Department of Human Resources v. Howard

918 A.2d 441, 397 Md. 353, 2007 Md. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 2007
Docket53, September Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 918 A.2d 441 (Department of Human Resources v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Human Resources v. Howard, 918 A.2d 441, 397 Md. 353, 2007 Md. LEXIS 96 (Md. 2007).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

This case presents an opportunity to consider an infrequently occurring phenomenon of appellate practice in Maryland. That phenomenon is the in banc proceeding. We focus here on the extent to which, when the Court of Special Appeals hears and decides an appeal in banc with a full complement of the thirteen incumbent members of the Court, specially assigned retired judges properly may sit also on the in banc court. With all respect to our retired appellate colleagues, who supply invaluable legal experience and erudition in support of the mission of the intermediate appellate court, we conclude that such a scenario is contrary to the statutory authority governing the composition and conduct of the Court of Special Appeals sitting in banc.

I. FACTS

The underlying facts of this case, except insofar as they supply context for the largely procedural, but dispositive, issue we shall decide here, are not germane. Consequently, we *355 recite a truncated version of the factual background, emphasizing rather the procedural history of this matter.

The Anne Arundel County Department of Social Services (“the Department”) found Sherri Howard responsible for “indicated child abuse” 1 of her minor son, Alexander. Howard appealed administratively that determination, receiving a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) of the Maryland Office of Administrative Hearings. The ALJ issued a written decision affirming the Department’s finding that Howard perpetrated the physical variety of “indicated child abuse” by striking her son in the region of his eye, exposing him to a substantial risk of serious eye injury. Howard sought judicial review of the AL J’s decision, the final administrative adjudication of the matter, by the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. The Circuit Court reversed the administrative decision, opining that no reasonable administrative agency fact finder could have found Howard’s act to have harmed or caused a substantial risk of harm to the well-being of her son. The court concluded that Howard did not intend actually to harm her child, thus removing her act from the scope of conduct considered to be abuse.

The Department noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. The case was assigned routinely to a three-judge panel. 2 Before the panel decided the appeal (but after initial briefing 3 and oral argument before the three judge *356 panel), the intermediate appellate court invited the parties to submit additional briefs and argue the single question anew before the court in banc. Participating on the in banc court were the 13 incumbent members of the court and two retired judges who were specially assigned. 4 On 18 May 2006, the Court of Special Appeals, by an eight-to-seven vote, affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court. Chief Judge Murphy authored the opinion for the eight-member majority, reasoning that Howard neither acted with an intent to, nor the knowledge that her act would, cause injury. Dep’t of Human Res. v. Howard, 168 Md.App. 621, 644-45, 897 A.2d 904, 917-18 (2006). Judge Davis penned a concurring opinion, in which four other judges in the majority joined, including Judge Thieme, espousing the view that the ALJ’s decision should have been reversed solely on the basis that Howard did not intend deliberately to harm Alexander nor did she act in reckless disregard of the possibility of harm. Howard, 168 Md.App. at 652, 897 A.2d at 922.

There were two intertwined camps of dissenting judges. One dissent, authored by Judge Moylan and joined by six incumbent judges, took issue with the majority’s perceived lack of fealty to the principles of judicial deference to certain administrative agency determinations and reasoned that, under the substantial deference standard, the court should not have disturbed the ALJ’s factual findings and resultant legal conclusion. Howard, 168 Md.App. at 663-72, 897 A.2d at 928- *357 33. Judge Moylan also explicated that relevant precedent made it clear that Howard’s swing of the hand with the intention to make contact with her son was all that was necessary to support a finding of abuse when harm results; an intent to create harm by swinging at the child was not required. Howard, 168 Md.App. at 678-79, 897 A.2d at 937. Four of the dissenting incumbent judges, with Judge Deborah Eyler writing, echoed Judge Moylan’s sentiments generally, but emphasized, as especially problematic in upsetting the ALJ’s decision, the unrestrained and unannounced nature of Howard’s discipline. Howard, 168 Md.App. at 681, 897 A.2d at 938.

The Department petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari on the question of the proper standard for administrative determinations of indicated child abuse. 5 In our Order granting certiorari and issuing the writ, we posed a further question: “What authority does the Court of Special Appeals have to hold an en banc[ 6 ] hearing with fifteen judges?” This additional question of appellate procedure becomes a threshold question because the proper constitution of the intermediate appellate court sitting in banc is a prerequisite for a valid decision for us to review. If no valid judgment was rendered by the Court of Special Appeals, we may not review the judgment of the Circuit Court (and thus the ALJ’s decision) because the writ of certiorari was issued not to the Circuit Court, but rather to the Court of Special Appeals. Thus, even though we ordinarily would stand, analytically, in the shoes of the Circuit Court in reviewing the decision of the ALJ, Spencer v. Md. State Bd. of Pharmacy, 380 Md. 515, 523-24, *358 846 A.2d 341, 346 (2004); Gigeous v. Eastern Correctional Institution, 363 Md. 481, 495-96, 769 A.2d 912, 921 (2001), we cannot simply side-step the question of whether the Court of Special Appeals’s judgment, a procedure point of departure for our review, was issued by a properly constituted in banc court.

II. DISCUSSION

At the outset, we note that the statute addressing in banc 7 proceedings in the Court of Special Appeals is unadorned with decisional law interpreting its meaning regarding the question *359 of appellate procedure before us. Section l-403(e) of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article of the Maryland Code (1974, 2006 Repl.Vol.) (hereinafter “Cts. & Jud. Proc.”) is the primary authority governing the intermediate appellate court’s procedure for hearing and deciding cases in banc. Thus, our analysis of the statute will begin, when it begins, with its plain language.

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Bluebook (online)
918 A.2d 441, 397 Md. 353, 2007 Md. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-resources-v-howard-md-2007.