In re Valerie H.

527 A.2d 42, 310 Md. 113, 1987 Md. LEXIS 249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1987
DocketNo. 3 (Adv.)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 527 A.2d 42 (In re Valerie H.) 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
In re Valerie H., 527 A.2d 42, 310 Md. 113, 1987 Md. LEXIS 249 (Md. 1987).

Opinion

MURPHY, Chief Judge.

The question presented in this case is whether a juvenile court order discharging a local department of social services from further custodial responsibility over a child also serves to terminate the juvenile court’s continuing jurisdiction over that child.

I

When Valerie H. was five years old, the Department of Social Services for Baltimore City (DSS) petitioned the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, sitting as a juvenile court, to have her adjudged a “child in need of assistance” (CIÑA).1 DSS alleged that Valerie’s father’s absence and her mother’s narcotic addiction created an inadequate home environment for the neglected child. The juvenile court (Hammerman, J.) found Valerie to be a CIÑA and committed her care and custody to DSS on September 7, 1973, subject to its further order.

Eight years later, in October of 1982, DSS recommended that the juvenile court rescind the order of commitment; Valerie had been returned to her mother’s care the previous year, and DSS believed her mother was providing acceptable care. The juvenile court (Allen, J.) accepted DSS’s request and ordered on November 10, 1982, that

“the Order committing the Respondent [Valerie] to said Agency [the Baltimore City DSS] be, and the same is hereby rescinded, and said Agency is discharged from [116]*116further responsibility for the care, custody, and/or supervision of the Respondent.”

Valerie was returned to foster care placement by DSS sometime in February of 1985 for reasons not disclosed in the record. DSS, however, did not petition the court for recommitment until over a year later in May of 1986. In the interim, not only had Valerie become 18 years old and thus ineligible for consideration as a CINA under a new petition, but DSS had exceeded its own six-month limit on voluntary foster care placements.2 Valerie could therefore continue receiving foster care services only if she were recommitted to DSS’s custody under the original CINA adjudication by the juvenile court.3

DSS’s request for a hearing to review Valerie’s foster care placement was denied by the juvenile master on May 20, 1986, on the ground that “[t]he effect of the [juvenile court’s] rescission order was to cancel the commitment order and to close the original case.” The master’s recommendation was approved by the juvenile court (Mitchell, J.) on July 21, 1986. Although the court agreed with DSS’s and Valerie’s contention that the rescission language of Judge Allen’s 1982 order did not, of itself, terminate the juvenile court’s jurisdiction, it stated:

“The further language of Judge Allen’s Order accomplished that. After the committing Order was rescinded, [117]*117the agency was discharged from further care responsibilities for the Respondent____ [Referring to the dictionary, discharge means to free or end the effect of a legal order. The Court’s orders then in use contained discharge rather than terminate when referring to the cessation of jurisdiction. The net effect is the same.”

Valerie appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. We granted certiorari on our own motion to consider the important question raised in the case.

II

It is, of course, a basic premise that a court obtaining jurisdiction of the person and subject matter retains it until final disposition of the case. See Eggleston v. State, 209 Md. 504, 511, 121 A.2d 698 (1956); Hunter v. Warden, 198 Md. 655, 656, 80 A.2d 611 (1951). The Juvenile Causes Act, in § 3-804(a) of the Article provides that the juvenile court “has exclusive original jurisdiction over a child alleged to be delinquent, in need of supervision, in need of assistance or who has received a citation for a violation.” Although exclusive original jurisdiction may be waived by the juvenile court under specific circumstances, it is presumed that the juvenile court’s jurisdiction continues: “until that person reaches 21 years of age unless terminated sooner.” § 3-806(a). Under this Section, jurisdiction, once acquired, terminates (with some exceptions not here pertinent) only if the juvenile court so orders.

The Juvenile Causes Act does not specify the precise language necessary to terminate the juvenile court’s jurisdiction. However, the Maryland Rules contain approved “Forms for Juvenile Causes,” one of which, Form 920, sets forth an appropriate order of termination of jurisdiction under Md.Rule 9204, which is as follows:

[118]*118FINAL ORDER OF TERMINATION
ORDERED, this .............. day of ............... 19..., by the .............. Court for .............. City/ County, Maryland, sitting as a Juvenile Court, that this proceeding be, and it hereby is, terminated; and it is further
ORDERED, that a copy of this Order be served on the Respondent and on .....................
Recommended: ..........................
Master for Juvenile Causes
Judge

In comparing the above language with that of the 1982 order issued by Judge Allen, which Judge Mitchell construed to have terminated juvenile court jurisdiction, we note initially that Form 920 uses the word “terminate,” in keeping with the language of §§ 3-806(a) and 3-804(a) of the Courts Article and Md.Rule 920. The 1982 order, on the other hand, uses the term “discharge.” According to Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1979), “termination” refers to an “end in time or existence,” “cessation,” or “conclusion,” (at p. 1319), whereas “discharge” means “to release,” “annul,” “extinguish an obligation” (at p. 416). Thus, given the presumption of a juvenile court’s continuing jurisdiction, we do not view “discharge” in this context as meaning a cessation of the entire panoply of petitions that could be filed in juvenile court concerning the care and custody of a child adjudged a CINA. Moreover, the language of the 1982 order specifically refers to discharging the “agency ... from further responsibility for the care, custody, and/or supervision of the Respondent”; it does not, directly or indirectly, suggest a termination of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction. Consequently, we hold that the 1982 order did not terminate the juvenile court’s jurisdiction over Valerie.

[119]*119We have previously considered cases involving the termination of juvenile court jurisdiction. In re Johanna F., 284 Md. 643, 399 A.2d 245 (1979), concerned a delinquent child committed for detention in November of 1972. Between 1972 and 1978, Johanna absconded from various juvenile facilities at which she had been placed. A subsequent court order in July of 1978 committed her to the custody of the Juvenile Services Administration for placement at a facility particularly suited to her needs. Johanna, however, contended that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction over her in 1978. She argued that, under § 3-825(b)5

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Bluebook (online)
527 A.2d 42, 310 Md. 113, 1987 Md. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-valerie-h-md-1987.