I.B. v. Frederick Cnty. Dept. of Soc. Services ( 2018 )


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  • I.B. v. Frederick County Department of Social Services, No. 1497, September Term,
    2016. Opinion by Sharer, J.
    FAMILY LAW – INDICATED CHILD NEGLECT – IMPLIED ELEMENT OF
    SCIENTER
    The Family Law Article § 5-701 definition of “Neglect” is distinguishable from the
    statute’s definition of “Abuse” and does not imply the same element of scienter. The
    Court of Appeals’s decisions in Taylor v. Harford Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    384 Md. 213
    (2004) and McClanahan v. Washington Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    445 Md. 691
     (2015),
    holding the element of scienter is implicit in findings for both indicated child abuse –
    physical injury and for indicated child abuse – mental injury, respectively, do not extend
    to findings of indicated child neglect. The language of the COMAR provision that
    supported an implicit element of scienter for child abuse, where the contact was
    “accidental and unintended,” is not found under the same COMAR provision for child
    neglect regulations.
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – SUMMARY                               DECISION        –    HEARING
    REQUIREMENT – STATUTORY ESTOPPEL
    The ALJ did not err in granting summary decision, dismissing father’s administrative
    appeal of an indicated child neglect finding, following his guilty plea to a related criminal
    charge that arose out of the indicated child neglect pursuant to Md. Code, Family Law §
    5-706.1(b)(3)(ii). Under the statute, when DSS moved for summary decision to dismiss
    the administrative appeal based on the finding of guilt of the related criminal charge and
    presented uncontroverted evidence that the finding of guilt of the related criminal charge
    arose out of the same finding of indicated neglect, the ALJ was deprived of the discretion
    to rule other than to dismiss the appeal.
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – SUMMARY DECISION – FACTUAL SUPPORT –
    PRESERVATION
    An issue alleging a dispute of material fact not presented to the ALJ for its initial
    consideration of a motion for summary decision of an administrative appeal may not later
    be asserted for the first time on judicial review of the ALJ’s decision.
    Circuit Court for Frederick County
    Case No. 10-C-16-000236
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1497
    September Term, 2016
    ______________________________________
    I.B.
    v.
    FREDERICK COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF
    SOCIAL SERVICES
    ___________________________________
    *Woodward, C.J.,
    Reed,
    Sharer, J. Frederick
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Sharer, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: November 29, 2018
    *Woodward, J., now retired, participated in the
    hearing and preparation of this opinion, and
    participated in the Court’s decision to designate
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    this opinion for publication pursuant to Md.
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document " authentic.
    Rule 8-605.1, while an active member of this
    2018-11-30 16:27-05:00
    Court and as its Chief Judge.
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Acting Clerk
    Appellant, I.B.1, seeks reversal of an order of the Circuit Court for Frederick
    County affirming the grant of summary decision, entered by an Administrative Law
    Judge, finding an “indication of child neglect” sought by the Frederick County
    Department of Social Services (DSS), appellee. In his timely appeal, I.B., questions: (1)
    the sufficiency of the evidence to support a summary decision by the ALJ; (2) the failure
    of the ALJ to hold a hearing on his motion; and (3) whether intent is a requisite element
    of neglect under Maryland Code (1984, 2012 Repl. Vol., 2015 Supp.), Family Law
    Article (FL) § 5-701.2
    I. BACKGROUND
    The underlying facts are not in dispute. In July 2015, I.B. took his children to
    church, unintentionally leaving his infant daughter in her car seat in the back of the car,
    on a hot day with the front windows slightly open. Authorities were called, who removed
    the child from the car. I.B. acknowledged that, while attending to the other children, he
    had forgotten that his daughter was in the car. The incident was reported to DSS, which
    1
    In keeping with this Court’s policy of protecting privacy in cases involving children,
    and in response to appellant’s Motion to Reconsider/Revise, we identify appellant by
    initials only.
    2
    All subsequent statutory references, unless otherwise indicated, shall be to the Family
    Law Article of the Maryland Code (1984, 2012 Repl. Vol., 2015 Supp.), which reflects
    the version of the relevant statutes in effect at the time of the incident. Similarly, all
    references to the Code of Maryland Regulations (COMAR), unless indicated otherwise,
    shall be to the 2015 version of COMAR, which reflects the version of the regulations in
    effect at the time of the incident.
    initiated an investigation, ultimately making a finding of indicated3 child neglect.4 I.B.
    requested a contested case hearing pursuant to FL § 5-706.1(b)(1), but, as provided by the
    statute, that proceeding was stayed pending the outcome of the pending criminal case, in
    which I.B. was charged with neglect of a minor5 and confinement of a minor in an
    unattended vehicle.6 The State nol prossed the child neglect charge and I.B. pleaded
    guilty to confinement of a minor, a misdemeanor, subjecting the offender to both a
    monetary fine and imprisonment. He was afforded probation before judgment.7
    Following disposition of the criminal charges, the stay was lifted in the family law
    proceeding. DSS moved for summary decision to dismiss the request for hearing based
    on the finding of guilt in the criminal proceeding, pursuant to FL § 5-706.1(b)(3)(ii). I.B.
    opposed the summary decision on the ground that the criminal charge was not similar to
    3
    FL § 5-701 defines “Indicated” as “a finding that there is credible evidence, which has
    not been satisfactorily refuted, that … neglect … did occur.” FL § 5-701(m).
    4
    FL § 5-701 defines “Neglect” as the “leaving of a child unattended or other failure to
    give proper care and attention to a child by any parent … of the child under
    circumstances that indicate … that the child’s health or welfare is harmed or placed at
    substantial risk of harm[.]” FL § 5-701(s)(1).
    5
    Maryland Code (2002, 2012 Repl. Vol.), Criminal Law Article § 3-602.1(b), Neglect of
    a Minor.
    6
    Pursuant to FL § 5-801(a), for the confinement of a minor:
    A person who is charged with the care of a child under the age of 8 years
    may not allow the child to be locked or confined in a … motor vehicle
    while the person charged is absent and the … motor vehicle is out of the
    sight of the person charged ….
    7
    In granting I.B. probation before judgment, the District Judge observed: “You have no
    prior criminal record. I’m sure it was unintentional.”
    2
    the family law neglect offense and that the criminal court did not find him guilty of
    neglect. The ALJ issued a summary decision granting DSS’s motion, relying on the fact
    that I.B. (1) failed to dispute any evidence that the finding of indicated neglect was based
    on the same incident as the guilty plea charge,8 and (2) the provisions of FL § 5-
    706.1(b)(3)(ii).9
    ALJ’s Findings and Decision
    The ALJ’s decision on the motion for summary decision was fully developed and
    supported in its written decision, but did not detail the sufficiency of the DSS’s finding of
    “indicated neglect.” Rather, the ALJ focused on what was undisputed and relevant to the
    question of whether dismissal of the administrative appeal was appropriate. The ALJ
    found:
    1. On July 27 [sic], 2015, the Local Department [DSS] received a
    report of an unattended child found alone within a car at 9:30 a.m.
    The car with the unattended child inside was parked at [I.B.’s]
    family church parking lot.
    2. The unattended child found inside the car is the biological child of
    [I.B.].
    3. The unattended child resided with [I.B.], [its] biological mother and
    siblings.
    8
    Several times in its written decision, the ALJ mentioned I.B.’s failure to “submit any
    affidavit or exhibits with [his] answer to the motion.”
    9
    FL § 5-706.1(b)(3)(ii) provides:
    If after a final disposition of the criminal charge, the individual requesting
    the hearing is found guilty of any criminal charge arising out of the alleged
    abuse or neglect, the Office of Administrative Hearings shall dismiss the
    administrative appeal.
    3
    4. On August 12, 2015, the Local Department notified [I.B.] that it
    made a finding of indicated child neglect of the unattended child.
    5. On September 22, 2015, the District Court for Frederick County,
    Maryland found [I.B.] guilty and convicted him for confining an
    unattended child, pursuant to 
    Md. Code Ann., Family Law § 5-801
    (2012). [I.B.] was sentenced to probation before judgment, with
    supervised probation ending on September 22, 2016.
    Based on those factual findings and the lack of evidence to the contrary, the ALJ
    determined that
    the undisputed evidence shows that [I.B.] was found guilty of a criminal
    charge that arose out of the incident of July 26, 2015. The undisputed
    evidence also shows that the Local Department’s finding of indicated
    neglect was based upon the same incident. Family Law section 5-801;
    Family Law 5-706.1(b)(3)(ii) (2012 Rpl. Vol.). I find, therefore, as a
    matter of law, that the Local Department’s motion for summary decision
    must be granted. COMAR 28.02.01.12D.
    I.B. sought judicial review of the ALJ’s decision, which was affirmed by the
    circuit court.
    Appellant’s Questions
    I.B. presents three questions for our review of the ALJ’s dismissal of the
    administrative appeal of the finding of “indicated” child neglect. First, I.B. challenges
    the sufficiency of the factual record to support the ALJ’s grant of the summary decision.
    Second, he questions whether Maryland law requires a hearing to be held when one of the
    requisite elements for a finding of abuse or neglect is contested, and when the element in
    question was not adjudicated in the related criminal proceeding. Finally, I.B. asks this
    Court to determine whether an implied element of intent or scienter, found by case law in
    4
    the related child abuse statute of the Family Law Article, exists in the neglect statute of
    that same article.
    Standard of Review
    We have recently explained the appropriate standard for reviewing agency
    decisions:
    It is “[b]ecause an appellate court reviews the agency decision under the
    same statutory standards as the circuit court,” Consumer Prot. Div. v.
    George, [
    383 Md. 505
    , 512] (2004) (quotations and citation omitted), that
    “we analyze the agency’s decision, not the [circuit] court’s ruling.” Martin
    v. Allegany County Bd. of Educ., [
    212 Md. App. 596
    , 605] (2013) (citation
    omitted). We are “‘limited to determining if there is substantial evidence in
    the record as a whole to support the agency’s findings and conclusions, and
    to determine if the administrative decision is premised upon an erroneous
    conclusion of law.’” W.R. Grace & Co. v. Swedo, [
    439 Md. 441
    , 453]
    (2014) (quoting Bd. of Physician Quality Assur. v. Banks, [
    354 Md. 59
    , 67–
    68] (1999)).
    Mihailovich v. Dep’t of Health & Mental Hygiene, 
    234 Md. App. 217
    , 222 (2017), cert.
    denied, 
    457 Md. 396
     (2018).
    The entry of a summary decision is, in our view, akin to summary judgment on
    review of which “we are concerned with whether there was a dispute as to any material
    fact and, if not, whether the movant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Casey
    v. Grossman, 
    123 Md. App. 751
    , 765 (1998). It is to this end, that we must “construe the
    facts properly before the court, and any reasonable inferences that may be drawn from
    them, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party[.]” Powell v. Breslin, 
    195 Md. App. 340
    , 346 (2010) (citations omitted), aff’d, 
    421 Md. 266
     (2011). In our review of a
    grant of summary judgment “we examine ‘the same information from the record and
    determine the same issues of law as the trial court.’” Cent. Truck Ctr., Inc. v. Cent.
    5
    GMC, Inc., 
    194 Md. App. 375
    , 387 (2010) (quoting La Belle Epoque, LLC v. Old Europe
    Antique Manor, 
    406 Md. 194
    , 209 (2008)). “If no material facts are in dispute, the
    appellate court must determine whether the trial court correctly entered summary
    judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    1. Factual Support
    I.B. first argues that the factual record does not support the ALJ’s decision to enter
    a summary decision to dismiss the appeal. He contends that the exhibits relied upon by
    DSS to support its motion to dismiss were “wholly deficient regarding the conviction,
    and contain inconsistencies and inaccuracies that require a contested hearing[.]”
    DSS responds, first, that I.B.’s dispute of material fact argument was not
    addressed in his response to the DSS’s motion for summary decision, hence, it was not
    preserved. It avers that the requirements of COMAR 28.02.01.12D, governing motions
    for summary decision, require a responding party to identify all disputed material facts at
    issue. Since I.B. failed to identify a dispute of material fact in his response, DSS argues,
    he has waived the ability to assert it later on judicial review. Alternatively, DSS argues
    that even had I.B. not waived this argument, the disputed facts he proffers were not
    material to the ALJ’s decision.
    The COMAR motion for summary decision provisions are clear that a response to
    such a motion “shall identify the material facts that are disputed.”                COMAR
    28.02.01.12D(2) (emphasis added). I.B. did not present any dispute of material facts
    before the ALJ; rather, he focused on how the criminal charge was not based on neglect
    6
    and did not share the same elements. Judicial review of an agency decision is limited to
    evidence and issues presented from the record before it. See also Md. Code, State Gov’t
    § 10-214(a) (providing that, on judicial review “[f]indings of fact must be based
    exclusively on the evidence of record in the contested case proceeding and on matters
    officially noticed in that proceeding”). Therefore, I.B.’s belated attempt to challenge the
    previously uncontested facts and evidence presented to the ALJ, for the first time in his
    petition and memorandum in support of judicial review, is without merit. See Allmond v.
    Dep’t of Health & Mental Hygiene, 
    448 Md. 592
    , 606 (2016) (reiterating “that questions,
    including Constitutional issues, that could have been but were not presented to the
    administrative agency may not ordinarily be raised for the first time in an action for
    judicial review” (quoting Bd. of Physician Quality Assur. v. Levitsky, 
    353 Md. 188
    , 207-
    08 (1999))).
    Notwithstanding that failure, neither FL § 5-706.1(b)(3)(ii), nor the related
    COMAR provision, 07.02.26.06C(1), limit what criminal charges relating to the indicated
    neglect are dispositive of an administrative appeal based on a finding of guilt. See FL §
    5-706.1(b)(3)(ii) (“If after final disposition of the criminal charge, the individual
    requesting the hearing is found guilty of any criminal charge arising out of the alleged
    abuse or neglect, the Office of Administrative Hearings shall dismiss the administrative
    appeal.” (emphasis added)). See also COMAR 07.02.26.06C(1)10 (tracking the language
    10
    COMAR 07.02.26.06C has since been amended to provide further clarification that, if
    appellant is “[f]ound guilty of any criminal charges arising out of the alleged child abuse
    or neglect, including being found guilty and receiving probation before judgment or
    7
    of the statute: “If, after final disposition of the criminal proceeding, the appellant is[ ] …
    [f]ound guilty of any criminal charges arising out of the alleged child abuse or neglect,
    OAH shall dismiss the appeal[.]” (emphasis added)).
    Therefore, when DSS moved for summary decision to dismiss the administrative
    appeal based on the finding of guilt of the related criminal charge and presented
    uncontroverted evidence that the finding of guilt of the related criminal charge arose out
    of the same finding of “indicated neglect,” the ALJ was deprived of the discretion to rule
    other than to dismiss the appeal. In his generic response, without particularity, to the
    DSS motion to dismiss, I.B. failed to assert the existence of any evidence to controvert
    that which was presented by DSS and cannot now challenge the sufficiency of the
    evidence relied on by the ALJ.
    2. Hearing Requirement
    Next, I.B. argues that, if an element necessary for a finding of neglect is in dispute
    and was not adjudicated in the criminal proceeding, a hearing is required. In support, he
    relies on Tabassi v. Carroll Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    182 Md. App. 80
     (2008). Tabassi
    sought judicial review of an ALJ’s grant of DSS’s motion to dismiss based on the finding
    of guilt in a related criminal proceeding.
    While a search warrant was being executed at Tabassi’s home, loaded guns were
    located next to a bed where a 12-year-old girl, unrelated to Tabassi, was sleeping. 182
    Md. App. at 83-84. DSS noted a finding of indicated neglect, and related criminal
    taking an Alford plea, OAH shall dismiss the appeal.” COMAR 07.02.26.06C(1) (2018)
    (emphasis added).
    8
    charges were filed arising out of those facts. Id. at 83. Tabassi was convicted of reckless
    endangerment and firearms access by minors. Id. at 85. Thereafter, DSS moved to
    dismiss his request for a contested hearing. Id. Based on the criminal conviction, the
    ALJ dismissed his request. Tabassi then sought judicial review, resulting in affirmance
    of the ALJ’s decision. Id.
    On appeal, we vacated the circuit court’s order and remanded with directions for
    the ALJ to hold further proceedings on the question of Tabassi’s status as a custodian of
    the child. Id. at 93. We held that
    dismissal of an alleged abuser or neglector’s administrative appeal is
    warranted where an accused is found guilty of criminal charges stemming
    from the same conduct that serves as the basis for a finding of abuse or
    neglect and the requisite status of the individual to the child has been
    adjudicated or is not disputed.
    Id. At the administrative level, Tabassi’s status as to the child was contested and had not
    been determined.
    I.B. reads into our holding in Tabassi that, when the elements of the criminal
    charges are different from the Family Law offenses and if an element of the Family Law
    offense was not adjudicated in the criminal proceeding, a hearing should be afforded to
    adjudicate it in the ALJ’s proceeding. He fails, however, to recognize that his failure to
    timely contest any of the facts asserted or evidence offered concerning the elements of
    indicated child neglect against him. His reliance on Tabassi is misplaced.
    The essence of our Tabassi holding is that all elements of indicated neglect, said to
    be disputed, are to be resolved at the administrative stage of the proceedings. Because
    9
    I.B. raised no disputed facts, and because there is no dispute that he is the child’s parent,
    Tabassi is factually inapposite to the arguments that he raises.
    3. Intent
    I.B.’s final argument is that, even if all the elements of the confinement of a minor
    criminal charge were identical to the elements of neglect, there is an implicit requirement
    of some level of intent to neglect, which he lacked. To support this argument, he refers to
    Taylor v. Harford Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    384 Md. 213
     (2004) and McClanahan v.
    Washington Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    445 Md. 691
     (2015). It is important to note
    however, that both Taylor and McClanahan were cases dealing with findings of criminal
    child abuse and did not involve dismissal of administrative appeals pursuant to FL § 5-
    706.1(b)(3).
    Taylor, in anger, kicked a stool which unintentionally struck his daughter resulting
    in injuries that required medical treatment. 
    384 Md. at 217
    . A DSS investigation ensued,
    which resulted in a finding of indicated child abuse. 
    Id. at 216-218
    . Following a
    contested case hearing, the ALJ affirmed the finding of abuse. 
    Id. at 218-20
    . Judicial
    review also resulted in affirming the finding of abuse. 
    Id. at 221
    . On appeal, the Court of
    Appeals noted that the ALJ failed to consider “an absence of intent to harm,” a
    consideration allowed under COMAR 07.02.07.12C(2)(a)(i) (2004)11 for “Ruled Out
    11
    The provisions for disposition of child abuse have since been amended and renumbered
    and are now found in COMAR 07.02.07.11. The provisions for “Ruled Out Child
    Abuse” have been amended to afford, in relevant part, that a finding of ruled out child
    abuse can be based on “[a] finding that the alleged maltreator was not responsible for the
    injury for reasons [that] … [t]he injury resulted from accidental and unintended contact
    10
    Child Abuse.” 
    Id. at 226-27
    . Because of that provision, and Taylor’s lack of intent to
    harm his child when kicking a stool in anger, the Court held that “the intentional act must
    be shown to have been either reckless in its nature or deliberately intended to harm the
    child in order for a finding of ‘indicated child abuse’ to be made.” 
    Id. at 232
    .
    In McClanahan, supra, DSS was alerted to several repeated allegations of sexual
    abuse of a minor child by the father. 445 Md. at 695. DSS determined that in the course
    of a custody dispute, the child’s mother appeared to have been continuously manipulating
    the child into believing that she had been assaulted by the father. Id. at 696-97. As a
    result, the child developed behavioral and emotional problems, forming the basis of a
    finding of indicated child abuse – mental injury – and indicated child neglect. Id. at 697.
    Following a hearing, the ALJ affirmed the DSS finding of indicated child abuse – mental
    injury – but modified the finding of indicated child neglect to “ruled out child neglect.”
    Id. at 696-97. On judicial review, the circuit court affirmed the ALJ’s decision. Id. at
    697-98.
    On appeal, the Court of Appeals engaged in an analysis of whether a parent can be
    liable for child abuse of the mental injury variety when there was no intent to harm the
    minor child.    445 Md. at 700.        In its discussion, the Court addressed statutory
    interpretation, as well as its holding in Taylor, concluding that “[b]ecause FL § 5-701(b)
    does not differentiate between mental injury and physical injury, we do not interpret
    Subtitle 7 to sanction a regulation in which a parent can be deemed a child abuser for
    with the child and was not caused by a reckless disregard for the child’s health or
    welfare[.]” COMAR 07.02.07.11C(2)(c)(i) (2018).
    11
    unintentionally causing mental injury but not liable for unintentionally causing physical
    injury.” Id. at 706 (footnote omitted). Because of the lack of distinction, the Court held
    that “to be included as a ‘child abuser’ in [the] central registry, a person must either
    intend to injure the child or at least act in reckless disregard of the child’s welfare.” Id. at
    711.
    Relying on Taylor and McClanahan, I.B. posits that, because the child abuse and
    child neglect definitions are found under the same provision of the Family Law statute,
    intent is also an implicit requirement for a finding of child neglect. For support, he relies
    on this Court’s legislative intent analysis in Tabassi and asserts, “[t]he fact that the
    definitions for ‘Abuse’ and ‘Neglect’ are housed in the same statute,12 suggest that they
    are to be interpreted together in the context, as one element of a whole … in order to
    harmonize and reconcile the statutory provisions.” (Internal quotations omitted)].
    DSS responds in a footnote that this argument was not preserved and that the ALJ
    did not “base [its] decision on an interpretation of what constitutes neglect.”
    Even if we were to find that the argument was preserved for review, we would
    find a significant distinction between the COMAR provisions for neglect and abuse in
    terms of intent. DSS need not prove intent in order to establish neglect. See In re
    Priscilla B., 
    214 Md. App. 600
    , 621, 625 (2013) (discussing the identical definition of
    12
    The “same statute” I.B. refers to in this regard is FL § 5-701 – Definitions, which
    houses over 20 definitions for various words used throughout Subtitle 7 of the Family
    Law Article. As such, we place no significance on the fact that the definitions for
    “Abuse” and “Neglect” are both found in the same statute that contains relevant
    definitions for the entire Subtitle.
    12
    “neglect” in CINA cases, explaining that, while “neglect might not involve affirmative
    conduct … [like abuse], the court assesses neglect by assessing the inaction of a
    parent[,]” because “a child can be harmed as severely by a failure to tend to her needs as
    by affirmative abuse”). To the contrary, a successful prosecution of child abuse must
    establish proof of intent. See McClanahan, 445 Md. at 711 (holding that “a person must
    either intend to injure the child or at least act in reckless disregard of the child’s
    welfare”). Accord Taylor, 
    384 Md. at 232
     (holding that an “intentional act must be
    shown to have been either reckless in its nature or deliberately intended to harm the child
    in order for a finding of ‘indicated child abuse’ to be made”).
    The COMAR provisions discussing neglect do not contain the same language as
    those discussing abuse, which the Court of Appeals had relied on in Taylor and
    McClanahan to support its determination that intent was an implicit element of both
    physical and mental child abuse.         See Taylor, 
    384 Md. at 226
     (“accidental or
    unintentional and not reckless or deliberate” (quoting COMAR 07.02.07.12C(2)(a)(i)
    (2004)); McClanahan, 445 Md. at 704 (“accidental and unintended and … the injury was
    not foreseeable” (quoting COMAR 07.02.07.12C(2)(a)(i) (2015)). 13
    13
    At the time of the incident and DSS findings, the COMAR provisions for disposition of
    child abuse were located under 07.02.07.12 and the language, “the act causing the injury
    was accidental or unintentional and not reckless or deliberate,” from the earlier version of
    COMAR 07.02.07.12C(2)(a)(i) (2004), had been amended to provide, “[t]he contact with
    the child was accidental and unintended and under the circumstances, the injury was not
    foreseeable[.]” COMAR 07.02.07.12C(2)(a)(i)(2015) (emphasis added). The current
    version of this provision has been renumbered and amended, now located in COMAR
    07.02.07.11, providing in relevant part, “accidental and unintended contact with the child
    13
    During an investigation of indicated child neglect, other than for mental injury, the
    considerations taken into account for the particular context and circumstances of the
    incident are “[t]he nature, extent, or cause of the failure to provide proper care and
    attention indicate that the child’s health or welfare was harmed or was at substantial risk
    of harm.” COMAR 07.02.07.13A(d). However, once the four elements of indicated
    child neglect, including the contextual considerations, have been found to exist, the Court
    of Appeals has explained, such a finding is only the beginning of the inquiry. See Taylor,
    
    384 Md. at 231
     (finding that, “[i]n assessing the dispositions of investigation delineated
    in COMAR 07.02.07.12, it is incumbent upon the ALJ to examine all the evaluative
    standards contained within this regulation[,]” to ensure that neither an “Unsubstantiated”
    nor a “Ruled–Out” finding apply).14
    Within the COMAR provisions referring to “Ruled Out Child Neglect,” a decision
    that has ruled out a child neglect finding could be based on reliable evidence that: “(1)
    There was no failure to provide proper care and attention; (2) The child’s health or
    welfare was not harmed or at substantial risk of being harmed; (3) The individual alleged
    to be responsible … was not a parent or a caretaker; or (4) The alleged victim was not a
    and was not caused by a reckless disregard for the child’s health or welfare[.]” COMAR
    07.02.07.11C(2)(c)(i) (2018).
    14
    As I.B. does not discuss the factors for an “Unsubstantiated” finding, we need not
    address those provisions.
    14
    child at the time ….” COMAR 07.02.07.13C(1)-(3) (2015).15 It is clear from the four
    limited scenarios under which child neglect may be “ruled out,” the words “accidental
    and unintended,” as they were found in the equivalent child abuse provisions, are absent.
    Consequently, I.B.’s attempt to expand the definition of neglect to mirror the intent
    requirements established by the Court of Appeals for the definition of abuse, is to no
    avail.
    Because the standards of proof of neglect vis-à-vis abuse were, and continue to be,
    demonstrably disparate regarding intent or scienter, neither Taylor nor McClanahan form
    a basis for the relief I.B. seeks. See also Tamara A. v. Montgomery Cty. Dep’t of Health
    & Human Servs., 
    407 Md. 180
    , 194 (2009) (clarifying the meaning of FL § 5-
    706.1(b)(3)(ii), that a “[c]onviction, in other words, does act as an absolute statutory bar
    to further prosecution of the administrative appeal” (emphasis in original)).
    Because the statute is clear that, following a criminal conviction based on the same
    facts that support indicated child neglect, dismissal of the administrative process “shall”
    be ordered, we are constrained to affirm.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR FREDERICK COUNTY AFFIRMED;
    COSTS ASSESSED TO APPELLANT.
    15
    The COMAR provisions for disposition of child neglect are now located under
    07.02.07.12 and provide, in relevant part, that a decision that rules out a child neglect
    finding can be based on either “[a] lack of credible evidence supporting one or more
    elements of indicated child neglect; or … [t]he credible refutation of one or more
    elements of indicated child neglect.” COMAR 07.02.07.12C(2)(a)-(b) (2018).
    15