The Mayor and City Council of Cumberland and its insurer, Hartford Accident & Indemnity (hereinafter appellants), appeal a decision of the Circuit Court for Allegany County finding that the appellants were estopped from applying the statute of limitations as a bar to appellee Walter Beall’s attempt to modify a workers’ compensation award by filing a claim for additional compensation more than five years after the last compensation payment under the award. They also appeal the trial court’s determination that the claim was timely made.
At the pertinent time, Article 101, section 40(c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act provided for modification of awards if “application therefor shall be made to the Commission within five years next following the last payment of compensation.” 1 It is undisputed that the last payment of compensation occurred on September 19, 1985, that the modification claim was filed with the Commission on September 24, 1990, and that the claim was filed with the Commission more than five years after the last payment.
The crux of the case revolves around a letter sent not to the Commission, but to the insurer. That letter stated:
August 6, 1990
The Hartford
Attn: Samuel Gilliland
57 W. Timonium Road
*599 P.O. Box 350
Lutherville, Maryland 21093
RE: Walter R. Beall vs. City of
Cumberland/468C 53472 SG
D/A: 2/25/83
Dear Ladies and Gentlemen:
I was recently contacted by my client, Walter Ray Beall, as a result of the above captioned accident since he has had to lose additional time from his employment due to an exacerbation of his ongoing lumbar problem. As you will note from the notes of Dr. Bollino, the treating doctor, he put Mr. Beall off work as of July 26, 1990 until Monday, July 30, 1990. I have not talked to Mr. Beall or the doctor since that time, but I assume he did return to work on July 30, 1990.
In any event, I would appreciate it if temporary total disability could be paid for the dates claimed in this letter. If there is any difficulty with the payment of this, please advise as soon as possible.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Ronald J. Levasseur/ksr
Ronald J. Levasseur
RJL/ksr
The statute of limitations ran before the insurer responded to the letter. The insurer, in response to the letter, informed appellee, that the claim was time barred. Prior to receiving the insurer’s response, the appellee filed his claim with the Commission but, as we have said, that filing was untimely. The trial court apparently found either that the silence of appellant, following the direct question posed in the letter of August 6th, amounted to an estoppel by silence and thus a waiver of the statutory bar or that the letter was the filing of a claim with the Commission, or both. We disagree and shall reverse.
*600 Limitations and Equitable Estoppel Generally
In
Vest v. Giant Food Stores, Inc.,
The Commission’s power to reopen awards ... is expressly limited with respect to the time during which it may exercise that power. Section 40(c) ... limits the exercise of that jurisdiction to a five-year period....
... [S]uch a reservation [of the power to reopen], even if intended by the Commission, is wholly inconsistent with § 40(c). The Commission cannot bypass the statutory restriction on its authority.
Id.
at 475-76,
The Court noted in
Montgomery County v. McDonald,
Undoubtedly the Act is to be construed liberally in favor of injured employees and to effectuate its remedial purposes, but a liberal rule of construction does not mean that courts are free to disregard the provisions comprising the Act....
The foregoing rule of construction is particularly apt for the subject limitations provision.
“[T]he general purpose of the applicable workmen’s compensation act to compensate injured workers should not be used to interpret the limitations provision, because the very existence of a limitations provision in the act indicates that the legislature has deliberately compromised the general compensation purpose in the interests of the purposes served by the limitations provision.” [Citations omitted.]
*601
See also Walter J. Crismer & Son, Inc. v. Seal,
Booth Glass Company, Inc. v. Huntingfield Corporation,
Huntingfield eventually filed suit. Booth pled limitations, asserting that more than three years had elapsed from the time when Huntingfield had first discovered the problem. We had held that Booth’s continuing attempts to repair the work tolled the statute. 2 In reversing us, the Court of Appeals noted:
LW]e are aware that courts in some jurisdictions, in contract and warranty actions, have adopted or recognized the rule that limitations will be tolled where ... assurances are given that repairs will be made____ Other courts, however, have determined that even though assurances are given, attempts to repair will not toll limitations absent a strong showing of inducement by the defendant not to sue.
Id.
at 622,
We have long adhered to the principle that where the legislature has not expressly provided for an exception in a *602 statute of limitations, the court will not allow any implied or equitable exception to be ingrafted upon it....
... In Maryland ... it is well settled that equitable estoppel will not toll the running of limitations absent a showing that the defendant “held out any inducements not to file suit or indicated that limitations would not be pleaded.”
Id.
at 623-24,
The Court of Appeals does not allow any implied or equitable exception to be engrafted on the statute of limitations merely on the ground that such exception would be within the spirit of the statute. To the contrary, the Court looks to the public policy served by the defense of limitations, and permits it to function arbitrarily, without discrimination between the just and unjust claim, or the avoidable and unavoidable delay.
Glenn v. Morelos,
Maryland courts have infrequently addressed the juxtaposition of the defense of limitations and the doctrine of equitable estoppel.... We have already seen that the courts rigorously protect the defense of limitations____
In
Lehninger,
we noted and relied on
Leonhart v. Atkinson,
[T]he Leonharts argue that appellee ought to be prohibited from using the statute as a bar since his conduct “obscure[d] the [appellants’] perception of the wrong---- It was not alleged that the accountant ... asked the Leonharts to forbear bringing suit ... [or] indicated he would waive the defense of limitations ... or that he induced them not to file suit by giving assurances---- [T]he only conclusion ... is that the delay ... was due to the lack of diligence on the part of the Leonharts.
Leonhart,
In an earlier breach of contract case,
Walko Corporation v. Burger Chef Systems, Inc.,
This policy of repose has fostered a traditional rule concerning the tolling of statutes of limitation that can be fairly termed one of strict construction. Early on we adopted this rigorous stance: “The principle of law is indisputable, that when the Statute of Limitations once begins to run, nothing will stop or impede its operation.” The rule has lost little of its vitality.... [T]he principle ... “while not immutable under all circumstances ... is still the general legal approach.”
This venerable rule, which defers to the legislative intent expressed in the statute of limitations itself, ... avoids implied exceptions or strained constructions....
Id.
at 210-11,
In affirming a trial court summary judgment dismissing a case on the basis of limitations, the Court of Appeals stated:
*604 There is no showing that Mr. Clagett held out any inducement not to file suit. There is no indication that Mr. Clagett indicated in any way that limitations would not be pleaded. There is no indication that any legal defense would be waived. There is no showing of any unconscionable, inequitable or fraudulent act of commission or omission upon which Jordan relied and has been misled to his injury.
Jordan v. Morgan,
In the negligence case of
Bertonazzi v. Hillman,
Plaintiffs counsel contacted the administratrix and informed her that there were some technical problems with the suit. The administratrix responded that she had no objection to a proper determination of the facts and referred plaintiffs lawyer to her lawyer. The administratrix’s lawyer was called and told of the potential limitations problem. He agreed to accept service of process but indicated that he would not be consent *605 ing to jurisdiction. Plaintiffs lawyer then served the administratrix’s lawyer. Thereafter, the suit was dismissed because it had been filed in the wrong jurisdiction.
It was refiled in the proper jurisdiction after the statute had expired. When the plea of limitations was filed, the plaintiff filed a “Plea of Estoppel as to the Statute of Limitations.” The telephone conversation between the plaintiffs lawyer and the administratrix’s lawyer was the primary basis for the claim of estoppel. While the Court of Appeals held that the prior filing was sufficient to toll the statute, 3 it summarily rejected the estoppel argument:
We see no support ... for a finding of waiver or estoppel____ [T]here [is no] mention of or reference to any express promise or agreement ... to waive the statute.... [N]othing that Mrs. Hillman or her lawyer said or did inspired or fostered the idea [that the statute would be tolled]. There is no assertion that representatives of Mr. Hillman’s insurer led appellant to believe that liability would not be contested or that any legal defense would be waived.
Bertonazzi,
In
Cromwell v. Ripley,
“... [I]t was counsel’s responsibility ... to keep himself abreast of the litigation of which he is counsel of record ... it was your responsibility to see ... that the motion ... got *606 to the attention of the Judge ... and was acted upon before the Statute ran on August 18.” [4]
Id.
at 179,
Dixon v. Checchia,
In this case, the statutory notice ... was given and it is not alleged ... that the administrator had “ ‘requested and induced’ the appellant not to file suit and assure her ‘that said claim would be settled and * * * damages paid by * * * deceased’s estate without the necessity of filing suit.’ ” We do not think that the appellants were induced into filing after the expiration of the six month period.
Id.
at 27,
We note that information on the statute of limitations is equally available to all parties. These statutes of repose, being just
that
— statutes, are matters of record. The general rule is that “mere silence as to rights of record does not create an estoppel.”
Zimmerman v. Summers,
The Doctrine of Estoppel by Silence
One of the seminal cases addressing the doctrine of estoppel by silence was
Carmine v. Bowen,
I understand that you are making preparations for sowing your fall crop which will not mature until after the expiration of your lease of the farm. * * * I do not admit that in any event you will have the right to remove any crops ... and will stand on my rights in this matter.... But I particularly warn you, that I will hold you strictly to the consequences of your failure to sow grass seed....
Id.
at 200,
In the fall, after that letter was written, the landowner was in the field while the farmer was sowing the grass seed. The landowner asked the farmer how much timothy had been sowed and expressed satisfaction. The farmer then told the appellant, “ T don’t anticipate any trouble in the cutting of my crop....’” Id. The landowner made no response. The Court of Appeals noted the landowner’s concern with the sowing of grass seed:
[H]e [the landowner] strongly implied ... before the crops were sown, that a failure to sow grass seed would defeat the tenant’s right to remove the crops after the term had ended. But the tenant did sow the grass seed, and at the very time he was putting it in the ground in accordance with the insistence of the landlord he remarked to the latter that he, the tenant, anticipated no trouble in cutting the crop he was then sowing; to which remark the landlord made no reply.
It has been justly and forcibly observed that there is a negative fraud in imposing a false apprehension on another by silence where silence is treacherously oppressive....
... It was whilst the tenant was doing the very thing which by the terms of the letter [from the landowner] he naturally believed was the thing that entitled him to remove the crop ... that he remarked to the landlord---- “I don’t anticipate any trouble....” The circumstances and the situation all clearly indicate that it was his [landlord’s] duty *608 to speak____ He must be held to be estopped to deny what he tacitly admitted.
Id.
at 201-07,
There is an important distinction that appellee fails to make in relying on Carmine. When a tenant farmer tells the landowner that he is planting crops and will harvest them when they ripen some months later, all parties immediately understand that the crops cannot be harvested until they are ripe. In the case at bar, there was nothing stopping appellee or limiting his ability to file his claim with the Commission simultaneously with, or the day after, his counsel’s letter to the insurer. It was unnecessary to wait to file the claim, while in Carmine all parties knew that the crops could not be harvested immediately — before the time expired.
In another early case,
Carroll v. Manganese Steel Safe Co.,
that Carroll fatally estopped himself to assert his present claim by remaining silent when Lindgren told him that at the price at which the appellee could get the contract there would be no commission for either of them. His silence permitted Lindgren to go on and conclude a contract on behalf of the appellee, under circumstances when it is not reasonable to suppose he would have done so but for that silence____
Id.
at 259,
More recently, however, the courts have subjected claims of estoppel by silence to closer scrutiny.
The claimant in the workers’ compensation case of
Nazario v. Washington Adventist Hospital, Inc.,
One of the issues involved in
Eastern Shore Warehousing, Inc. v. Wallis,
The contractual arrangement, however, required that suit be filed within nine months after the notice was given to Eastern Shore. It was filed ten months later. The claimant alleged that the assurances made by Eastern Shore, that the notice was sufficient for notice purposes, caused him to overlook that the filing of suit had a contractual limitation deadline. Judge Fischer, for this Court, said:
Ordinarily, equitable estoppel arises in cases of this nature because one party misleads the other into missing a filing deadline either by implying that the deadline has been extended or by assurances that the claim will be paid. It is clear that this did not occur here....
There is nothing in the record to suggest that Leizure did or said anything that gave a false impression or misled appellees or their agent in any way. As a result, appellees *610 are left with the proposition that Leizure failed to advise Sharum that suit needed to be filed when Sharum asked if “everything [was] in order.” ... Leizure was under no' duty to volunteer to Sharum that suit needed to be filed....
In addition, appellees cannot reasonably argue that they changed their position or course of action based upon anything Leizure said----
... There were no conversations or correspondence between the parties relating to Dresser’s obligation to bring suit within nine months. Leizure was under no duty to make Sharum aware of the requirement to bring suit ... and Leisure did nothing to lead Dresser to change its position to its detriment.
Id.
at 147-49,
Of the cases we have reviewed, Eastern Shore is closest on point with the instant case, where a statute imposes no duty. There were no contractual duties created in the case sub judice. The insurer did nothing to cause the claimant to change his position. In fact, it appears from his failure to file that Beall was unaware of the need to file. Nor is there any evidence that the insurer knew that the filing period was about to expire prior to its recovery of the file from the dead file depository, and the file was not recovered until after the filing deadline.
In the case at bar, the estoppel argument is much weaker than that in Eastern Shore. The parties here were direct adversaries (to the extent adversarial relationships exist in workers’ compensation cases), and there is absolutely no evidence that appellant had any knowledge that appellee was unaware of the statute of limitations — a statute of record. Additionally, the mere forwarding of a letter to the insurer in no way indicates that appellee was going to forbear filing his claim with the Commission within the five-year period. The claim could have been filed the next day, the next week.
*611
We are additionally constrained to comment on whether, in an adversarial relationship, there can generally be any duty (unless expressly imposed by statute, or by the rules of discovery, procedure, or pleading) for the parties to advise the opposing parties of anticipated defenses or whether there is any requirement (unless expressly imposed by statute or rule) for one adversarial party to advise the other of weaknesses or impending weaknesses in the other’s cases. Certainly, unless statutorily imposed, there is no such duty in circumstances such as exist in the present case.
See also Subsequent Injury Fund v. Ehrman,
Before concluding, we note that equitable estoppel, whether by conduct or silence, generally involves situations much more egregious than the present case. In addition to the cases heretofore mentioned, an additional sample of the cases includes:
Geisz v. Greater Baltimore Medical Center,
Conclusion
We hold that the trial court erred in finding an estoppel or waiver of the bar of limitations. As there is no dispute that the statute in effect during the entire relative period required claims to be filed with the Commission and the uncontradicted evidence proved that the claim was not filed with the Commission within five years, the trial court’s finding to the contrary was clearly erroneous. We shall reverse.
JUDGMENTS REVERSED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLEE.
Notes
. The statute has since been recodified with little, if any, relevant substantive changes as section 9-736(a)(3) of the Workers’ Compensation Act.
. We had held that the statute was tolled under the continuous course of treatment rule.
. The Court of Appeals later, in
Walko Corporation,
4. The original declaration was declared a nullity. Thus, the amended declaration had to be filed within the limitations period.
