass the administrative official. . . .” 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 629
    , 24 A.3d at 736
    (quoting 
    Muhl, 313 Md. at 480-81
    , 545 A.2d at 1330); 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 65
    , 706 A.3d
    at 1070.
    The MIA views its jurisdiction over Petitioners’ claim as primary. In light of our
    conclusions infra, that Petitioners’ claim depends upon the statutory scheme of the
    Insurance Article and the expertise of the MIA, we are persuaded that the MIA maintains
    primary jurisdiction over Petitioners’ claim. See 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 629
    , 24 A.3d at 736
    (noting that consideration of the remaining Zappone factors would support the Court’s
    conclusion that the allegations in Carter’s complaint were not “truly and fully independent
    common law claims,” in which the General Assembly has provided him “a special form of
    remedy[]”); 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 65
    , 706 A.3d at 1070 (acknowledging “that an agency’s
    interpretation of the statute which it administers” and its “interpretation that the remedy
    - 18 -
    before the agency was not intended to be primary[,]” is entitled to weight) (citation
    omitted).
    c. Factor Three: Petitioners’ claim depends upon the statutory scheme of
    the Insurance Article
    Whether a plaintiff’s claim is dependent on the statutory scheme is accorded
    significant weight in determining the nature of an administrative remedy. See 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 65
    , 706 A.2d at 1070 (“An extremely significant consideration . . . is the nature
    of the alternative judicial cause of action pursued by [a] plaintiff.”). Thus, “[w]here the
    judicial cause of action is wholly or partially dependent upon the statutory scheme . . . the
    Court has usually held that the administrative remedy was intended to be primary and must
    first be invoked and exhausted before resort to the courts.” 
    Id. Petitioners aver
    that their claim is not dependent on the statutory scheme, since their
    “claim is constitutional, not statutory, and therefore is ‘entirely independent’ from the
    Insurance Article.”    We disagree, and are persuaded by the MIA’s argument that
    “[Petitioners’] claim is wholly dependent on the Insurance Article because, without the
    enactment of [Ins.] § 16-118(c)(1) and [Commissioner Goldsmith’s] threatened
    enforcement action . . . [Petitioners] would have no claim.”
    Petitioners cite to 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 64-66
    , 706 A.2d at 1069-70 and
    Mardirossian v. Paul Revere Life Ins. Co., 
    376 Md. 640
    , 642, 649, 
    831 A.2d 60
    , 61, 65-66
    (2003), and asserts that “[t]his Court has twice held that parties are not required to exhaust
    ‘common law’ claims in administrative hearings before the [Insurance] Commissioner.”
    Petitioners’ reliance on these cases is misplaced. In Zappone, 
    349 Md. 45
    , 50, 706 A.2d
    - 19 -
    1060, 1062, this Court considered whether “the provisions of the Insurance [Article]
    pertaining to unfair trade practices by insurers and their agents provide[d] [an] exclusive
    or primary remedy [to consumers] for alleged acts of fraud, negligent misrepresentation,
    and negligence by an insurer or agent in connection with the sale of insurance.”
    In the original complaint, Zappone, shareholder of a printing shop, filed suit against
    his insurance provider, Liberty Life Insurance Company, alleging fraud, negligent
    misrepresentation, and negligence. 
    Id. at 52,
    56, 706 A.2d at 1064-65
    . Observing that the
    Insurance Article did not provide an exclusive or primary remedy to redress Zappone’s
    “recognized common law causes of action sounding in deceit and negligence[,]” we held
    that the claim was “wholly independent of the [Insurance Article’s] Unfair Trade Practices
    subtitle.” 
    Id. at 65-68,
    706 A.2d at 1071. We reasoned:
    No interpretations or applications of the Insurance Code or of any regulations
    by the Insurance Commissioner are involved. Instead, under the plaintiff’s
    allegations and theory of the case, their right to recover money damages is
    totally dependent upon the common law tort principles applicable to deceit
    and negligence actions. . . .
    
    Id. at 67.
    Similarly in 
    Mardirossian, 376 Md. at 642
    , 831 A.2d at 61, this Court considered
    whether “Maryland law provide[d] a judicial cause of action, entirely independent of the
    Maryland Insurance [Article], for a claim to compel specific performance on an oral
    contract for disability insurance[.]” We observed that “the General Assembly did not
    intend that the Insurance Commissioner’s authority, to restrain unfair practices, [under the
    Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices subtitle of the Insurance Article], modified Maryland
    common law contract enforceability principles.” 
    Id. at 649,
    831 A.2d at 65. Accordingly,
    - 20 -
    we held that “[t]he Maryland common law contract remedy [was] fully concurrent [with
    the administrative remedy under the Insurance Article], and may be pursued in court
    without exhausting the administrative remedy. . . .” 
    Id. Zappone and
    Mardirossian are distinguishable from the case at bar, since the claims
    advanced in those cases “were treated as common law in nature because they existed
    without an essential underpinning found in the Insurance Article.” 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 630
    ,
    24 A.3d at 736. Here, Petitioners’ claim is dependent upon the statutory scheme because
    it is predicated on how the MIA interprets and will enforce Ins. § 16-118. In Petitioners’
    complaint, they alleged, “[Petitioners] bring this action solely to challenge the retroactive
    application of the [Ins. § 16-118]” because “[t]he [MIA] . . . advised [Petitioners] that the
    [statute’s] requirements must be applied to [Petitioners] existing, in-force policies.”
    Similarly, in support of Petitioners’ contention that Commissioner Goldsmith’s statement
    did not constitute a “threatened act” under Ins. § 2-210, they alleged:
    [Commissioner Goldsmith] simply disclosed her view that [Ins. § 16-118] is
    retroactive. . . . It was a statement of belief about what the General Assembly
    required the Commissioner to do when it enacted the law. Nothing in the
    statutory text indicates that the General Assembly intended to require
    litigants to exhaust administrative remedies when the Commissioner, in an
    informal, non-public meeting, shares an opinion that a particular law is
    retroactive.
    As the Court of Special Appeals concluded, although Petitioners’ claim “may lie in
    constitutional law, the entirety of their claims pertain to how the Commissioner propose[d]
    to interpret and enforce the statutory scheme and how the Commissioner’s interpretation
    [of the statute] affect[ed] their constitutional rights.” United Insurance, 
    2015 WL 5968833
    at *6. Petitioners’ contentions are predicated upon a particularized construction of the
    - 21 -
    relevant statutory provisions, reflected in their complaint. Petitioners sought a declaration
    that Ins. § 16-118 was “consistent with Maryland’s presumption against retroactive
    operation of new laws, [and] only applie[d] prospectively to life insurance policies issued
    on or after the [statute’s] effective date, and does not apply to policies already in-force as
    of that date.”
    Petitioners also advanced an alternative claim, asserting that “if [Ins. § 16-118] were
    to be construed to have retroactive effect,” they sought a declaration that the statute
    “substantially impairs their contractual rights under their in-force policies[,]” in violation
    of “Articles 19, 24, and 2511 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, Article III, § 40 of the
    Maryland Constitution, and the Contract Clause of the [U.S.] Constitution.” Moreover,
    Petitioners’ contention that Ins. § 16-118 “would require [Petitioners] to assume substantial
    new obligations . . .” and that a “[f]ailure to comply with any of the requirements of the
    [statute] . . .” would expose them to “severe civil penalties” for engaging in unfair
    settlement practices, emphasized the MIA’s interpretation of the statute, and the
    consequences that would result from noncompliance.
    Since the record reflects that Petitioners’ claim is dependent upon the statutory
    scheme, Petitioners cannot simply by-pass the administrative exhaustion requirement and
    “pursue directly a judicial remedy in a court of law . . . by characterizing or recasting” their
    action as a common law claim. 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 627
    -28, 24 A.3d at 735; see also 
    id. at 11
                Article 25 provides:
    That excessive bail ought not to be required, nor excessive fines imposed,
    nor cruel or unusual punishment inflicted, by the Courts of Law.
    - 22 -
    
    630-33, 24 A.3d at 736-38
    (holding that Carter’s claim regarding a rate charged “in excess
    of the MIA-approved schedule[]” was dependent on the statutory scheme, “irrespective of
    whether that schedule became part of some unspecified oral or written contract[]”); cf.
    
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 65
    -66, 706 A.2d at 1070 (observing that “where the alternative
    judicial remedy is entirely independent of the statutory scheme containing the
    administrative remedy . . . the Court has held that the . . . remedy was not intended to be
    primary and . . . the plaintiff could maintain the independent judicial cause of action without
    first invoking and exhausting the administrative procedures[]”) (citations and footnote
    omitted).
    d. Fourth Factor: Petitioners’ claim depends upon the expertise of the MIA
    Similarly, “[w]here [the] judicial cause of action is wholly or partially dependent
    upon . . . the expertise of the administrative agency, the Court has [also] held that the
    remedy was intended to be primary and must first be invoked and exhausted before resort
    to the courts.” 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 65
    , 706 A.2d at 1070. Petitioners aver that “the MIA’s
    expertise in insurance regulation is not relevant to the questions [regarding] whether
    retroactive legislation is constitutional or whether the constitutional question can be
    avoided through the presumption against retroactivity.” Specifically, Petitioners allege that
    “the question whether a statute operates retrospectively,” does not involve “any special
    expertise of the [MIA]” and that “Maryland courts do not defer to the agency’s
    determination on a question of constitutional law.” (citations omitted). Although we
    acknowledge that the presumption against retroactivity has not been rebutted in the case at
    bar, for the reasons explained below, we nonetheless hold that Petitioners’ claim depends
    - 23 -
    upon the expertise of the MIA, and therefore, it is appropriate to accord deference to the
    MIA’s determinations.
    i.   The presumption against retroactivity has not been rebutted
    “Retrospective statutes are those ‘acts which operate on transactions which have
    occurred or rights and obligations which existed before passage of the act.’” Muskin v.
    State Dep’t of Assessments & Taxation, 
    422 Md. 544
    , 557, 
    30 A.3d 962
    , 969 (2011)
    (quoting Langston v. Riffe, 
    359 Md. 396
    , 406, 
    754 A.2d 389
    , 394 (2000)). In Maryland,
    statutes that operate retroactively are generally disfavored, and therefore, a statute is
    presumed to apply prospectively unless there is a “clear legislative intent to the contrary[.]”
    
    Langston, 359 Md. at 406
    , 754 A.2d at 394 (quoting Traore v. State, 
    290 Md. 585
    , 593,
    
    431 A.2d 96
    , 100 (1981)). This presumption “is particularly applicable where the statute
    adversely affects substantive rights. . . .” John Deere Const. & Forestry Co. v. Reliable
    Tractor, Inc., 
    406 Md. 139
    , 146-47, 
    957 A.2d 595
    , 599 (2008).
    In John 
    Deere, 406 Md. at 147
    , 957 A.2d at 599, we observed that “although we
    have clearly established the analysis to be used when applying a statute retroactively, this
    Court has only provided limited analysis of what constitutes a retrospective application of
    a statute.” (emphasis added). In expressly adopting the U.S. Supreme Court’s retroactivity
    analysis articulated in Landgraf v. USI Film Products, 
    511 U.S. 244
    , 
    114 S. Ct. 1483
    (1994), we held that a statute applied retroactively where it “would impair rights a party
    possessed when he acted, increase[d] a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose[d] new
    duties with respect to transactions already completed.” John Deere Const. & Forestry Co.
    v. Reliable Tractor, Inc., 406 Md. at 
    147, 957 A.2d at 599
    (quoting Landgraf, 511 U.S. at
    - 24 -
    
    280, 114 S. Ct. at 1505
    ); see also 
    Muskin, 422 Md. at 557-58
    , 30 A.3d at 969
    (“[R]etrospective statutes are those that ‘would impair rights a party possessed when he
    acted, increase a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose new duties with respect to
    transactions already completed.’”).
    We rejected a “bright line rule” that a statute operated “‘retrospectively’ merely
    because it is applied in a case arising from conduct antedating the statute’s enactment. . .
    .” John 
    Deere, 406 Md. at 147
    , 957 A.2d at 600 (quoting 
    Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 269
    , 114
    S.Ct. at 1499). We, instead, held that the retroactivity determination “required a ‘process
    of judgment concerning the nature and extent of the change in the law and the degree of
    connection between the operation of the new rule and a relevant past event[,]’” which
    considered factors of “fair notice, reasonable reliance, and settled expectations.” John
    
    Deere, 406 Md. at 147
    , 957 A.2d at 600 (quoting 
    Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 270
    , 114 S.Ct. at
    1499) (hereinafter “the Landgraf factors”).
    “Fair notice” is satisfied where a reasonable time period exists between the
    enactment of new legislation and the deadline for compliance. 
    Muskin, 422 Md. at 558
    , 30
    A.3d at 970. In the case at bar, the record reveals that Petitioners did not receive the benefit
    of fair notice regarding the MIA’s intent to retroactively enforce the requirements of Ins.
    § 16-118 to their in-force policies. Maryland Senate Bill 77 (2012) was passed by the
    General Assembly on April 2, 2012, signed into law as § 16-118 of the Insurance Article
    on May 2, 2012, and became effective on October 1, 2013. On February 28, 2013,
    approximately seven months prior to the statute’s effective date, Petitioners were advised
    - 25 -
    of the MIA’s plans for retroactive enforcement during a meeting with Commissioner
    Goldsmith and the Principal Counsel for the Office of the Attorney General.
    Since the statute did not expressly or impliedly indicate whether it applied
    retroactively to Petitioners’ in-force policies, they were not on notice of the enforcement
    until approximately seven months before compliance was required. See, e.g., State v.
    Goldberg, 
    437 Md. 191
    , 206, 
    85 A.3d 231
    , 240 (2014) (holding that “fair notice [was] not
    satisfied by the provisions of Chapter 286[12] . . . [because] Chapter 286 was passed on
    [April 2, 2007], and made effective three months later on [July 1, 2007]”); cf. 
    Muskin, 422 Md. at 558
    , 30 A.3d at 970 (holding that “fair notice [was] satisfied by the reasonable time
    period between enactment of Chapter 290[13] [on October 1, 2007] and the registration
    deadline of [September 30, 2010].”
    Similarly, reasonable reliance and settled expectations are satisfied where the
    enactment of legislation does not severely impact future interests or vested rights of
    interested parties. See, e.g., 
    Goldberg, 437 Md. at 206
    , 85 A.3d at 240 (“Chapter 286
    impacts severely the reasonable reliance and settled expectations of ground rent owners by
    virtue of its extinguishment of the right of reentry and destruction of the reversionary
    interest.”); 
    Muskin, 422 Md. at 558
    , 30 A.3d at 970 (“Chapter 290 impacts impermissibly
    12
    Md. Code (1974, 2010 Repl. Vol.) § 8–402.2 of the Real Property Article
    (concerning ejectment procedures for defaulting lessees who were more than six months
    overdue on rent for ground leases) (subsequently preempted by Goldberg, 
    437 Md. 191
    ,
    206, 
    85 A.3d 231
    , 240 (2014)).
    13
    Md. Code (1974, 2010 Repl. Vol.) § 8–703(a) of Real Property Article (“Ground
    Rent Registry Statute”) (creating a process for the extinguishment and transfer of
    reversionary interests from the ground lease holder to the ground rent tenant).
    - 26 -
    the reasonable reliance and settled expectations of ground rent owners by virtue of its
    extinguishment and transfer features as the consequences for non-registration (or untimely
    registration) of ground rents.”).
    The contentions raised in Petitioners’ complaint reveals that retroactive enforcement
    of Ins. § 16-118 may impact the reasonable reliance and settled expectations of Petitioners’
    existing business model and insurance policy framework. Petitioners alleged:
    Applying the [statute’s] requirements retroactively to the thousands of life
    insurance policies already in force on its effective date fundamentally
    restructures the terms of [Petitioners’] policies and the parties’ long-settled
    understanding of their respective rights and obligations. [Petitioners’]
    existing life insurance policies were not priced to account for these new
    obligations or the assumption of these new costs and claim settlement
    procedures. Instead, the premium rates on [Petitioners’] in-force policies
    reflect their contractual expectations that a person seeking to claim benefits
    must furnish [Petitioners] with a claim and due proof of death and that,
    consequently, [Petitioners] do not have an obligation to proactively
    determine whether an insured is deceased or to incur administrative costs to
    search for proof of an insured’s death or locate potential beneficiaries. The
    premiums also reflect the contractual expectation that [Petitioners] will retain
    and invest cash flows from the policies until either a claim is submitted or
    the insured reaches the mortality limiting age (typically, 99 years old). If the
    insured attains the mortality limiting age without a death claim being filed,
    the policy is deemed ‘matured’ and [Petitioners] are then obligated to pay the
    policy proceeds to the policy owner.
    [Petitioners] set premium rates when a policy is issued and are prohibited
    from adjusting premium rates on in-force policies to account for these new
    obligations and costs. As a consequence, retroactively applying [Ins. § 16-
    118] to in-force policies deprives [Petitioners] of essential contractual rights
    and forces them to assume duties and costs that were never part of the
    contractual relationship with their policy owners. Retroactive application of
    the [statute’s] requirements would alter the economics of [Petitioners’]
    contractual relationships, increasing the costs of the overall administration of
    their insurance business and depriving [Petitioners] of related investment
    income that is critical to the financial health of the business and that
    facilitates the orderly payment of claims to all policyholders. . . .
    - 27 -
    However, given the narrow procedural issue before this Court, specifically, whether
    Petitioners must first exhaust administrative remedies before pursuing a declaratory
    judgment, and in light of our conclusion infra, that Petitioners’ claim is within the MIA’s
    expertise, we shall not engage in an assessment regarding the reasonable reliance and
    settled expectations of future interests or vested rights.
    ii.   Petitioners’ claim implicates the MIA’s expertise, despite the
    presumption against retroactivity
    We, nonetheless, hold that determining the accuracy of Petitioners’ assertions
    regarding the nature and extent of retroactive enforcement to their in-force policies,
    including the impact of enforcement on matters concerning reasonable reliance and settled
    expectations, depends upon the MIA’s expertise. The expertise of the administering
    agency is a significant factor supporting administrative exhaustion. In Ray’s Used 
    Cars, 398 Md. at 650
    , 922 A.2d at 505, we explained:
    The reasons for requiring the exhaustion of administrative remedies before
    resorting to the courts are that it is within the expertise of the administrative
    agency involved to hear and consider the evidence brought before it and
    make findings as to the propriety of the action requested; courts would be
    performing the function that the [General Assembly] specified be done by
    the administrative agency; courts might be called on to decide issues that
    would never arise if the prescribed administrative remedies were followed;
    and where a statute provides a specific form of remedy in a specific case then
    this remedy must be followed. . . .
    (quoting Gingell v. Board. of County Comm’rs for Prince George’s County, 
    249 Md. 374
    ,
    376-77, 
    239 A.2d 903
    , 904, 905 (1968)) (citation omitted).
    Petitioners allege that retroactive enforcement: 1) “[a]lters [t]he [p]arties’ [e]xisting
    [c]ontractual [a]llocation of [r]ights [a]nd [r]esponsibilities [a]nd [w]ill [r]esult in
    - 28 -
    [s]ubstantially [i]ncreased [a]dministrative [c]osts[;]” 2) that “the costs of undertaking
    these new burdens [through compliance] . . . are substantial[]” in relation to the total
    amount of annual premiums collected and “the relatively modest face values of the policies
    at issue[;]” and 3) that compliance “[f]undamentally [a]lters the [e]conomic [a]ssumptions
    [u]nderlying [their] [p]olicies and the [p]remium [p]ricing.”
    As the administering agency of the Maryland insurance market, the MIA is
    responsible for, inter alia, “[p]rotect[ing] Maryland consumers by regulating the [S]tate’s
    insurance companies and producers[;] “[c]onduct[ing] financial examinations of insurance
    companies to ensure solvency[;]” “[c]onduct[ing] market conduct examinations to ensure
    compliance with Maryland’s insurance laws[;]” and “[r]eview[ing] and approv[ing] rates
    and contract forms.” See About the Maryland Insurance Administration, MARYLAND.GOV,
    http://insurance.maryland.gov/About/Pages/default.aspx (last visited June 27, 2016).
    Petitioners’ claim implicates the MIA’s expertise because it is premised upon the
    contractual expectations of insurers and policyholders, the processes they utilize in
    administering insurance policies, the consequences of producing compliant policies, and
    the factors assessed in setting prices and valuing policies. We, therefore, agree with the
    Court of Special Appeals that “determining whether [Petitioners’ assertions] are factually
    accurate and assessing ‘the nature and extent of the change in the law’ in light of the
    existing regulatory framework are matters that lie fairly within the [MIA’s] expertise.”
    United Insurance, 
    2015 WL 5968833
    at *16. See, e.g., 
    Carter, 420 Md. at 633-35
    , 24 A.3d
    at 738-39 (acknowledging that the MIA’s expertise played a role “in deciding whether ‘[a]
    person [or insurer] . . . willfully collect[ed] a premium or charge for insurance’” in violation
    - 29 -
    of a statutory provision under the Insurance Article) (emphasis omitted); see also 
    id. at 634,
    n.13, 24 A.3d at 739
    , n.13 (observing that by rendering findings of fact, “the
    Commissioner could serve a valuable prefatory fact-finding and analytical purpose
    sounding in judicial economy[]”); 
    Zappone, 349 Md. at 65
    -66, 706 A.2d at 1070 (noting
    that “where the . . . expertise of the administrative agency is not particularly relevant to the
    judicial cause of action, the Court has held that the . . . remedy was not intended to be
    primary and . . . the plaintiff could maintain the independent judicial cause of action without
    first invoking and exhausting the administrative procedures[]”) (citations and footnote
    omitted) (emphasis added).
    Moreover, we accord great deference to the factual findings and legal conclusions
    of an administrative agency that are “premised upon an interpretation of the statutes that
    the agency administers and the regulations promulgated for that purpose.” Frey v.
    Comptroller of Treasury, 
    422 Md. 111
    , 138, 
    29 A.3d 475
    , 490 (2011) (citations omitted).
    In contrast, “[w]hen an agency’s decision is necessarily premised upon the ‘application and
    analysis of caselaw,’ that decision rests upon ‘a purely legal issue uniquely within the ken
    of a reviewing court.’” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    See, e.g., Maryland State Comptroller of
    Treasury v. Wynne, 
    431 Md. 147
    , 161, 
    64 A.3d 453
    , 461 (2013) (“Because our review of
    its analysis turns on a question of constitutional law, we do not defer to the agency’s
    determination.”).    Accordingly, deference to the MIA’s factual findings and legal
    conclusions, if any, is appropriate, because Petitioners’ claim is not “a purely legal issue”
    concerning constitutional law, but is instead premised upon the MIA’s interpretation and
    enforcement of Ins. § 16-118.
    - 30 -
    Additionally, in light of the foregoing, we also reject Petitioners’ contention that
    they can alternatively pursue a declaratory judgment under § 3-409 of the Courts & Judicial
    Proceedings Article to challenge the constitutionality of Ins. § 16-118.14
    II.    Petitioners’ claim does not fall within the constitutional exception to the
    administrative exhaustion requirement
    This Court recognizes the following five exceptions to the administrative exhaustion
    requirement:
    1.   When the legislative body has indicated an intention that exhaustion of
    administrative remedies was not a precondition to the institution of normal
    judicial action. White v. Prince George’s [County], 
    282 Md. 641
    , 649 
    387 A.2d 260
    , 265 (1978).
    2.   When there is a direct attack, constitutional or otherwise, upon the power or
    authority (including whether it was validly enacted) of the legislative body
    to pass the legislation from which relief is sought, as contrasted with a
    constitutional or other type issue that goes to the application of a general
    statute to a particular situation. Harbor Island Marina v. Calvert [County],
    
    286 Md. 303
    , 308, 
    407 A.2d 738
    , 741 (1979).
    3.   When an agency requires a party to follow, in a manner and to a degree that
    is significant, an unauthorized procedure. Stark v. Board of Registration, 
    179 Md. 276
    , 284–85, 
    19 A.2d 716
    , 720 (1941).
    4.   Where the administrative agency cannot provide to any substantial degree a
    remedy. Poe v. Baltimore City, 
    241 Md. 303
    , 308–09, 
    216 A.2d 707
    , 709
    (1966).
    5.   When the object of, as well as the issues presented by, a judicial proceeding
    only tangentially or incidentally concern matters which the administrative
    agency was legislatively created to solve, and do not, in any meaningful way,
    call for or involve applications of its expertise. [Maryland]-Nat’l [Capital]
    14
    See Md. Code (2006, 2013 Repl. Vol.) § 3-409 (c) of the Courts & Judicial
    Proceeding Article (“A party may obtain a declaratory judgment or decree notwithstanding
    a concurrent common-law, equitable, or extraordinary legal remedy, whether or not
    recognized or regulated by statute.”).
    - 31 -
    [Park] & [Planning] v. [Washington] Nat’l Arena, 
    282 Md. 588
    , 594–604,
    
    386 A.2d 1216
    , 1222-27 (1978).
    
    Blumberg, 288 Md. at 284-85
    , 418 A.2d at 1161
    Petitioners rely on the second exception, known as the constitutional exception, and
    assert that even if the administrative remedy is primary, the administrative exhaustion
    doctrine should not apply in the case at bar because they advance “a direct attack” upon
    the General Assembly’s power and authority to pass legislation that retroactively impairs
    their vested contract rights in violation of the Maryland and Federal Constitutions.
    Specifically, Petitioners contend that “[r]esolving [their] challenge requires a court to
    answer a single, fundamental question of constitutional law: does the General Assembly
    have the authority to enact a law that retroactively modifies the terms of pre-existing life
    insurance contracts?” We are not persuaded, and hold that the constitutional exception is
    inapplicable to the case at bar, because Petitioners do not challenge the overall
    constitutionality of the Ins. § 16-118, but instead, challenge the constitutionality of
    retroactive enforcement under the statute, as applied to their in-force policies.
    The constitutional exception to the administrative exhaustion requirement is
    narrowly construed. See Ray’s Used 
    Cars, 398 Md. at 650
    , 922 A.2d at 506 (“Under
    Maryland administrative law, the ‘constitutional exception’ to the requirement that primary
    administrative remedies must be pursued and exhausted is an extremely narrow one.”);
    Montgomery County. v. Broad. Equities, Inc., 
    360 Md. 438
    , 455, 
    758 A.2d 995
    , 1004
    (2000) (“[T]his Court has emphasized that the so-called ‘constitutional exception’ to the
    - 32 -
    normal rule that primary administrative and judicial review remedies must be followed is
    very ‘narrow.’”) (footnote omitted).
    In Ray’s Used 
    Cars, 398 Md. at 652
    , 922 A.2d at 507, this Court held that a facial
    attack concerning the validity of a statute falls within the scope of the constitutional
    exception only when “‘the attack [is] made to the constitutionality of the statute as a whole,’
    including all of its parts and all of its applications.” (quoting Goldstein v. Time-Out Family
    Amusement, 
    301 Md. 583
    , 590, 
    483 A.2d 1276
    , 1280 (1984)). Thus, when challenging the
    statute as a whole, an aggrieved party may proceed immediately to the court to seek a
    declaratory judgment or equitable remedy, regardless of the availability of an
    administrative remedy, because the “sole contention raised in the court action is based on
    a facial attack on the constitutionality of the governmental action.” Ehrlich v. Perez, 
    394 Md. 691
    , 700, n.6, 
    908 A.2d 1220
    , 1225, n.6 (2006) (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
    This Court’s opinion in Goldstein, 
    301 Md. 583
    , 
    483 A.2d 1276
    , is instructive. In
    that case, the Respondent, owner of Time-Out Family Amusement Centers, Inc. (“Time-
    Out”), filed a declaratory judgment action against the Comptroller of Maryland, seeking to
    have a tax exemption statute and the Comptroller’s implementation regulations declared
    unconstitutional. 
    Id. at 585-86,
    483 A.2d at 1278. Time-Out alleged that the statute and
    the implementation regulations were in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and the Maryland Declaration of Rights.
    
    Id. The Comptroller
    sought to dismiss the complaint, asserting that Time-Out failed to
    exhaust all statutory administrative remedies, which the circuit court overruled. The court
    also dismissed the Comptroller’s subsequent summary judgment motion, and following a
    - 33 -
    merits hearing, rendered a written declaration in Time-Out’s favor. 
    Id. at 586-87,
    483 A.2d
    at 1278.
    In addressing whether Time-Out’s claim qualified under the constitutional
    exception to administrative exhaustion on appeal, this Court opined:
    [W]e here explain that the ‘constitutional exception’ to which we have just
    alluded permits a judicial determination without administrative exhaustion
    when there is a direct attack upon the power or authority (including whether
    it was validly enacted) of the legislative body to adopt the legislation from
    which relief is sought.
    Thus it is apparent that to come within the ‘constitutional attack’ exception to
    the general rule concerning the exhaustion of administrative remedies, the
    attack must be made to the constitutionality of the statute as a whole and not
    merely as to how the statute has been applied. In our view the constitutional
    attack here was not to the statute as a whole.
    
    Id. at 301
    Md. at 
    590, 483 A.2d at 1280
    (quotations and citation omitted) (emphasis added).
    Aligned with those principles, we held that Time-Out was required to “exhaust its
    administrative remedies[,]” because Time-Out “was not attacking the General Assembly’s
    legislative power to enact exemptions to a general taxation scheme[,]” but rather, “merely
    attacked certain exemptions granted to businesses similar to its own.” 
    Id. We observed
    that “[a]lthough Time-Out originally claimed to attack the exemption statute in its entirety,
    it [was] clear . . . that its real protest focused upon the statutory exemptions granted to
    recreational businesses,[] and not upon the exemptions for non-profit and charity
    exemptions which [were] also contained in [the tax exemption statute].” 
    Id. We similarly
    rejected Time-Out’s equal protection challenges. 
    Id. at 591,
    483 A.2d
    at 1281. Time-Out alleged that “the Comptroller’s decision to allow some businesses to
    use [a] ‘tax included’ option while denying Time-Out that economic advantage[]” violated
    - 34 -
    their equal protection rights. 
    Id. Specifically, they
    asserted “that the Comptroller construed
    the regulation ‘to allow one class of persons to pass on the tax while prohibiting another
    class of persons from passing on the tax. . . .’” 
    Id. We opined
    that by “disagree[ing] with
    the Comptroller’s interpretation of the regulation[,]” Time-Out attacked “the application
    of the regulation itself[.]” 
    Id. Thus, we
    held that Time-Out’s challenge reflected an attack
    “upon the application of a regulation to a particular situation,” in which Time-Out was
    required to exhaust administrative remedies. 
    Id. (citing State
    Dep’t of Assessments &
    Taxation v. Clark, 
    281 Md. 385
    , 404, 
    380 A.2d 28
    , 39 (1977)).
    Petitioners contend that they are “challeng[ing] the statute as written and as a
    whole[,]” because “if they prevail, the effect will be to categorically block [Ins. § 16-118]
    from applying to insurance contracts that were issued prior to its effective date.” This is a
    strained reading of Ins. § 16-118. Consistent with 
    Goldstein, 301 Md. at 590
    , 483 A.2d at
    128, Petitioners’ claim does not fit within the constitutional exception, because they do not
    attack the constitutionality of Ins. § 16-118 as a whole, but only retroactive enforcement,
    as applied only to their in-force policies. Specifically, Petitioners do not seek to have the
    entire statute declared unconstitutional,15 but instead, pursue only a declaratory judgment
    that the statute does not apply retroactively, or, in the alternative, that it is void if applied
    to in-force policies in effect prior to its enactment.
    15
    Notably, Petitioners do not challenge the General Assembly’s authority to enact
    Ins. § 16-118, and, in fact, conceded that the statute can be applied prospectively to life
    insurance policies:
    (continued . . .)
    - 35 -
    Additionally, as observed in Goldstein, the fact that Petitioners interpretation of Ins.
    § 16-118 — that the statute should not be applied retroactively to their in-force policies —
    is in disagreement with the MIA’s interpretation indicating to the contrary, is particularly
    relevant. See 
    id. 301 Md.
    at 
    591, 483 A.2d at 1281
    . Thus, although Petitioners allege that
    they are challenging the constitutionality of the statute in its entirety, Petitioners’ “real
    protest” focuses only upon the constitutionality of a part of the statute (i.e., the retroactive
    enforcement of Ins. § 16-118), and more importantly, how the statute is applied to a
    particular situation (i.e., against Petitioners’ in-force policies). See 
    id. at 590-91,
    483 A.2d
    at 1280-81. Accordingly, Petitioners do not qualify for the constitutional exception, as an
    alternative to their primary argument concerning the construction of the statute, because
    their reliance on the exception is premised upon more than one claim that is not solely
    constitutional. See 
    Ehrlich, 394 Md. at 700
    , 
    n.6, 908 A.2d at 1225
    , 
    n.6, supra
    (holding that
    a party who challenges a statute as a whole is not required to exhaust administrative
    remedies when the “sole contention raised in the court action is based on a facial attack on
    the constitutionality of the governmental action[]”) (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
    See also Goldstein, 301 Md. 
    590-91, 483 A.2d at 1280-81
    ; Ray’s Used Cars, 398 Md. at
    ( . . . continued)
    [Petitioners] do not dispute that Maryland has the authority to require this
    change with respect to new life insurance policies issued on or after the
    effective date of [Ins. § 16-118]. [Petitioners] have been doing business in
    the State for decades and recognize the General Assembly’s power and
    responsibility to regulate the business of insurance consistent with the
    Constitution and laws of Maryland.
    - 36 -
    
    654-55, 922 A.2d at 508
    (rejecting the plaintiffs’ claim that the constitutional exception
    applied because they did not attack the statute “as a whole”); Ins. Com’r of State of Md. v.
    Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of U.S., 
    339 Md. 596
    , 619, 
    664 A.2d 862
    , 874 (1995) (“[W]here
    a party is not challenging the validity of a statute as a whole,” but instead “that the statute
    as applied in a particular situation is unconstitutional, . . . [the Court of Appeals] has
    regularly held that the constitutional issue must be raised and decided in the statutorily
    prescribed administrative and judicial review proceedings.”).
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS IS AFFIRMED.
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONERS.
    - 37 -