Rohrer v. Humane Society , 454 Md. 1 ( 2017 )


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  • Daniel Rohrer v. Humane Society of Washington County
    No. 32, September Term 2016
    Animals – Abuse or Neglect of Animals – Seizure of Animal from Owner. Under
    Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article, §10-615, an officer of a humane society may take
    possession of an animal from its owner “if necessary to protect the animal from cruelty” or
    “if necessary for the health of the animal.” When an animal has already been removed
    from its owner pursuant to a criminal search and seizure warrant based on alleged animal
    cruelty, a humane society officer may not exercise its authority under §10-615 to seize the
    animal from State custody. However, the humane society may notify the owner of its intent
    to exercise its authority to take possession of the animal upon its release from State custody
    under the warrant. Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article, §10-615.
    Animals – Abuse or Neglect of Animals – Timeliness of Evidence Justifying Seizure
    of Animal from Owner. The decision of a humane society officer to take possession of a
    mistreated animal under Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article, §10-615, may not be based
    upon “stale” information. The temporal relationship between the alleged circumstances of
    abuse or neglect and the time that a humane society officer takes possession of the animal
    is relevant to a determination whether the officer’s action was “necessary to protect the
    animal from cruelty” or “necessary for the health of the animal.” In a case where an animal
    is seized pursuant to a criminal search and seizure warrant based on a finding of probable
    cause of contemporaneous violations of the animal cruelty laws, a humane society officer
    may take possession of the animal upon the animal’s release from seizure under the
    warrant, on the basis of the same allegations that supported the warrant. Whether the
    humane society may continue to possess the animal is subject to determination in an
    administrative proceeding or a judicial proceeding concerning a petition for return of the
    animal. Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article, §10-615.
    Animals – Abuse or Neglect of Animals – Seizure of Animal – Petition for Return of
    Animal. An owner of an animal that has been seized by a humane society officer pursuant
    to the authority of Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article, §10-615, may – if no
    administrative remedy is available – file a petition for return of the animal as provided in
    that statute. Denial of a petition for return of the animal resolves temporarily whether the
    owner has a right to possess the animal, but does not divest the owner of the ownership
    interest in the animal. The right to possess the animal reverts back to the owner when
    possession by the humane society is no longer “necessary to protect the animal from
    cruelty” or “necessary for the health of the animal.” Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article,
    §10-615.
    Circuit Court for Washington County
    Case No. 21-C-15-054127
    Argument: January 6, 2017
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 32
    September Term, 2016
    DANIEL ROHRER
    V.
    HUMANE SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
    _____________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.,
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by McDonald, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: June 27, 2017
    This case concerns the application of a State statute designed to remedy
    mistreatment of animals. In particular, we must construe Maryland Code, Criminal Law
    Article (“CR”), §10-615 which, among other things, authorizes an officer of a humane
    society to take possession of an animal from its owner “if necessary to protect the animal
    from cruelty” or “if necessary for the health of the animal.” Pondering laws that regulate
    the treatment of animals by people can provoke profound questions concerning the nature
    of human beings and their relationship to the natural world.1 A statute that deputizes an
    officer of a private entity to seize an animal belonging to another without prior judicial
    process and that provides only cryptic direction concerning the consequences of that
    seizure raises serious constitutional questions under the Fourth Amendment, the Due
    Process Clause, and their analogs in the Maryland Constitution.2
    We will not resolve those questions. Our task is more mundane. We must determine
    whether the circumstances under which a humane society exercised its authority under CR
    §10-615 to take possession of a farmer’s animals based on allegations of animal cruelty
    were consistent with that statute in two respects. We must also decide how that action may
    1
    See, e.g., S.M. Wise, The Legal Thinghood of Nonhuman Animals, 23 B.C. Envtl.
    Aff. L. Rev. 471 (1996); C. Gutleben, Compassion for Animals: A Religious Tradition,
    43:2 Md. Bar. J. 36 (2010).
    2
    See, e.g., Porter v. DiBlasio, 
    93 F.3d 301
    , 305-10 (7th Cir. 1996); Pine v. Texas,
    
    921 S.W.2d 866
    , 873-74 (Tex. App. 1996); B. J. Bearup, Pets: Property and the Paradigm
    of Protection, 3 J. Animal L. 173, 179-83, 187-89 (2007); H.D. Winters, Updating Ohio’s
    Animal Cruelty Statute: How Human Interests Are Advanced, 29 Cap. U. L. Rev. 857,
    865, 875-76 (2001).
    have affected the farmer’s ownership interest in the animals. The resolution of those issues
    in this case turns in part on the existence of a parallel criminal prosecution and the
    execution of a criminal search and seizure warrant involving the same animals.
    In late 2014, officers of the Respondent Humane Society of Washington County
    (“Humane Society”), together with other law enforcement officers, executed a criminal
    search and seizure warrant at the farm of Petitioner Daniel Rohrer. The search and seizure
    warrant, which was based on an affidavit of a Humane Society officer alleging abuse and
    neglect of animals at the farm, resulted in the seizure and removal of nearly 100 animals
    from Mr. Rohrer’s farm. Acting as an agent of the State, the Humane Society placed the
    animals with foster farms while the animals remained in State custody.
    In early 2015, the Humane Society decided that, regardless of the outcome of the
    criminal animal cruelty charges pending against Mr. Rohrer, the seized animals should not
    be returned to him. Invoking its authority under CR §10-615, the Humane Society notified
    Mr. Rohrer of its intent to “seize/remove” those animals. Pursuant to the same statute, Mr.
    Rohrer petitioned the District Court for their return. The District Court denied Mr.
    Rohrer’s petition in light of the pending criminal charges.
    Ultimately the vast majority of the animal cruelty charges against Mr. Rohrer were
    disposed of by dismissal or acquittal. The District Court found him guilty of five
    misdemeanor counts related to three animals, sentenced him to probation before judgment,
    released all of the animals from seizure under the warrant, and required him to implement
    a farm management plan under the supervision of the Humane Society. Although the
    2
    disposition of the criminal charges released the animals from the warrant, the Humane
    Society retained possession of the animals, relying on the District Court’s earlier denial of
    Mr. Rohrer’s petition for their return under CR §10-615.
    Mr. Rohrer appealed the District Court decision denying his petition for return of
    the animals to the Circuit Court for Washington County. He argued that possession of the
    animals by the Humane Society did not satisfy the standards set forth in CR §10-615 and
    that, in any event, the Humane Society had failed to follow that statute’s procedures. The
    Circuit Court rejected those challenges and affirmed the District Court decision.
    In this Court, Mr. Rohrer again raises questions about the authority of the Humane
    Society to act under CR §10-615, as well as the legal status of animals seized under that
    law.
    We hold that, while the statute does not provide for seizure of an animal that is
    already in State custody in connection with a criminal proceeding, an officer of a humane
    society may notify the animal’s owner or custodian of an intent to take possession of the
    animal upon the animal’s release from State custody in the criminal case. In addition,
    seizure of an animal under the statute need not occur contemporaneously with the alleged
    mistreatment of the animal. However, the temporal remoteness of the alleged mistreatment
    is relevant to whether it is “necessary to protect the animal from cruelty” or “necessary for
    the health of the animal” for the humane society to take – and retain – possession of the
    animal. The statute gives a humane society the authority to temporarily possess an animal
    3
    when those standards are satisfied, although that authority expires when the necessity ends.
    The statute does not purport to determine ownership of the animal.
    I
    Background
    A.     Animal Cruelty Law and Procedure
    Maryland Animal Cruelty Laws
    Under the common law, farm animals, such as horses, cattle, sheep, and pigs, were
    treated as a form of personal property. See City of Hagerstown v. Witmer, 
    86 Md. 293
    ,
    300-01 (1897); 3B C.J.S. Animals §3. Mistreatment of animals had legal significance only
    to the extent that it interfered with someone’s property interest in the animal. See S. M.
    Wise, The Legal Thinghood of Nonhuman Animals, 23 B.C. Envtl. Aff. L. Rev. 471, 525-
    28 & n.372 (1996); see also Maryland Code, Article 27, §§80-81 (1914); cf. Hurd v State,
    
    190 Md. App. 479
    (2010) (affirming conviction for malicious destruction of property based
    on shooting of pet dog).
    During the mid-nineteenth century, legislatures began to enact animal protection
    laws that were not based primarily on the protection of a property interest. C.E. Friend,
    Animal Cruelty Laws: The Case for Reform, 8 U. Rich. L. Rev. 201 (1974). In Maryland,
    local governments took the lead in passing ordinances that barred abuse of animals. In
    1890, the General Assembly enacted a statewide law prohibiting “torture or cruelty” with
    4
    respect to animals, and classified a violation of that law as a misdemeanor.3 Chapter 198,
    Laws of Maryland 1890, then codified at Article 27, §§63-64; see State v. Falkenham, 
    73 Md. 463
    , 466 (1891) (holding that new statewide law superseded a local law on animal
    cruelty). That law defined “torture or cruelty” to “include everything whereby unjustifiable
    physical pain, suffering or death is caused.” It defined “animal” to include “every living
    creature except men.”
    The State animal cruelty law has been amended and refined over the years. It is
    currently codified in Maryland Code, Criminal Law Article (“CR”), §10-601 et seq. A key
    provision of this subtitle is CR §10-604, which prohibits abuse or neglect of an animal.
    Among other things, that statute defines criminal sanctions both for the intentional
    infliction of “unnecessary suffering or pain on an animal” as well as for the failure to
    provide the animal with sufficient food, water, space, and shelter.4 See Silver v. State, 420
    3
    Every other state and the District of Columbia have adopted similar laws regulating
    the treatment of animals. See Madeline Bernstein and Barry M. Wolf, Time to Feed the
    Evidence: What to Do With Seized Animals, 
    35 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 10679
    (2005).
    4
    That statute provides, in pertinent part:
    (a) A person may not:
    1) overdrive or overload an animal;
    2) deprive an animal of necessary sustenance;
    3) inflict unnecessary suffering or pain on an animal;
    4) cause, procure, or authorize an act prohibited under item (1),
    (2), or (3) of this subsection; or
    
    5 Md. 415
    (2011) (upholding a conviction for animal cruelty under CR §10-604). An
    individual who is convicted of a charge of animal cruelty may be prohibited from “owning,
    possessing, or residing with an animal.” CR §§10-604(b)(3), 10-606(b)(3).
    Role of Humane Societies in Enforcement of Animal Cruelty Law
    Since 1900, Maryland law has authorized members of humane societies to serve as
    animal control units and to help carry out the State’s laws concerning the protection of
    animals from abuse or neglect. Chapter 456, Laws of Maryland 1900, then codified at
    Article 27, §46T (authorizing “any officer or agent of the Maryland Society for the
    Prevention of Cruelty to Animals or of any [similar] society” to take charge of abandoned,
    diseased, or disabled animals). The animal cruelty law currently defines “humane society”
    as “a society or association incorporated in Maryland for the prevention of cruelty to
    animals.” CR §10-601(d). Although a humane society is a private entity, 5 the criminal
    5) if the person has charge or custody of an animal, as owner or
    otherwise, unnecessarily fail to provide the animal with
    nutritious food in sufficient quantity, necessary veterinary care,
    proper drink, air, space, shelter, or protection from the weather.
    CR §10-604(a); see also CR §§10-606, 10-607, and 10-608 (prohibiting various types of
    “aggravated” animal cruelty).
    5
    The first organization dedicated to animal welfare – i.e., the first humane society
    – was founded in England in 1824.                  SPCA International, Our History,
    http://www.spcai.org/about-spcai/our-history/ [https://perma.cc/Y7EV-4XRR]. The first
    such organization in the United States was the American Society for the Prevention of
    Cruelty to Animals, or ASPCA, which was founded in 1866. ASPCA, About Us,
    https://www.aspca.org/about-us [https://perma.cc/HBA6-AMG3]; see also American
    Humane, History, https://www.americanhumane.org/about-us/history/ [https://perma.cc
    /7XCQ-HTHD] (stating that American Humane was founded in 1877 as a “unified voice”
    6
    statutes concerning animal cruelty delegate to humane societies certain powers to carry out
    the State’s policy against animal cruelty.6 For example, a humane society officer may
    arrest anyone “committing a misdemeanor that involves cruelty to an animal.” CR §10-
    609. Pertinent to this case, an officer of a humane society may also seize or remove an
    animal from its owner under CR §10-615. This case concerns how the power conferred on
    a humane society by CR §10-615 to take possession of an animal is to be exercised and the
    consequences of the exercise of that power.7
    for 27 humane societies in 10 different states). Today, most humane societies operate as
    independent, local organizations. ASPCA, Pet Statistics, https://www.aspca.org/animal-
    homelessness/shelter-intake-and-surrender/pet-statistics [https://perma.cc/Q9E4-9WS5].
    6
    The delegation of enforcement authority of animal cruelty statutes to a humane
    society was first adopted in New York in the late 19th century; other states, including
    Maryland, enacted similar legislation. See E. R. Rumley & R. W. Rumley, Enforcing
    Animal Welfare Statutes: In Many States, It’s Still the Wild West, 21 San Joaquin Agric.
    L. Rev. 21, 24-25 (2012).
    7
    Other laws may authorize the seizure or detention of certain types of animals when
    they are perceived as a threat to human health or safety or to the health of domestic animals.
    See Maryland Code, Health-General Article, §18-217 et seq. (authorizing Secretary of
    Health and Mental Hygiene to prohibit, among other things, the possession of animals
    found to be dangerous to human health and safety and authorizing their seizure by law
    enforcement officers); Maryland Code, Agriculture Article (“AG”), §3-101 et seq.
    (delineating powers of Secretary of Agriculture to protect health of domestic animals from
    contagious or infectious diseases).
    7
    B.    Facts and Judicial Proceedings
    The Farm
    Mr. Rohrer owns and runs a farm in Boonsboro, Maryland. A self-described “Old
    MacDonald,” he raises various livestock – including cattle, sheep, goats, and chickens –
    for slaughter and egg production. He sells meat at farmer’s markets and participates in
    “farm-to-fork” programs. At any given time, there may be several hundred animals on his
    farm. Raising animals for food production is his livelihood.
    The Investigation
    During the fall of 2014, the Humane Society received an anonymous call from an
    individual concerned about whether animals on Mr. Rohrer’s farm were adequately fed. In
    response, on November 19, 2014, Crystal Mowery, a field services officer with the Humane
    Society, conducted a drive-by inspection of the farm. After seeing several cattle that
    “appeared to be thin,” Officer Mowery returned to her office and contacted Dr. Edward
    Wurmb, a veterinarian. They and another Humane Society officer went to Mr. Rohrer’s
    farm later that day for a closer inspection. Dr. Wurmb observed a number of cattle in the
    pasture that were “extremely thin” and “walking skeletons,” with some in “imminent
    danger of dying if it got cold.”8 Officer Mowery asked Mr. Rohrer if they could examine
    8
    During this visit to the farm, Dr. Wurmb utilized the Virginia Cooperative
    Extension’s “Body Condition Scoring” system to gauge the size of the cattle. Available at
    https://pubs.ext.vt.edu/400/400-795/400-795_pdf.pdf       [https://perma.cc/X4J5-GYT2].
    Under this system, cows are assigned a number from one to nine based on the amount of
    fat and muscle on the animal. A score of one indicates the cow is “extremely thin,” and a
    8
    animals inside his barn. He allowed them to look into the barn from outside, but refused
    to let them enter the barn without a warrant.
    The Warrant
    Two days later, on November 21, 2014, with the approval of the State’s Attorney,
    Officer Mowery applied to the District Court of Maryland for a search and seizure warrant
    for Mr. Rohrer’s farm. In the application, she described the appearance of the cattle and
    the apparent lack of food for animals in the field. She alleged that these conditions
    established probable cause to believe that Mr. Rohrer was violating various provisions of
    CR §10-604. The District Court issued the warrant. The warrant authorized Officer
    Mowery and other officers to enter and search Mr. Rohrer’s farm for evidence of violations
    of the animal cruelty law, to seize any such evidence, to take photographs, and, at the
    recommendation of a veterinarian on the scene, to seize “any animal found to be deprived
    of nutritious food and water.”
    Execution of the Search and Seizure Warrant
    Three days later, on November 24, 2014, Officer Mowery – accompanied by other
    members of the Humane Society, members of the Washington County Sherriff’s
    Department, an Assistant State’s Attorney, and Dr. Wurmb – served the warrant and
    conducted a search of the farm. At that time, according to the later testimony of Officer
    score of nine indicates the cow is “very obese.” Dr. Wurmb testified that “at least 10” cows
    were “twos or less,” but noted that “it’s hard to give a one.”
    9
    Mowery and Dr. Wurmb, the pasture was bare with no edible forage, contained numerous
    empty feeders that – because of the presence of weeds and moldy hay – likely had not been
    filled for some time, and was littered with dead animal bones and rolls of barbed wire. The
    barn contained bodies of dead animals lying among the live animals, a dead sheep in the
    hay feeder, empty water troughs, and manure and feces piled four or five feet high. In a
    separate, detached chicken coop, live chickens roosted inside dead chicken carcasses, and
    eggs were intermingled among more than six inches of animal feces. In addition to some
    emaciated cows, they also discovered sheep and goats whose hooves had never been
    trimmed and were so overgrown that the animals could no longer walk correctly. When
    asked about the dead animals, Mr. Rohrer told Officer Mowery that “they lay where they
    die.” He admitted that it had been three or four years since a veterinarian had visited his
    farm.
    On the basis of these observations, the Humane Society and the Sheriff’s Office
    formally “seized” all of the animals on Mr. Rohrer’s farm under the authority granted by
    the warrant. The search warrant return and inventory completed by Ms. Mowery the next
    day listed the property taken pursuant to the warrant as “approximately” 50 cattle, 50 sheep,
    4 goats, 15 pigs, and 50 chickens. However, no animals were physically removed from
    Mr. Rohrer’s farm that day. Rather, they were left on the farm and Mr. Rohrer was
    informed that he was not to exercise any control over them. During the period between
    10
    November 25, 2014 and the expiration of the search warrant on December 10, 2014, 9 the
    Humane Society returned to the farm, removed many of the seized animals, and relocated
    them to foster farms.     Other animals were “released from seizure” under a written
    agreement between Mr. Rohrer and the Humane Society.
    The Agreement
    The agreement, dated December 12, 2014, recited that 95 animals (40 cows, 4 goats,
    and 51 sheep) had been removed from the farm and that the Humane Society and Mr.
    Rohrer had not agreed on the disposition of those animals. It acknowledged that Mr.
    Rohrer retained ownership of those animals and that the Humane Society had temporary
    custody. The agreement further stipulated that the animals remaining on the farm were
    “released from seizure” and were “now under [Mr. Rohrer’s] control.” Finally, the
    agreement provided that Mr. Rohrer “must contain the animals on the property” and was
    responsible for providing “nutritious food in sufficient quantity, necessary veterinary care,
    proper drink, air, space, shelter, or protection from weather.”
    Criminal Charges
    A few days later, on December 15, 2014, Mr. Rohrer was charged in the District
    Court with 318 misdemeanor counts of animal cruelty under CR §10-604. Case No.
    2V00090540. According to Case Search, the online database of the Maryland Judiciary,
    9
    A search and seizure pursuant to a search warrant must take place within 15 days
    of the day on which the warrant is issued. Maryland Code, Criminal Procedure Article,
    §1-203(a)(4).
    11
    most of the charges were brought under CR §10-604(a)(5), which prohibits the owner of
    an animal from “unnecessarily fail[ing] to provide the animal with nutritious food in
    sufficient quantity, necessary veterinary care, proper drink, air, space, shelter, or protection
    from weather.” Some of the charges were brought under CR §10-604(a)(4), which
    prohibits anyone from causing or authorizing certain acts of mistreatment of an animal.10
    Unsuccessful Request for TRO
    In December 2014, following the execution of the search warrant and the removal
    of some of the animals, Mr. Rohrer filed suit in the Circuit Court for Washington County
    seeking injunctive relief, including a temporary restraining order (“TRO”), for return of
    the animals. By the time the Circuit Court conducted a hearing on his request for a TRO
    on December 18, 2014, the criminal charges had been filed in the District Court. In light
    of the pending criminal charges and the agreement between Mr. Rohrer and the Humane
    Society with respect to the animals remaining on the farm, the Circuit Court declined to
    grant injunctive relief pending resolution of the criminal charges.
    Notice of Seizure Under CR §10-615
    On January 20, 2015, approximately two months after execution of the search
    warrant and removal of some of the animals and one month after the filing of criminal
    charges, the Humane Society posted a notice on Mr. Rohrer’s door stating that it had
    “seized/removed” the animals from his custody under CR §10-615(b), (c), and (f). The
    10
    See footnote 4, above.
    12
    notice also referred to those animals as “impounded from your custody.” The Humane
    Society posted a slightly revised version of the notice on February 5, 2015. 11 The notice
    referred to seizure, removal, and impoundment under the statute in the past tense,
    apparently referencing the actions taken in November and December 2014 under the search
    warrant. However, Officer Mowery later testified that the Humane Society had not decided
    to invoke its authority under the statute until shortly before the initial notice was posted in
    January 2015. She explained that, because the court had denied the TRO seeking return of
    the animals to Mr. Rohrer during the criminal proceedings, the Humane Society had
    focused on placing and caring for the animals before it sought to resolve their ultimate
    disposition.
    The January 2015 notice advised that Mr. Rohrer could file a petition for return of
    the animals in the District Court within 10 days of their removal pursuant to CR §10-615(d)
    and that, if he chose not to avail himself of that remedy, the animals would be considered
    strays and disposed of according to Maryland law.12 The notice also advised Mr. Rohrer
    11
    The notice posted on January 20, 2015, had indicated that it applied to all animals
    “removed on November 24, 2014.” After Mr. Rohrer noted, in his Petition for Return of
    the animals, that no animals had actually been removed from the farm on November 24,
    the Humane Society posted the second notice clarifying that it applied to “animals
    physically removed between November 25, 2014 and December 10, 2014.” The District
    Court essentially treated the second notice as an amendment of the original notice. Neither
    party challenges that approach on appeal.
    12
    With respect to the disposition of stray animals, the notice cited CR §10-617(c) -
    (d), which concerns the disposal of domestic animals of unknown ownership by a local
    animal control unit, and AG §3-603, which concerns the disposition of a “stray horse,
    13
    that he was “under criminal investigation” for cruelty to animals and provided written
    Miranda warnings concerning his right to remain silent, to be represented by counsel, and
    to have counsel appointed if he could not afford a lawyer.
    The Petition for Return of Animals
    On January 30, 2015, Mr. Rohrer filed a “Petition for Return of Seized Animals”
    (“Petition for Return”) in the District Court, pursuant to CR §10-615(d)(2). He argued that
    the seizure notice was late, that the animals remaining on the farm were well cared for, that
    he was being deprived of the opportunity to sell certain animals for slaughter at the time of
    their maximum value, and that the Humane Society had no reasonable justification for
    holding his animals. In particular, he argued that the Humane Society had failed to provide
    notice under CR §10-615(d) at the time the animals were actually removed from his
    property and had not done so until two months later at a time when the animals were in the
    custody of the State pursuant to the search warrant.
    District Court Hearing on the Petition for Return
    A hearing on the Petition for Return was held in the District Court on February 20
    and March 30, 2015. Mr. Rohrer testified and called three witnesses – a University of
    Maryland extension agent, a veterinarian, and a Maryland Department of Agriculture
    livestock inspector – to testify about the conditions of his farm around the time the animals
    sheep, hog, cow, or other domestic animal” of unknown ownership by the finder of the
    stray animal.
    14
    were removed from his farm in late 2014. That testimony presented a somewhat different
    picture of Mr. Rohrer’s farm and the conditions of his animals from that portrayed by the
    Humane Society. Mr. Rohrer explained that most of the animals he acquired were being
    prepared for slaughter. The extension agent, who had not previously known Mr. Rohrer,
    visited the farm shortly after the execution of the search warrant, but before most of the
    animals were removed. He opined that most of the animals were in excellent condition
    although some of the cattle were thin. The veterinarian, who had also visited the farm at
    the same time, provided similar testimony as to the condition of the animals.
    Officer Mowery and Dr. Wurmb testified on behalf of the Humane Society at the
    hearing and reiterated the information they provided in the warrant and also described their
    observations of conditions when the warrant was executed. Another veterinarian testified
    that he had evaluated the cattle shortly after execution of the warrant and found 26 of the
    40 cattle to be underweight, which he found “very concerning.” Officer Mowery testified
    that, although the animals were originally seized and removed pursuant to the criminal
    search and seizure warrant in late 2014, the decision to invoke the Humane Society’s
    authority under CR §10-615(c) was not made until shortly before January 20, 2015, when
    the notice was first posted at Mr. Rohrer’s farm.
    At the hearing, Mr. Rohrer reiterated his argument that the Humane Society had
    failed to provide the appropriate notice under CR §10-615(d) at the time the animals were
    physically removed from the farm. Alternatively, he argued that, to the extent that the
    Humane Society was not required to provide that notice at the time the animals were
    15
    removed because the animals had initially been seized by the State (with the Humane
    Society’s assistance) under a criminal search and seizure warrant, that situation had not
    changed at the time that the Humane Society actually provided notice under CR §10-615,
    as the animals remained in State custody at that time and were not under his control.
    Ruling from the bench at the conclusion of the second day of the hearing, the District
    Court denied Mr. Rohrer’s Petition for Return, although the court lamented the “lack of
    guidance” in the statute as to how it was to decide the case. The court first observed that
    the animals had been removed from the farm pursuant to a valid search warrant “based on
    the evidence that was available at the time of the removal.” The court cited the conditions
    on the farm in late 2014: the small size of the cattle in the field, the dead animals and
    manure in the barn, and the lack of sanitary water. The court did not directly address the
    adequacy of the timing of the subsequent notice under CR §10-615 by the Humane Society.
    As to whether the animals should be returned to Mr. Rohrer, the court noted the
    December 2014 agreement between Mr. Rohrer and the Humane Society under which he
    retained many of the animals and under which the Humane Society acknowledged his
    ownership of the seized animals. With respect to the animals that had been removed from
    the farm, the court observed that they “appear to be being well taken care of” by the
    Humane Society and that “the best interest of the animals” would be served by remaining
    in that care “at this particular stage ... particularly between now and ... the hearing on [the
    criminal animal cruelty charges].”
    16
    When Mr. Rohrer’s counsel raised the question whether he would lose ownership
    of the animals as a result of the court’s ruling, the District Court stated that “the statute
    really doesn’t say that” and pointed to the December 2014 agreement which, in the District
    Court’s words, “says what it says” – that Mr. Rohrer retained ownership of those animals.
    Mr. Rohrer promptly appealed the District Court decision to the Circuit Court for
    Washington County.
    Criminal Trial
    In the meantime, while the appeal of the District Court’s denial of the Petition for
    Return of the animals was pending, the criminal charges proceeded to trial before a
    different judge of the District Court. A bench trial was held over the course of several days
    in May and July 2015. At the outset of the trial, the State dismissed 288 of the 318 counts.
    At the conclusion of the State’s case, the court granted a motion for judgment of acquittal
    as to six additional counts. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the State dismissed four
    more counts. Of the remaining 20 counts, the District Court found Mr. Rohrer not guilty
    on 15 counts. The District Court found Mr. Rohrer guilty on five counts relating to three
    animals but, as provided in Maryland Code, Criminal Procedure Article, §6-220, withheld
    the entry of judgment and placed him on unsupervised probation before judgment for three
    years with respect to those counts.13
    13
    Although we do not have the full record of the criminal case before us, one of the
    pleadings from a related case contained in the Record Extract indicates that the five counts
    on which Mr. Rohrer was found guilty related to failing to provide adequate space for two
    17
    In a probation order issued on July 22, 2015, the court added a special condition of
    probation that required Mr. Rohrer to comply with a farm management plan supervised by
    the Humane Society. The probation order stated that the animals were “released from
    seizure” – presumably referring to seizure under the criminal search warrant – and that
    “any action to recover may be brought in a civil proceeding.” Mr. Rohrer apparently did
    not appeal this disposition of the criminal charges.
    Failed Negotiations for Return of Animals
    After the adjudication of the criminal charges, but while Mr. Rohrer’s appeal of the
    District Court’s denial of the Petition for Return was still pending in the Circuit Court, the
    parties attempted to negotiate the disposition of Mr. Rohrer’s animals. In an email dated
    August 28, 2015, counsel for the Humane Society indicated his belief that the District
    Court’s decision on the Petition for Return was dispositive as to the ownership of the
    animals – i.e., the denial of the petition eliminated Mr. Rohrer’s ownership interest of the
    animals. Nevertheless, counsel for the Humane Society offered to return some – but not
    all – of the animals, provided that Mr. Rohrer agreed to abide by the terms of his probation.
    Counsel indicated that the offer was “not negotiable,” and if not accepted within three days,
    all of the remaining animals would be given away.
    goats and one sheep and failing to trim the hooves of one goat and one sheep. All of the
    charges related to cattle were either dismissed or resulted in an acquittal.
    18
    In response to this email, on August 31, 2015, Mr. Rohrer filed a Motion for Ex
    Parte Emergency Relief for Release of Animals or, in the Alternative, Stay of Disposal of
    Animals and Request for Emergency Hearing in the District Court. The District Court
    granted the motion in part, and issued an order on September 1, 2015 prohibiting the
    Humane Society from taking any action regarding the animals “inconsistent” with Mr.
    Rohrer’s property rights, until the conclusion of all legal actions and appeals that involve
    the disposition of the animals. Because Mr. Rohrer’s appeal of the denial of his Petition
    for Return of the animals was still pending in the Circuit Court, the District Court declined
    to hold a hearing.
    Appeal of Denial of the Petition for Return
    The Circuit Court held a hearing on the appeal on December 11, 2015. Mr. Rohrer
    challenged the substantive decision of the District Court – i.e., whether the Humane
    Society’s possession of the animals was actually necessary for the animals’ health – as well
    as the procedures used by the Humane Society under CR §10-615 and in relation to the
    December 2014 agreement. Among other things, Mr. Rohrer argued that the Humane
    Society’s invocation of its authority to remove animals under CR §10-615 was improper
    because, at the time it gave him notice of a seizure under the statute, the animals were
    already in the custody of the State under the search warrant and there was no “necessity”
    to seize them at that time. The Humane Society, in response, pointed to the evidence of
    the conditions on Mr. Rohrer’s farm in late 2014, argued that its procedure in seizing and
    19
    holding the animals was lawful, and denied any legal significance of its December 2014
    agreement with Mr. Rohrer.
    In a written opinion dated May 6, 2016, the Circuit Court upheld the District Court’s
    denial of the Petition for Return. The Circuit Court concluded that the District Court ruling
    “was not ‘clearly erroneous’. . . that the animals were being well cared-for by the Humane
    Society, and it was not in the best interests of the animals to return their custody to [Mr.
    Rohrer].” The Circuit Court did not address the fact that the District Court’s decision not
    to return the animals was premised in part on the fact that criminal charges related to the
    same animals were pending at the time of the District Court decision. By the time the
    Circuit Court issued its decision, the criminal charges had been resolved and the animals
    had been released from seizure in connection with that proceeding. It thus appears that the
    Circuit Court was focused on the merits of the District Court ruling at the time of that
    ruling.
    Mr. Rohrer petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, which we granted.
    Related Pending Litigation
    Mr. Rohrer has brought a replevin action for return of the animals, but that action
    has been stayed pending the resolution of this appeal. Case No. 21-C-15-055661 (Circuit
    Court for Washington County).
    20
    II
    Discussion
    Mr. Rohrer has presented three issues for review. The first two issues concern the
    predicate for seizure or removal of an animal from its owner based on allegations of animal
    cruelty:
    (1) May an officer of a humane society seize an animal under CR
    §10-615 when that animal is already in State custody pursuant
    to a search and seizure warrant?
    (2) Must the seizure of an animal by an officer of a humane society
    under CR §10-615 be justified by conditions existing at the
    time of seizure, or may it be based on conditions previously
    observed?
    The third issue concerns the application and effect of the process created by the statute for
    the possible return of the animal to its owner:
    (3) When an owner of a seized animal files a petition for return of
    the animal under CR §10-615(d) and the petition is denied,
    how does that ruling affect the owner’s rights with respect to
    the animal?
    A.     Standard of Review
    We have jurisdiction of this case pursuant to Maryland Code, Courts & Judicial
    Proceedings Article, §12-305, as we are asked to review a final judgment of the Circuit
    Court on appeal from the District Court’s decision denying Mr. Rohrer’s Petition for
    Return of animals under CR §10-615(d). The Circuit Court conducted its review on the
    record pursuant to Maryland Rule 7-113 and affirmed the decision of the District Court.
    21
    When an action has been tried without a jury, as in this case, an appellate court is to
    review the case on both the law and the evidence. Maryland Rule 8-131(c). The fact
    findings of the trial court are not to be set aside unless clearly erroneous. 
    Id. However, the
    appellate court does not accord any special deference to the legal conclusions of the
    trial court or its application of the law to the facts. Cunningham v. Feinberg, 
    441 Md. 310
    ,
    321-22 (2015). A circuit court is to apply the same standard of review when it reviews a
    District Court decision on the record. Maryland Rule 7-113(f); see Friendly Finance Corp.
    v. Orbit Chrysler Plymouth Dodge Truck, Inc., 
    378 Md. 337
    , 342-43 & nn.4-5 (2003).
    The three issues raised by Mr. Rohrer concerning the application of CR §10-615 are
    purely legal in nature. Accordingly, we shall consider them without according deference
    to the decisions of the District Court or Circuit Court.
    B. Authority for a Humane Society to Take Possession of an Animal under CR §10-615
    To address the questions before us, it is useful first to sketch out the legal context in
    which they arise – in particular, the provisions, purpose, and application of CR §10-615.
    1.       Statutory Text
    The statute provides in pertinent part14:
    §10-615. Care of mistreated animal.
    14
    We omit Subsection (g) of the statute, which pertains only to the statute’s
    enforcement in Baltimore County and, accordingly, is not pertinent to this case, which
    concerns enforcement in Washington County.
    22
    (a) Court-ordered removal. If an owner or custodian of an animal
    is convicted of an act of animal cruelty, the court may order the
    removal of the animal or any other animal at the time of conviction for
    the protection of the animal.
    (b) Seizure. (1) An officer or authorized agent of a humane society,
    or a police officer or other public official required to protect animals
    may seize an animal if necessary to protect the animal from cruelty.
    (2)(i) An animal that a medical and scientific research
    facility possesses may be removed under this subsection only after
    review by and a recommendation from the Department of Health and
    Mental Hygiene, Center for Veterinary Public Health.
    (ii) The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene shall:
    1. conduct an investigation within 24 hours after
    receiving a complaint; and
    2. within 24 hours after completing the investigation,
    report to the State’s Attorney for the county in which the facility is
    situated.
    (c) Impounded animal. (1) If an animal is impounded, yarded, or
    confined without necessary food, water, or proper attention, is subject
    to cruelty, or is neglected, an officer or authorized agent of a humane
    society, a police officer, another public official required to protect
    animals, or any invited and accompanying veterinarian licensed in the
    State, may:
    (i) enter the place where the animal is located and supply
    the animal with necessary food, water, and attention; or
    (ii) remove the animal if removal is necessary for the health
    of the animal.
    (2) A person who enters a place under paragraph (1) of this
    subsection is not liable because of the entry.
    (d) Notification of owner. (1) A person who removes an animal
    under subsection (c) of this section shall notify the animal’s owner or
    custodian of:
    (i) the removal; and
    23
    (ii) any administrative remedies that may be available to the
    owner or custodian.
    (2) If an administrative remedy is not available, the owner or
    custodian may file a petition for the return of the animal in the District
    Court of the county in which the removal occurred within 10 days after
    the removal.
    (e) Stray. An animal is considered a stray if:
    (1) an owner or custodian of the animal was notified under
    subsection (d) of this section and failed to file a petition within 10 days
    after the removal; or
    (2) the owner or custodian of the animal is unknown and cannot
    be ascertained by reasonable effort for 20 days to determine the owner
    or custodian.
    (f) Limitations. This section does not allow:
    (1) entry into a private dwelling; or
    (2) removal of a farm animal without the prior recommendation
    of a veterinarian licensed in the State.
    CR §10-615(a)-(f).15
    This case does not present any issue under Subsection (a) or Subsection (f) of the
    statute. Subsection (a) authorizes a court to order removal of an animal from its owner
    following a conviction for animal cruelty. Although Mr. Rohrer was ultimately convicted
    15
    For convenience, we have included the caption and catchlines, as the Legislature
    (as opposed to a legal publisher) included them when the statute was most recently re-
    codified. Chapter 26, §2, Laws of Maryland 2002. However, the captions and catchlines
    are not regarded as evidence of legislative intent. See Maryland Code, General Provisions
    Article, §1-208. For reasons spelled out later in this opinion, one of the catchlines may
    have led the parties and courts below slightly astray as they attempted to construe this
    somewhat cryptic statute. See Part II.B.2.i of this opinion below.
    24
    of five counts of animal cruelty, the District Court did not order any animals to be taken
    from him as a result of those convictions.16 Rather, it explicitly ordered that the animals
    were “released from seizure” in connection with the criminal case. There is also no issue
    under Subsection (f), which requires approval of a veterinarian to seize a farm animal and
    which limits the statutory authority with respect to entry in a private dwelling. It appears
    to be undisputed that, in connection with the execution of the search and seizure warrant,
    a veterinarian recommended removal of the animals and that the seizure of Mr. Rohrer’s
    farm animals did not involve entry into a private dwelling.
    Subsections (b) and (c) of the statute both relate to the predicate for seizure or
    removal of an animal by a humane society officer. Both subsections were cited by the
    Humane Society in the notice of “seizure/removal” that it provided to Mr. Rohrer two
    months after execution of the search warrant. Those subsections thus relate to the first two
    questions in this appeal.
    Subsections (d) and (e) both concern the procedure for seeking the return of an animal
    that has been seized or removed under the statute. Those subsections relate to the third
    question before us concerning the effect of a denial of a petition for return.
    16
    Nor did the court prohibit him “from owning, possessing, or residing with an
    animal” as a condition of probation, as it could have done pursuant to CR §10-604(b)(3).
    25
    2.    The Predicate for Seizure or Removal of an Animal
    i.     “Seize” v. “Remove” v. “Impound” – Statutory Text
    During the course of this litigation, there has been some debate over the use of
    various forms of the words “seize,” “remove,” and “impound” in the statute and whether
    the Humane Society’s action was best described by one or the other of those verbs. There
    is also some confusion whether those terms are used in the statute simply as synonyms for
    one another or to denote a distinction to which the courts should attach significance.
    CR §10-615 could be read as authorizing several different methods by which an
    officer of a humane society may deal with a mistreated animal. For example, Subsection
    (b) of the statute authorizes an officer to “seize” an animal. Subsection (c) of the statute
    describes circumstances under which such an officer may “remove” an animal. Subsection
    (c) also refers to an “impounded” animal, and both Mr. Rohrer and the Humane Society
    have asserted, at times, that the Humane Society had “impounded” Mr. Rohrer’s animals
    under the statute, rather than “seized” them. The statute does not define these words. In
    order to answer the questions before us about the predicate for taking action under
    Subsections (b) and (c), it is worth clarifying whether these verbs refer to the same action
    or not.
    We can distinguish the significance of “impound” with a careful reading of the
    statutory text. As is evident, a form of that word – “impounded” – appears only in
    Subsection (c)(1) as one of three participles describing the location and condition of an
    animal prior to action by a humane society officer – “impounded, yarded, or confined
    26
    without necessary food, water, or proper attention ….” The term does not refer to the
    action taken by a humane society officer in response to those conditions. Thus, strictly
    speaking, at least insofar as CR §10-615 is concerned, the statute does not authorize a
    humane society officer to “impound” an animal, but rather to rescue an “impounded”
    animal in certain circumstances.
    The inclination to refer to a humane society as “impounding” an animal under CR
    §10-615 is understandable. A reader of CR §10-615 might be misled by the catchline for
    Subsection (c) (“Impounded animal”), and assume that it expresses a parallel meaning to
    the catchlines for Subsection (a) (“Court-ordered removal”) and Subsection (b)
    (“Seizure”). It may also be that the notion that a humane society “impounds” an animal
    under Subsection (c) has arisen because that verb is used in other statutes to refer to an
    action taken by an individual or an animal control unit that captures a stray animal. See
    CR §10-617 (detailing procedures for an animal control unit to dispose of domestic animals
    of unknown ownership that have been “impounded” by the unit);17 AG §3-603 (authorizing
    the owner of an “enclosure” to “impound” a stray animal that trespasses on the enclosure).
    The term “impound” thus has no special significance for resolution of the issues in
    this case under CR §10-615. However, the terms “seize” and “remove” are both used in
    the statute to describe actions that may be taken by an officer. Subsection (b)(1) of the
    statute authorizes an officer to “seize” an animal “if necessary to protect the animal from
    17
    In the vernacular, the “dog pound.”
    27
    cruelty.” In describing special procedures for the seizure of an animal from a research
    facility, Subsection (b)(2) appears to use the verb “remove” as a synonym for “seize.” In
    addition, Subsection (c) authorizes an officer to “remove” an animal in circumstances
    seemingly similar to those described in Subsection (b)(1) – when the action is “necessary
    for the health of the animal.” In the context of the rest of Subsection (c), “remove” appears
    to refer to a seizure of an animal that is already confined in some way, as opposed to
    running free. An excursion into its legislative history confirms that the two terms are
    essentially used as synonyms.
    ii.    “Seize” v. “Remove” – legislative history
    Most of the legislative enactments that created the provisions of CR §10-615
    pertinent to this case occurred before the General Assembly regularly compiled and
    preserved bill files. While we lack some of the legislative materials typically referenced
    for construing more recent legislation, what does exist is informative as to the development
    of CR §10-615.
    1955 – Original version of the statute
    The predecessor of CR §10-615 was first enacted in 1955.18 Chapter 278, Laws of
    Maryland 1955, then codified in Article 27, §§86, 87. The original proposal went through
    more than one iteration before it was passed.
    18
    Earlier statutes had provided for an officer of a humane society to take possession
    of an abandoned animal and dispose of it. See Chapter 456, Laws of Maryland 1900, then
    codified at Article 27, §46T, later recodified at Article 27, §§86 (1951 Code). Another
    early statute provided for the issuance of a search warrant to a peace officer “in order to
    28
    Proposed legislation. As it was originally introduced, the 1955 bill would have
    authorized an officer of a humane society or a police officer to “take possession” of an
    animal if necessary “to protect [the] animal from neglect and/or cruelty.” Senate Bill 284
    (1955). The bill would also have authorized an officer to provide necessary sustenance to
    an animal “impounded, yarded, or confined … without necessary food, water or proper
    attention” or to remove the animal from that location, if necessary “for the health of the
    animal.” 
    Id. The bill
    provided that the officer would not be liable for entering the property.
    
    Id. “In all
    cases” the owner or custodian of the animal, if known, was to be “immediately”
    notified of the officer’s action. 
    Id. If the
    owner or custodian was not known and could not
    be located “with reasonable effort,” the animal was to be treated as a stray. 
    Id. Finally, the
    bill provided that the owner of the animal would be responsible for the expenses
    incurred by the humane society in caring for the animal and that the humane society could
    recover that debt by selling the animal after obtaining a judgment for that purpose. 
    Id. Amendments. As
    the bill proceeded through the Legislature, it was amended in
    several key respects that appear to reflect a concern for the property rights of the owner or
    custodian of the animal. First, the bill was amended to limit the general authorization for
    an officer to “take possession” of a mistreated animal only to situations where the owner
    or custodian had been convicted of animal cruelty. See Chapter 278, Laws of Maryland
    discover evidence of guilt” in an animal cruelty case, but did not explicitly authorize the
    seizure or removal of an animal. Chapter 527, Laws of Maryland 1902, then codified at
    Article 27, §46L, later recodified at Article 27, §87 (1951 Code).
    29
    1955. The authorization for an officer to enter property and remove an animal that was
    confined without proper sustenance was limited to circumstances when the owner or
    custodian “cannot be found.” 
    Id. Another amendment
    further limited the officer’s
    authority to enter on property, and the corresponding immunity from liability – that
    amendment provided that the statute did not authorize entry into a “private dwelling.” 
    Id. Apparently in
    light of the fact that entry on property for removal of a mistreated animal
    was now premised on the fact that the owner could not be found, another amendment
    eliminated the requirement for immediate notification of the owner, but instead required
    notification if the owner was “subsequently located.” 
    Id. A related
    amendment clarified
    that the “reasonable efforts” to locate an absent or unknown owner should continue for 30
    days before the animal would be considered a stray. 
    Id. Enacted statute.
    As amended and ultimately passed, the original 1955 version of
    the statute read as follows:
    86. Whenever the owner or custodian of an animal is convicted of
    any act of cruelty thereto and subsequently it becomes necessary, in
    order to protect said animal from further neglect and/or cruelty, any
    officer of an animal humane society or any police officer may take
    possession of it. When an animal is impounded, yarded, or confined,
    and continues without necessary food, water or proper attention, and
    the owner or custodian thereof cannot be found, any officer of an
    animal humane society or any police officer may enter into and upon
    any place in which the animal is impounded, yarded, or confined, and
    supply it with necessary food, water, and attention, so long as it there
    remains, or, if necessary for the health of the animal, may remove such
    animal, and not be liable to any action for such entry. In all cases the
    owner or custodian of such animal, if subsequently located shall be
    notified of such action by the person taking possession of the animal.
    If the owner or custodian continues to be unknown and cannot with
    reasonable effort be ascertained for a period of thirty days, such animal
    30
    shall be held to be an estray and be dealt with as such, provided
    however, that nothing in this section shall be construed as permitting
    the entry into a private dwelling.
    87. The necessary expenses for food and attention given to an
    animal under the preceding section, may be collected from the owner
    thereof, and the animal shall not be exempt from levy and sale upon
    execution issued upon a judgment therefor.
    Chapter 278, Laws of Maryland 1955, codified at Article 27, §§86, 87 (1955) (emphasis
    added).
    The statute thus allowed for separation of an animal from its owner or custodian by
    a humane society officer or police officer in two situations: (1) an officer could “take
    possession” of the animal upon the conviction of the owner or custodian of animal cruelty
    if there was a need to protect the animal from further abuse or neglect and (2) an officer
    could “remove” an animal that was “impounded, yarded, or confined” without necessary
    food, water, or care when the owner could not be found and it was necessary to remove the
    animal to provide those necessities; in such a case, the officer would not be liable for
    trespass. In both instances, the statute appeared to leave it to the judgment of the officer
    as to whether the requisite conditions of abuse or neglect existed. The statute further
    provided that “[i]n all cases” the officer “taking possession” of the animal was to notify
    the owner or custodian of the animal.
    Thus, removal of an animal from a place of confinement was simply one specific
    way in which an officer could, pursuant to the statute “take possession” of a mistreated
    animal from an owner or custodian who could not be located. Although the 1955 statute
    required notification of the owner or custodian, it was silent on whether – or how – that
    31
    individual could retrieve the animal. Nor did the statute purport to address the effect of a
    seizure on ownership of the animal, if the owner was known, although it appeared to regard
    the animal as property of the owner that was subject to levy and execution to reimburse the
    humane society for its expenses.19
    1963 amendment – court order upon a conviction
    A few years later, in 1963, the General Assembly amended the provision predicated
    upon a conviction of animal cruelty to confer discretion on the court – as opposed to the
    officer – to order removal of the animal from its owner or custodian at the time of
    conviction. If the court elected not to do so at the time of conviction, the statute continued
    to allow an officer to “take possession” of the animal at a later time, if necessary to protect
    19
    As the text of the statute indicates, if the owner or custodian remained unknown
    after 30 days, the animal was to be treated as “an estray” – i.e., a stray animal – and dealt
    with accordingly. The statute did not define “stray” or “estray.” The common law deemed
    an animal a stray when it was wandering at large “without restraint or confinement” and
    allowed anyone to seize such animals. 3B C.J.S. Animals §§248, 251, 268.
    Currently, State and local law may also provide some direction as to the disposition
    of a stray animal. Certain statutes provide procedures for the disposition of a stray animal
    when the stray is either (1) trespassing and of known ownership (AG §3-603) or (2)
    “impounded” by an “animal control unit” (CR §10-617). Several Maryland county codes
    – including the code of Washington County, where Mr. Rohrer’s farm is located – also
    allow local governmental units and their agents to “impound” animals “found at large” and
    set forth the procedures to be followed after seizure. See, e.g., Animal Control Ordinance
    of Washington County, Maryland, §39, available at http://www2.washco-
    md.net/washco_2/pdf_files/legal/ ACO%20eff%201-10-11.pdf [https://perma.cc/BUY9-
    RPVF].
    32
    the animal from further neglect or cruelty. Chapter 718, Laws of Maryland 1963.20 The
    statute continued to provide for removal of confined animals when necessary and for
    notification of the owner or custodian “in all cases,” but remained silent on any process for
    return of the animal or the effect of the officer’s action on an individual’s ownership
    interest in the animal.
    1975 amendment – extending basis for removal and adding return procedure
    In 1975, the General Assembly amended the statute in four respects significant to
    this case. Chapter 716, Laws of Maryland 1975. Those amendments enhanced the
    authority of an officer to take possession of a mistreated animal, further defined the process
    to be accorded the owner of the animal, and established a special condition for seizure of
    an animal from a farmer.
    First, the general authority of an officer to “take possession” of an animal no longer
    depended upon the prior conviction of the owner or custodian, but was authorized
    “whenever it becomes necessary to protect any animal from neglect or cruelty.”
    Second, the 1975 amendment expanded the circumstances under which an
    “impounded, yarded, or confined animal” could be removed from that location by an
    officer. While such an action could still be premised on a lack of “necessary food, water
    or proper attention,” an officer could now also take action if the animal was otherwise
    20
    Since their original enactment in 1955, the two sections had been recodified as
    Article 27, §§67, 68 as part of the 1957 Code.
    33
    “cruelly treated or neglected.” And this authority was no longer limited to situations where
    the owner could not be found.
    Third, the 1975 amendment provided, for the first time, some direction in the statute
    with respect to the content of the notice to an owner or custodian and the procedures for
    seeking return of an animal. It reduced the requisite period for a reasonable search for an
    unknown owner or custodian from 30 days to 20 days. It directed that the owner or
    custodian be provided notice not only of the fact that the officer had taken possession of
    the animal, but also of “any administrative remedies.” If no administrative remedy was
    available, the statute now created its own judicial remedy – it authorized the owner or
    custodian to file “within ten days, . . . a petition for return of the animal in the district court
    of the county in which the removal occurred.” If the owner or custodian failed to file such
    a petition, the animal would be regarded as a stray and disposed of accordingly.21
    21
    The 1975 amendment thus elaborated the notice requirement and provided a
    default process for a hearing. The attention paid to the notice and hearing provision in the
    1975 amendment may reflect the concern of courts and lawmakers during the 1970s with
    defining and vindicating the constitutional right to procedural due process in various
    contexts. See, e.g., Goldberg v. Kelly, 
    397 U.S. 254
    (1970) (termination of welfare
    benefits); Fuentes v. Shevin, 
    407 U.S. 67
    (1972) (state replevin statutes); Board of Regents
    v. Roth, 
    408 U.S. 564
    (1972) (termination of non-tenured professor at state university);
    Perry v. Sindermann, 
    408 U.S. 593
    (1972) (termination of tenured professor at state
    universities); Goss v. Lopez, 
    419 U.S. 565
    (1975) (public school suspension of a student);
    Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    (1976) (termination of disability benefits).
    34
    Fourth, the 1975 law also added a special condition for removal of a farm animal –
    such an animal could not be removed without the recommendation of a licensed
    veterinarian.22
    The statute continued to provide that a humane society could collect from the owner
    the expenses of caring for an animal and that the animal was subject to levy and sale upon
    execution of a judgment for those expenses. Article 27, §68 (1975).
    Over the next few decades, the law underwent several other minor revisions not
    pertinent to our discussion.23
    22
    In addition to the amendments made to the seizure statute, the 1975 law made
    several notable amendments to other parts of the animal cruelty laws. In particular, prior
    to passage of the 1975 law, the animal cruelty law had described various ways in which an
    individual with charge or custody of an animal could commit the misdemeanor offense of
    animal cruelty, including by failing to provide an animal with “food, drink, air, space,
    shelter, or protection from the weather.” The 1975 amendment extended the definition of
    that crime to include not only a complete deprivation of those necessities, but also other
    forms of inhumane treatment, such as a failure to provide “nutritious food in sufficient
    quantity, necessary veterinary care, proper drink, air, space, shelter, or protection from the
    weather.” (emphasis added). At the same time, the General Assembly tempered this
    extension of the criminal provision by excluding from its reach certain “customary
    veterinary practices” and other “normal human activities” in which “the infliction of pain
    to an animal is purely incidental and unavoidable.” (e.g., processing animals for food).
    These provisions now appear in CR §10-603 and CR §10-604(a)(5).
    23
    Chapter 803, Laws of Maryland 1976 (changing both references to “officer of an
    animal humane society” to “officer or authorized agent of an animal humane society”);
    Chapter 647, Laws of Maryland 1978 (indicating that, in Baltimore County, the law should
    be enforced by that county’s Bureau of Animal Control); Chapter 528, Laws of Maryland
    1984 (providing that animals in research facilities cannot be removed without review by
    the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s Veterinary Medicine Division); Chapter
    482, Laws of Maryland 1985 (relating to enforcement of the law in Baltimore County);
    Chapter 175, Laws of Maryland 1998 (explicitly authorizing a licensed veterinarian to enter
    35
    2002 – Code Revision
    In 2002, the animal cruelty laws were recodified as part of the new Criminal Law
    Article and the provisions concerning seizure and removal of an animal were largely
    codified in CR §10-615. Chapter 26, Laws of Maryland 2002. The revisor’s note to that
    revision indicates, as is typically the case with code revision, that CR §10-615 is “new
    language derived without substantive change” from the prior version of the statute. It is
    notable, however, that the provision concerning levy and sale of an animal by a humane
    society to cover its expenses, which had always been tethered to the predecessor of CR
    §10-615, was now incorporated in a different statute concerning disposal of domestic
    animals by an animal control unit. See CR §10-617(d)(3). As explained later in this
    opinion, this may have been a drafting error by the code revisors. See footnote 38, below.
    The statute has not undergone any significant amendment since that time.24
    iii.   Summary
    Prior to the 2002 recodification, the statute authorized certain persons – “an officer
    or authorized agent of a humane society, or a police officer or other public official required
    to protect animals” – to “take possession” of an animal “[w]henever it becomes necessary,
    property with a humane society or police officer for the purpose of treating or removing an
    abused animal on the property).
    24
    Since the 2002 recodification, the Legislature has made only one minor
    amendment to CR §10-615 that is not pertinent to this case. See Chapter 25, Laws of
    Maryland 2004 (changing reference to the “Division of Veterinary Medicine” to the
    “Center for Veterinary Public Health”).
    36
    in order to protect [the animal] from neglect or cruelty.” As the revisor’s note indicates,
    this provision became CR §10-615(b)(1), which states that those same persons25 have the
    authority to “seize” an animal “if necessary to protect the animal from cruelty.” Therefore,
    code revision simply substituted the verb “seize” for “take possession of” and “seize,” as
    used in Subsection (b) (1), means “take possession.”
    The focus of Subsection (c) of the statute is primarily to authorize entry into an area
    where a mistreated animal is “impounded, yarded, or confined” without subjecting the
    officer or other person assisting the officer (such as a veterinarian) for liability for trespass
    for that entry. This subsection only incidentally authorizes “removal” of the animal from
    that location if necessary to provide the requisite care for the animal. This subsection does
    not appear to be authority, independent of Subsection (b), for an officer to take possession
    of an animal; rather, it directs an officer to exercise the power conferred by Subsection (b)
    in certain circumstances. This provision operates essentially to exempt an officer and
    others involved in a seizure from liability for trespass while rescuing neglected or
    mistreated animals that are confined.
    25
    For convenience, we shall use the generic term “officer” in this opinion to refer
    generally to an individual authorized to take action under CR §10-615.
    37
    3.     The Notice Requirement and Petition for Return
    i.     Notice Requirement
    Subsection (d)(1) states that “[a] person who removes an animal under subsection
    (c) of this section” must “notify the animal’s owner or custodian” of “the removal” and
    “any available administrative remedies.” Read literally, this language would apply only to
    mistreated animals that are removed from their place of confinement under Subsection (c)
    and not to other animals seized pursuant to Subsection (b). However, as is evident from
    our recitation of the legislative history of the statute, the notice requirement, since the
    inception of the statute, was intended to apply “in all cases,” and removal under Subsection
    (c) is simply one circumstance in which an officer exercises the authority conferred by
    Subsection (b). Nor is there any indication in the legislative history that the General
    Assembly subsequently intended to limit the notice requirement.
    In our view, the placement of the notice requirement in Subsection (c) as part of the
    2002 recodification of the statute was not intended to effect a substantive change in the
    breadth of the notice requirement. In other words, the statute requires notice to a known
    owner or custodian any time an officer takes possession of a mistreated animal under CR
    §10-615 in order to protect the animal. To read the statute otherwise could raise significant
    due process issues. See, e.g., Porter v. DiBlasio, 
    93 F.3d 301
    (6th Cir. 1996) (holding that
    a state may not terminate an individual’s interest in seized animals without notice and a
    hearing).
    38
    ii.    Judicial Return Remedy
    As the statutory text indicates, the statute incorporates whatever administrative
    remedy may exist in the particular jurisdiction for the return of a seized animal. The
    statute’s judicial remedy is a default remedy that becomes available only if no
    administrative remedy exists. Unfortunately, as the District Court noted in this case, the
    statute provides no explicit guidance as to the standard by which a petition for return should
    be decided, or even who has the burden of proof. It seems fair to infer that the seizing party
    would have the burden of justifying the legality of the seizure and its retention of the animal
    by establishing the statutory predicates for a seizure – that the seizure was “necessary to
    protect the animal from cruelty” or “necessary for the health of the animal.”
    The legislative history, as well as common sense, likewise informs our reading of
    the deadline for invoking the judicial remedy. Subsection (e)(1) literally requires an owner
    who is notified of the seizure of an animal to file a petition for return of the animal “within
    10 days after removal” of the animal, not within 10 days after notice of the removal. Failure
    to file a petition means that the animal will be deemed a stray and disposed of accordingly.
    If this provision were interpreted literally, an owner who was notified of the seizure of an
    animal 11 days after the seizure could never file a timely petition for return and exercise
    the remedy of which he or she was being notified. The legislative history demonstrates
    39
    that this nonsensical result is not what the Legislature intended.26 Prior to the 2002 code
    revision, the statute stated that “the owner or custodian of [the seized] animal shall be
    notified … [and] may file within ten days, if no administrative remedy is available, a
    petition for return of the animal….” Maryland Code, Article 27, §67 (1998). Thus, the
    triggering event for the beginning of the time period for filing a petition was the notification
    of the owner or custodian. As previously noted, the 2002 code revision was not intended
    to effect a substantive change in this provision. Therefore, we read Subsection (e)(1) as
    imposing a similar deadline – i.e., an owner or custodian must file a petition for return no
    more than 10 days after the seizing party provides notice under Subsection (d)(1), or the
    animal will be “considered a stray” pursuant to Subsection (e)(1).
    4.      Summary
    Our review of the statute, in light of its legislative history, yields the following
    conclusions:
     Subsection (b)(1) confers on an officer the authority to seize – i.e.,
    take possession of – a mistreated animal if necessary to protect the
    animal from cruelty.
     Subsection (c) provides some specific direction as to seizure under
    specific circumstances – when removal of an animal from a place
    of confinement is necessary for the health of the animal. It absolves
    an officer of liability for trespass when entering an area to care for,
    or to take possession of, a mistreated animal.
    26
    See Breck v. Maryland State Police, 
    452 Md. 229
    , 248 (2017) (“In our task of
    statutory interpretation, we avoid any construction of a statute that would lead to illogical,
    absurd, or anomalous results.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    40
     Whenever an animal is seized by an officer under the statute, the
    officer must notify the animal’s owner or custodian as prescribed
    in Subsection (d)(1), if the owner or custodian is known, and
    otherwise must make reasonable efforts to locate the owner or
    custodian for at least 20 days in order to provide notice of the
    seizure.
       The owner or custodian may seek return of the animal pursuant to
    any available administrative remedy. If there is no administrative
    remedy available, the owner or custodian has 10 days from the time
    of the notice to file a petition for return of the animal pursuant to
    Subsection (d)(2). A failure to do so results in the animal’s
    treatment as a stray under Subsection (e)(1).
     While the statute is silent on how a petition for return is to be
    litigated, it appears appropriate for the court to require the seizing
    party to establish that seizure was – and remains – necessary to
    prevent cruelty or to maintain the health of the animal.
    C.     Whether the Timing of the Notice of the Seizure Was Appropriate
    Mr. Rohrer argues that the Humane Society did not satisfy the predicate for seizure
    of his animals under CR §10-615 when it gave notice of its action for two reasons, both
    related to the timing of the notice provided by the Humane Society. First, he asserts that
    the seizure and notice were defective under CR §10-615 because the animals were no
    longer in his custody at the time of the January 2015 notice, but rather were in State custody
    – indeed, under the care of the Humane Society itself – pursuant to the criminal search and
    seizure warrant. Second, he contends that the conditions that allegedly justified seizure
    under the statute – the conditions observed by Officer Mowery and Dr. Wurmb at the farm
    in November 2014 – no longer existed at the time of the January 2015 notice. One
    contention is that the Humane Society acted too soon – it should have waited until the
    41
    animals were released to Mr. Rohrer from State custody. The other is that the Humane
    Society acted too late – the notice was based on past conditions remote in time.
    1.     Notice of Seizure by Humane Society while Animals Are in State Custody
    As noted earlier, the notice of “seizure/removal” under CR §10-615 posted by
    Officer Mowery appeared to state that the animals had been seized and removed under that
    authority in November and December 2014, although she later testified in the District Court
    that the Humane Society did not decide to invoke its authority under the statute until shortly
    before she posted the notice at Mr. Rohrer’s farm on January 20, 2015.27 It is undisputed
    that the animals were physically removed from Mr. Rohrer’s farm under the authority of a
    criminal search and seizure warrant during November and December 2014.28 As the State’s
    agent, the Humane Society took custody of those animals and placed them with foster
    farms.29
    27
    CR §10-615(b) may well be the authority for a humane society officer to
    participate in the execution of a search and seizure warrant.
    28
    Because the officers’ entry on Mr. Rohrer’s farm and the physical seizure of his
    animals was authorized by a criminal search and seizure warrant, we need not consider
    whether a seizure under CR §10-615 without a warrant could be justified as a search under
    exigent circumstances, as an administrative search of a pervasively regulated business (see
    New York v. Burger, 
    482 U.S. 691
    (1987)), or under some other exception to the warrant
    requirement.
    29
    The parties, as well as the courts below, appear to have assumed that the animals
    were seized and held as “evidence” of the alleged animal cruelty violations. There are
    several reasons to question that assumption and at least one reason to believe that the
    warrant itself was based in part on the authority granted by CR §10-615.
    42
    Mr. Rohrer argues that, because the animals were formally in the custody of the
    State pursuant to the search warrant as of the January 2015 notice, they were not subject to
    seizure and removal from their owner at that time by the Humane Society pursuant to CR
    §10-615. In Mr. Rohrer’s view, there was no risk of harm to the animals while they were
    in the custody of the State (indeed, under the supervision of the Humane Society itself) and
    the statute does not authorize the Humane Society to seize animals from the State. He
    argues that the Humane Society could not act under the statute unless and until the animals
    were released to him at the conclusion of the criminal case. In addition, he asserts that the
    Humane Society’s premature notice under CR §10-615 unfairly forced him to litigate the
    It is unclear from the record in this case whether the seized animals were presented
    in court or visited by the judge who presided at the criminal trial, although we suspect we
    know the answer. The criminal trial was held in May and July 2015, at least five months
    after seizure of the animals, which presumably were well cared-for in the interim. Their
    appearance and condition at the time of trial might have had little relation to their condition
    at the time of seizure.
    We do have the record of the earlier hearing on the Petition for Return under CR
    §10-615 in February and March 2015. At that hearing, the parties did not physically
    present the animals to the court for inspection, but rather relied on testimony and
    photographs of the animals and the farm from November and December 2014, which
    presumably were better evidence of whether the statutory conditions were met at the time
    of seizure.
    It is also notable that, while the search warrant authorized executing officers
    generally to seize “evidence” of animal cruelty violations, it also specifically directed them
    to “seize any animal found to be deprived of nutritious food and water, at the
    recommendation of the veterinarian on the scene” – a provision apparently designed to
    conform with the requirements of CR §10-615(c) & (f)(2).
    43
    allegations of animal cruelty in a civil context while he was a defendant in a parallel
    criminal proceeding concerning the same allegations.
    In our view, the posting of the notice may be best understood as notice of the
    Humane Society’s intent to keep the animals after resolution of the criminal case. When
    property is in State custody pursuant to a warrant it is “subject to the order of the court
    having criminal jurisdiction of the offense.”30 At the conclusion of the criminal case,
    property properly seized under a search and seizure warrant may simply be returned to the
    person from whom it was seized. Maryland Code, Criminal Procedure Article (“CP”), §1-
    203(c). Alternatively, the owner may seek return of the property from the State if there is
    no further need for retention of the property for law enforcement purposes. CP §1-203(d).
    Although such possession by the State “in no manner denies or affects the title of the true
    owner, but simply postpones his right of possession until the exigencies of the prosecution
    are satisfied,”31 the court’s authority over the property generally is not subject to
    interference in another proceeding.32 CR §10-615 does not create an exception to these
    principles.
    30
    Outerbridge Horsey Co. v. Martin, 
    142 Md. 52
    , 56 (1923).
    31
    Good v. Board of Police Comm’rs of City of Baltimore, 
    137 Md. 192
    , 196 (1921)
    (quoting Commission & Stock Co. v. Moore, 
    13 App. D.C. 78
    (1898)).
    32
    Dail v. Price, 
    184 Md. 140
    , 144 (1944) (“[W]hile the criminal case is pending,
    the articles cannot be replevied because they are in custodia legis.”); Weiprecht v. Ripple,
    
    217 Md. 337
    , 350 (1958) (“A lien cannot be obtained on property in custodia legis.”);
    Outerbridge Horsey Co. v. Martin, 
    142 Md. 52
    , 55 (1923) (“[W]hen a court acquires
    jurisdiction of goods, chattels, or money in one case, the orderly process of the court
    44
    It may well be reasonable in a particular case for a humane society to seek to
    maintain possession of animals seized under a search warrant regardless of the outcome of
    a parallel criminal case. There is a heightened standard of proof in criminal cases and even
    if that standard is met and the defendant is convicted, the court is not required to dispossess
    the defendant of an animal as part of the sentence. The humane society may decide that,
    regardless of the disposition of the criminal charges, removal of the animal from its owner
    will be “necessary to protect the animal from cruelty” or “necessary for the health of the
    animal.” To the extent that the Humane Society in this case was concerned that a return of
    the animals to Mr. Rohrer at the conclusion of the criminal case would subject the animals
    to abuse or neglect, and believed that it should continue to possess and care for them, it
    was reasonable to provide Mr. Rohrer with notice of that position. In effect, such a notice
    functioned as a sort of detainer – much like an arrest warrant is lodged as a detainer against
    a person already incarcerated for other reasons.
    Mr. Rohrer timely filed a Petition for Return in response to the January 2015 notice.
    The District Court held a hearing on that petition,33 and made the eminently sensible
    requires that it shall be permitted to determine the rights of the parties in that case, without
    the interference or interruption of a conflicting jurisdiction or of a separate and distinct
    action or proceeding.”)
    33
    Although it is not entirely clear from the transcript, it appears that the court and
    parties may have assumed that Mr. Rohrer bore the burden of proof on the Petition for
    Return. While a petitioner, as moving party, bears a burden of production of evidence, it
    is probably more appropriate to place the burden of persuasion on the Humane Society, as
    the statute sets forth a standard it must meet to effect a seizure.
    45
    decision not to affect the possession of the animals while the criminal case was pending.
    If a similar case were to arise in the future, it might well be preferable to defer any hearing
    and decision on a petition for return of an animal until after the conclusion of the criminal
    case – for several reasons. First, as was the case here, adjudication of the petition in that
    circumstance is unlikely to have any immediate effect on custody of the animal. Second,
    whether the statutory standard for removal of an animal from its owner or custodian – the
    need to protect the animal from cruelty or to preserve its health – exists should be measured
    not only as of the time of seizure, but also as of the time the animal would be released to
    the owner or custodian, which may be in the distant future, depending on the schedule of
    the criminal case. Third, litigation of the petition for return while parallel criminal charges
    are pending may be unfair to the owner or custodian. Finally, although it did not happen
    in this case, the pending parallel criminal proceeding may itself resolve disposition of the
    animals, rendering further litigation of a petition for return unnecessary.
    Thus, we hold that a humane society officer may, while an animal is in State custody
    pursuant to a search and seizure warrant, notify the owner or prior custodian of the animal
    of an intent to take possession of the animal upon its release from State custody under the
    warrant. Nothing in CR §10-615 forecloses this reading, and this interpretation furthers
    the Legislature’s intent of preventing animal cruelty by allowing an officer to assert
    proactively the authority to continue to possess (and care for) an animal that has already
    been seized in connection with a criminal investigation.
    46
    2.     Reference to Past Conditions to Justify Seizure
    The allegations of animal cruelty in this case related to the condition of the animals
    on Mr. Rohrer’s farm as observed by Officer Mowery and Dr. Wurmb in late November
    2014. The animals were removed from the farm in late November and early December
    2014 pursuant to the search warrant. Thus, by the time of the notice of “seizure/removal”
    in late January 2015, the animals no longer lived under the allegedly deficient conditions.
    Indeed, by that time, the animals had been in the custody of the Humane Society itself (on
    behalf of the State) for at least six weeks. Unsurprisingly, nothing in the notice tied the
    Humane Society’s decision to the circumstances of the animals at the time the notice was
    given.
    Mr. Rohrer argues that the “conditions permitting removal under CR §10-615 did
    not exist” when the January 20, 2015 notice was given. Because the animals were at the
    Humane Society’s foster farms at that time, and presumably in good care, Mr. Rohrer
    argues that seizure at that time could not have been necessary for the health of the animals.
    In our view, an officer may rely on previously-observed conditions to justify seizure
    of an animal under CR §10-615. The physical act of taking possession of an animal need
    not be contemporaneous with the conditions on which the officer relies to take possession.
    Nothing in the statute requires that an officer seize a mistreated animal at the moment the
    officer first observes abuse or neglect. On the other hand, the age of the evidence of
    mistreatment is a relevant consideration for a court that must decide whether seizure by the
    officer was truly “necessary to protect the animal from cruelty” or “necessary for the health
    47
    of the animal.” Just as the evidence establishing the probable cause supporting a search
    and seizure warrant may grow stale with the passage of time, the evidence allowing an
    officer to take action under CR §10-615 may, with the passage of time, become too
    attenuated to support that action. In the context of a criminal search warrant, staleness is
    assessed according to the circumstances of the particular case by factors such as the
    “passage of time, the particular kind of criminal activity involved, the length of the activity,
    and the nature of the property to be seized.” Patterson v. State, 
    401 Md. 76
    , 92-93 (2007);
    see also Greenstreet v. State, 
    392 Md. 652
    , 674-77 (2006). Similar factors may be applied
    in assessing the timeliness of the justification for a seizure under CR §10-615.
    As indicated in Part II.B.4 of this opinion, when an owner of an animal files a
    petition for return of the animal, a humane society has the burden of persuading the court
    that the seizure was – and remains – “necessary” under the terms of the statute. An owner
    may challenge the humane society’s retention of the animals in two respects: (1) whether
    the statutory standard was satisfied at the time of seizure and (2) even if the standard was
    satisfied at the time of seizure, whether the humane society’s continued possession of the
    animals remains “necessary.”
    The January 2015 notice, as amended in February 2015, clearly related the
    justification for the seizure to the conditions at the time the animals were removed from
    Mr. Rohrer’s farm in November and December 2014. Effectively, the Humane Society
    related the notice of seizure under CR §10-615 back to the time of the seizure under the
    warrant.   At the hearing on the Petition for Return, the Humane Society presented
    48
    testimony from Officer Mowrey and Dr. Wurmb about what they observed when Mr.
    Rohrer’s animals were first seized in late 2014. The District Court clearly found this
    testimony credible and relevant, specifically adverting to it when making its ruling. Mr.
    Rohrer does not argue that the District Court’s findings in this regard were clearly
    erroneous.
    However, Mr. Rohrer was entitled to contest whether the Humane Society’s
    continued possession of his animals was necessary to protect the animals from cruelty – or
    necessary for their health – at the time they would be released from State custody under
    the warrant. The District Court did not consider that question – understandably because
    the criminal charges remained pending at the time of its ruling and no one knew at that
    time when the criminal case would be resolved and when, if ever, the animals would be
    formally transferred from the State to the Humane Society. In our view, that remained an
    open question that neither the District Court nor the Circuit Court purported to decide.
    Thus, the District Court properly considered the evidence concerning the conditions
    at Mr. Rohrer’s farm at the time the animals were removed in November and December
    2014 and, in light of the pending criminal case, did not reach the question of whether the
    requisite necessity supporting the Humane Society’s possession of the animals continued
    to exist. In conducting an on-the-record appeal, the Circuit Court purported only to assess
    the merits of that decision as of the time it was made. Now that the criminal case has been
    concluded and the animals have been released from custody under the search warrant, the
    49
    District Court may consider the question of whether it remains necessary for the Humane
    Society to retain the animals to prevent abuse or neglect or to maintain their health.
    D.     Whether Denial of Petition for Return Affected Ownership Interest
    Finally, we turn to the legal effect of an adjudication of a petition for return of an
    animal. In denying Mr. Rohrer’s Petition for Return, the District Court decided that it was
    best for the seized animals to remain under the care of the Humane Society while the
    criminal charges were pending and alluded to “the best interest of the animals.” The Circuit
    Court apparently adopted the same standard when it affirmed the decision of the District
    Court and also referred to “the best interests of the animals.” When Mr. Rohrer’s counsel
    raised the question of the consequences of that decision for ownership of the animals, the
    District Court indicated its belief that the statute did not affect ownership and also noted
    the December 2014 agreement in which the Humane Society acknowledged Mr. Rohrer’s
    continuing ownership of the animals.       The District Court explicitly disclaimed any
    intention of deciding title to the animals and the Circuit Court implicitly seemed to take
    the same position.
    Whether the issue should be addressed
    Mr. Rohrer argues that denial of his Petition for Return did not affect his ownership
    of the animals while the criminal charges were pending. The Humane Society counters
    that the issue is not ripe for our review. However, the Humane Society took the position
    below that the denial of the petition, coupled with the conclusion of the criminal case (even
    though largely favorable to Mr. Rohrer), divested Mr. Rohrer of his interest in the animals.
    50
    It proceeded to dispose of half of the animals in its custody before that process was halted
    by the District Court.
    The effect of the denial of the petition on ownership of the animals was certainly
    raised in the courts below and at least tentatively decided by the District Court.
    Accordingly, it was preserved for purposes of Maryland Rule 8-131(a). Moreover, to the
    extent that we agree with the District Court’s disposition of the Petition for Return, it is
    important to indicate the significance of that disposition. Finally, the status of the animals
    apparently remains an issue in the pending replevin case and some guidance as to the effect
    of the denial of the Petition for Return may be useful to the court tasked with deciding that
    case.
    Whether the proceeding concerns a potential forfeiture
    Subsection (d)(2) of the statute allows the filing of a petition for return of an animal,
    but provides no explicit guidance on the nature of the proceeding that decides the merits of
    that petition.34 Under one possible reading of the statute, adjudication of a petition for
    return would determine ownership of the animal. Under this view, granting the petition
    would keep title in – and return possession to – the owner; denying the petition would
    34
    It is notable that a statute that authorizes the Maryland Horse Industry Board to
    take possession of mistreated horses pursuant to CR §10-615 provides additional guidance
    for the adjudication of a petition for return in that instance. See AG §2-716. An owner or
    custodian who files a petition for return is entitled to return of the horse if the owner or
    custodian (1) agrees to provide “proper attention” to the horse and (2) pays the costs and
    expenses involved in the seizure and maintenance of the horse. AG §2-716(c)(1).
    51
    transfer title to – and retain possession in – the Humane Society. Subsection (d)(2) would
    operate as a civil forfeiture statute.35 This is the interpretation that was advocated by the
    Humane Society.
    We reject that interpretation. First, “it has long been settled . . . that forfeitures are
    not favored in the law”36 and are considered “harsh extractions, odious, and to be avoided
    when possible.”37 Second, Subsections (b) and (c) allow an officer only to “seize” – i.e.,
    “take possession of” – or remove an allegedly mistreated animal. As the District Court
    noted, the statute says nothing about transferring ownership of the animal.
    Third, other parts of the statute do not appear to contemplate that a seizure effects a
    transfer of ownership. For example, at its inception, the legislation that is now codified at
    CR §10-615 provided that a humane society could recover its expenses through levy and
    sale of a seized animal following a judgment – giving the humane society a lien on property
    of the owner – i.e., the animal. The premise for that procedure is that the animal still
    35
    See generally Bottini v. Department of Finance, 
    450 Md. 177
    , 190-91 (2016)
    (explaining the history and operation of forfeiture law in the State). Maryland’s criminal
    forfeiture statutes are codified in the Maryland Code, Criminal Procedure Article, Titles 12
    and 13. They provide for the forfeiture of, among other things, illegal drugs and drug
    paraphernalia, CP §12-102, money involved with illegal gambling operations, CP §13-102,
    and guns used to commit certain crimes, CP §13-201. There is no provision in those laws
    for forfeiture of an ownership interest in an animal.
    36
    Prince George’s County v. Vieira, 
    340 Md. 651
    , 659 (1995).
    37
    State to Use of Frederick City Police Department v. One 1988 Toyota Pick-Up
    Truck Vin. JT4RN63A5J0211499, 
    334 Md. 359
    , 375 (1994).
    52
    belonged to the owner.38 Moreover, an owner of an animal retains that interest in the
    animal even if the animal becomes a stray.39 Subsection (e) of the statute provides that
    failure to file a petition for return results in the animal’s classification as stray. It would
    be illogical to read CR §10-615 as effecting forfeiture when a petition for return is denied,
    but not when a petition for return is never even filed.
    Finally, we note that the petition process provided in Subsection (d)(2) is a default
    procedure that is available only “[i]f an administrative remedy is not available” in the
    particular jurisdiction. If this default process were construed to create a forfeiture, a seizure
    under CR §10-615 could result in a forfeiture in one jurisdiction while a similar seizure in
    another jurisdiction would not. It seems unlikely that the General Assembly would intend
    38
    That provision remained in the statute when the petition for return process was
    added in 1975. As noted earlier, as part of the 2002 recodification this provision found its
    way into CR §10-617 concerning impoundment of domestic animals. This appears to have
    been a drafting error. Prior to the 2002 recodification, the lien provision appeared in former
    Article 27, §68 and explicitly cross-referenced former Article 27, §67 – the predecessor of
    CR §10-615. During the 1960s and 1970s, the General Assembly enacted two provisions
    concerning dogs and domestic animals, which were codified as §67A and §67B. Although
    §68 still clearly applied only to expenses incurred under §67 (i.e., current CR §10-615),
    the code revisors elected to combine §68 with §67B in new CR 10-617 – a decision that
    appears to have been based on the physical proximity of §68 to §67B, as opposed to the
    explicit textual relationship of §68 to §67.
    39
    See, e.g., Brown v. State, 
    236 Md. 505
    , 513 (1964) (noting that, because “stray
    domestic animals remain in the constructive possession of their owner,” one may be
    convicted of larceny for fraudulently taking and carrying them away) (emphasis added);
    Annapolis & E.R. Co. v. Baldwin, 
    60 Md. 88
    , 91-92 (1883) (although an owner of a stray
    animal is liable for direct damages caused by the animal, the owner is not liable for
    consequential damages unless the plaintiff proves the owner negligently allowed the animal
    to stray).
    53
    such a result. We decline to read a forfeiture provision into CR §10-615 when the statute
    does not explicitly include one and when doing so appears to be at odds with some parts of
    the statute.
    The standard to be applied under CR §10-615(d)(2)
    We also do not adopt the label that the District Court attached to the standard it
    applied in deciding the Petition for Return, although that decision, and its apparent
    rationale, appear to be unassailable. The District Court and Circuit Court understandably
    felt at a loss for what standard to apply to decide the petition, as the statute is not explicit,
    and latched onto a familiar phrase – “best interests” – from family law.40 See Santo v.
    Santo, 
    448 Md. 620
    , 626 (2016) (guiding principle in child custody disputes is “best
    interests of the child”). In our view, use of that label could be misleading. It was
    undisputed that most, if not all, of Mr. Rohrer’s animals (other than some of the chickens,
    which the Humane Society did not remove from the farm) were destined for the
    slaughterhouse. From the perspective of the animal, any action that would take it closer to
    the slaughterhouse would not be in its “best interests.” We shall refrain from using the
    phrase “best interests of the animals” lest the possession or return of farm animals under
    CR §10-615 should become confused with a child custody determination in family law.
    40
    Neither of the parties in this case proposed or argued for application of a “best
    interests” standard.
    54
    In the context of a petition for return of animals under CR §10-615, we understand
    the District Court’s use of the term “best interests” in this case as a shorthand for the
    statutory phrases “necessary to protect the animal from cruelty” and “necessary for the
    health of the animal.” That is how the Legislature has phrased the prerequisite for seizure
    of an animal under Subsections (b) and (c). Logically, the owner is not entitled to return
    of the animals for the duration of that necessity. The court may decide that possession by
    the seizing party was once “necessary,” but is no longer so (perhaps the owner or custodian
    has rectified the conditions justifying the initial seizure), which would mean that the owner
    or custodian would be entitled to return of the animal. Or the court may decide that
    possession by the seizing party was never – and is therefore currently not – “necessary,”
    which would also result in a return of the animal. Or the court may decide that possession
    by the seizing party was and remains “necessary,” which would mean that the humane
    society may retain the animal, at least as long as it is “necessary to protect the animal from
    cruelty or “necessary for the health of the animal.”41 But this does not effect a permanent
    transfer of ownership.
    41
    The statute does not preclude the owner or custodian who has filed a timely
    petition from filing another petition for return in the District Court. Alternatively, the
    owner or custodian may file a replevin action against the seizing party. See, e.g., Wallander
    v. Barnes, 
    341 Md. 553
    , 561 (1996) (“Replevin may be said to be the appropriate remedy
    in all cases where the object of the suit is to recover possession of specific goods and
    chattels, to the possession of which the plaintiff claims to be entitled at the time of
    instituting the suit.” (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)).
    55
    In our view, the function of a proceeding on a petition for return is to determine who
    has the right to possess the animal in question – i.e., to determine if possession of the animal
    by a humane society was and remains necessary under the statutory standard. Such a
    decision, however, does not affect an ownership right in the animal.
    III
    Conclusion
    For the reasons explained above, we hold:
    (1) Although a humane society acting under CR §10-615 may not take possession
    of an animal that is already in State custody pursuant to a criminal search warrant, the
    humane society may notify the animal’s owner or custodian of its intent to take possession
    of the animal under that statute upon the animal’s release from State custody.
    (2) When a humane society takes possession of an animal pursuant to CR §10-615
    based on the alleged abuse or neglect of the animal, the conditions that justify the seizure
    of the animal need not be precisely contemporaneous with the seizure. The temporal
    relationship between alleged circumstances of abuse or neglect and the time that the
    humane society takes possession of the animal, however, is relevant to a determination
    whether the humane society’s action is “necessary to protect the animal from cruelty” or
    “necessary for the health of the animal.” In any event, in a case where an animal is seized
    pursuant to a criminal search warrant based on a finding of probable cause of violations of
    the animal cruelty statute, the humane society may take possession of the animal upon
    release from custody under the warrant based on the same allegations that supported seizure
    56
    under the warrant if it believes that the statutory standard continues to be met at the time
    of release. The humane society may be required to justify that belief in an appropriate
    administrative proceeding or in the adjudication of a petition for return under CR §10-
    615(d)(2).
    (3) Denial of a petition for return of an animal under CR §10-615(d)(2) affirms the
    right of the humane society to take temporary possession of the animal; it does not vest the
    humane society with ownership of the animal. The right to possess the animal, however,
    reverts back to the owner when possession by the humane society is no longer necessary
    to protect the animal from cruelty or necessary for the health of the animal.
    What do these holdings mean for Mr. Rohrer’s animals, to the extent they are still
    in the Humane Society’s custody?42 Because the Humane Society’s invocation of CR §10-
    615 was not defective due to its timing or the fact that the animals were in State custody at
    the time it was invoked, Mr. Rohrer was not entitled to return of the animals for an alleged
    failure by the Humane Society to comply with CR §10-615 at the time the Humane Society
    provided notice to him. On the other hand, the denial of the petition for return of the
    animals did not eliminate Mr. Rohrer’s ownership interest in the animals. It may be that
    42
    At oral argument we were advised that some of the goats had run away, that some
    animals had been sold by the Humane Society following the criminal trial until halted by
    the District Court’s order on September 1, 2015, and that some animals were subsequently
    returned to Mr. Rohrer under an interlocutory order in the replevin case. There apparently
    remain unresolved issues in that case concerning Mr. Rohrer’s entitlement to proceeds of
    the sales of animals and liability for the expenses of the animals’ care.
    57
    possession of the animals by the Humane Society is no longer “necessary to protect the
    animal from cruelty” or “necessary for the health of the animal.” But that issue is not
    before us.
    In the context of this proceeding, we will remand the case to the Circuit Court with
    instructions to remand the case to the District Court so that the District Court may consider
    whether the change in circumstances since its initial decision – that is, the dismissal or
    acquittal of the vast majority of the criminal charges against Mr. Rohrer, the release of the
    animals from seizure under the search warrant, and the condition of Mr. Rohrer’s probation
    that requires him to implement a farm management plan overseen by the Humane Society,
    and other relevant circumstances – merit a different disposition of his petition for return of
    the animals. We leave it to the judgment of the Circuit Court whether to continue the stay
    of Mr. Rohrer’s pending replevin action and to ultimately consolidate the two proceedings
    to resolve issues of possession and title to the animals.
    PURSUANT TO MARYLAND RULE 8-604(D), CASE
    REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    WASHINGTON COUNTY WITH DIRECTION TO
    REMAND THE CASE TO THE DISTRICT COURT FOR
    FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS
    OPINION. COSTS TO BE DIVIDED EQUALLY BETWEEN
    THE PARTIES.
    58