Long v. State

807 A.2d 1, 371 Md. 72, 2002 Md. LEXIS 634
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 17, 2002
Docket79, September Term, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 807 A.2d 1 (Long v. State) 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
Long v. State, 807 A.2d 1, 371 Md. 72, 2002 Md. LEXIS 634 (Md. 2002).

Opinion

BELL, Chief Judge.

The issue this case presents for resolution is the propriety of entry, by the Court of Special Appeals, as a consent judgment in settlement of a contempt case pending appeal, of an order that is inconsistent with the consent order filed by the parties. In September, 1999, the State filed in the Circuit Court for Washington County a petition for contempt alleging *77 that Derrick D. Long, Sr., the petitioner, was in contempt of court for failing to comply with that court’s child support orders. Following a hearing in April 2000, the Circuit Court found the petitioner in constructive civil contempt and, notwithstanding its acknowledgment that he did not have the present ability to pay a purge amount, sentenced him to imprisonment for a specified period, subject to purger upon the payment of $700.

The petitioner noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals and, joined by the State, filed a joint motion to vacate the contempt order, together with a proposed consent order to facilitate the petitioner’s immediate release from incarceration. As jointly requested, the intermediate appellate court vacated the petitioner’s sentence; however, instead of entering the order submitted by the parties, it entered a modified order. That order remanded the case to the Circuit Court to determine conditions of release that would ensure the petitioner’s appearance at further proceedings.

We granted the petitioner’s Petition for Certiorari, Long v. State, 360 Md. 485, 759 A.2d 230 (2000), stayed enforcement of the Court of Special Appeal’s order, and ordered the petitioner immediately released from incarceration. We shall reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.

I.

The petitioner is the father of Kianna L. Long, born September 3, 1995. On March 14, 1997, the Circuit Court for Washington County ordered him to pay $25.00 per week for Kianna’s support. The petitioner did not comply with this order, or subsequent support orders issued by the court.

When the petitioner, still not in compliance with the support orders, failed to appear at an enforcement hearing pertaining to one of the support orders, the State filed a petition, pursuant to Md. Rule 15-207(e), 1 requesting that he be held in *78 contempt. At the hearing on that petition, evidence was presented that the latest support order required the petitioner to pay support and an amount toward the arrears he had amassed, but that no payments had been made. The evidence also was that, although payments had been suspended during two periods when the petitioner was incarcerated, 2 the current amount of arrearage was $2,975.00. Admitting that he had no physical or mental impairment that prevented his working, that in May, 1999, “off and on,” until his incarceration in *79 September, he worked at Labor Ready, and that if he were not incarcerated he would be able to return to that employment, the petitioner offered his intermittent incarceration and his inability to find employment following his release in November as the only explanation for failing to pay child support. He testified that he had no personal assets of any kind, including a car, and that the mortgage on his home, which he had owned with his mother and sister, had been foreclosed.

The court found the petitioner in contempt for his failure to pay child support from May 1999 to September 1999. Despite defense counsel’s argument that imprisonment could not be the sanction for contempt, given the petitioner’s inability to pay any purge amount, and specifically finding that the petitioner did not have the present ability to pay, 3 the court nevertheless sentenced him to incarceration in the Division of Correction, subject to his paying $700 to purge the contempt. It ruled:

“All right, based on prior adjudications and the fact that okay, sure, he can’t pay now ‘cause he’s in jail for failure to appear, which I’ve dismissed since I’ve found him in contempt, but there was just a blatant disregard back in May, June, July and August. I can’t hide that. He’s in contempt .... You seem to have a lot of problems not only not paying child support but apparently operating vehicles and everything else. If we can go out and buy a house and start paying on a house, we certainly can contribute money towards child support which apparently you didn’t think you wanted to do. [It is the s]entence of this Court [that] you be committed to DOC for a period of thirteen months.... ”

The petitioner noted an immediate appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. While that appeal was pending, the petitioner and the State filed a Joint Motion to Vacate Sentence, in *80 which they agreed, relying on Thrower v. State ex rel. Bureau of Support Enforcement, 358 Md. 146, 747 A.2d 634 (2000), that “the trial court did not find a present ability to purge, but, to the contrary, found that [the petitioner] lacked such an ability” and that “where [the petitioner] has been incarcerated [over four months] and lacks the ability to pay a purge, ... it is appropriate that he should be released immediately from incarceration.” Attached to the motion was a proposed order, which, if signed, would have vacated the petitioner’s sentence and ordered his immediate release, both without remand for further proceedings. 4

Rather than the proposed order submitted by the parties, however, the Court of Special Appeals issued its own order, in which, after acknowledging the parties’ agreement that the petitioner be immediately released from incarceration, the court vacated the Circuit Court contempt judgment, remanded the case to that court “for further proceedings that conform to the requirements of Md. Rule 15-207” and “ORDERED that [the petitioner] be taken without unnecessary delay to the Circuit Court for Washington County so a judge of that court can determine what — if any — conditions of release will reasonably assure [the petitioner’s] appearance at those further proceedings required by this Order.”

II.

The petitioner, joined by the State, argues that, where the parties to civil contempt proceedings agree to settle the case while it is on appeal and submit their agreement to the court in the form of a proposed consent order, 5 the appellate *81 court may not enter a modified consent order that does not reflect the parties’ agreement. Further, the petitioner maintains that, because the joint motion and proposed consent order filed by the parties were legally correct under Thrower v. State, supra, there was no basis for the Court of Special Appeals to reject any of its substantive provisions.

Moreover, the petitioner asserts, while the court to whom a consent order is submitted, the Court of Special Appeals in this case, properly may reject the proposed order, it does not have the authority to enter its own order disposing of the appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
807 A.2d 1, 371 Md. 72, 2002 Md. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-state-md-2002.