The sole question presented in this appeal is whether voluntary home confinement, undertaken as a condition of probation, constitutes “custody” which must be considered for purposes of sentencing credit. Under the limited facts of this case, we hold that it does not. 1
*366 Appellant, Ray Terry Balderston, pled guilty in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County (Messitte, J.) to driving while under the influence of alcohol. Appellant had four prior convictions for driving while intoxicated but had always been placed on probation and then resumed driving while intoxicated. Nevertheless, his defense counsel argued that, because he had entered an alcohol treatment program and had been sober for seven months, he again should be given a suspended sentence, this time with home confinement 2 and attendance at an alcohol treatment program imposed as conditions of probation. Defense counsel conceded that “there is no question that my client deserves jail.” Moreover, he expressly recognized “home confinement is not being asked in lieu of jail. It is being asked as a condition of probation.” The State’s Attorney opposed the request for a suspended sentence and home confinement as a condition of probation. He argued that a 60-day jail sentence was appropriate, that if “ever there was a candidate that the legislature had in min[d] when enacting the [jail] sentence, this is probably it,” that appellant had never been incarcerated, but instead had been given “every opportunity” and had still continued to abuse alcohol. Appellant himself then also requested leniency, recognizing “60 days [in jail] is deservable” but that he had family “responsibilities” (support of a sick father) which should influence the court not to impose a jail sentence.
After considering all of these arguments, the court sentenced appellant to the Montgomery County Detention Center for a period of 60 days, with 45 of those days suspended
*367 in favor of a two-year term of probation. As special conditions of probation, appellant was ordered to spend 45 days in a home confinement program; to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings as ordered by his probation agent; and to complete the White Flint Recovery Program, a privately-run program for the treatment of alcoholism. At some point after he completed his 45 days in home confinement, appellant stopped going to the White Flint Recovery Program and was terminated from the program. After a hearing, appellant was found to have violated his probation by failing to complete the White Flint Recovery Program; his probation was revoked, and the remainder of his original sentence was reinstated.
Appellant argues that home confinement is tantamount to imprisonment, or at least custodial confinement, and that he is entitled to credit against the remainder of his sentence, pursuant to Md.Ann.Code art. 27, § 638C, for the 45 days he spent in home confinement. 3 Section 6380(a) provides in relevant part:
Credit for time spent in custody before conviction or acquittal. — Any person who is convicted and sentenced shall receive credit against the term of a definite or life sentence ... for all time spent in the custody of any state, county or city jail, correctional institution, hospital, mental hospital or other agency as a result of the charge for which sentence is imposed or as a result of the conduct on which the charge is based.
Appellant asserts that home confinement is being “in custody” of an “other agency,” within the meaning of § 6380(a).
The Court of Appeals addressed an analogous, but not identical, question in
Maus v. State,
In determining whether this restrictive environment qualified as “custody” within the meaning of § 6380(a), the Court of Appeals in
Maus
observed that “[t]he word ‘custody’ can have a great variety of meanings and so can the words ‘other agency.’ ”
Id.
at 101,
Section 638C(a) was enacted by Ch. 735, Acts of 1974. The title of Ch. 735 tells us no more than the statutory language does. One amendment made during its passage, however, may contain a clue. When Ch. 735 was introduced as H.B. 650 (1974), the phrase on which we now focus referred to “time spent under the supervision or under the custody of any state, county or city jail” etc. The words “under the supervision or” were deleted by amendment.
Id.
By omitting the words “under the supervision,” the
Maus
Court observed, the legislature was perhaps emphasizing that the type of custody that would qualify for credit against a sentence was incarcerative custody, and not mere supervision.
Id.
That is, the “custody had to be involuntary and pursuant to a court commitment to a public institution.”
Id.
Since Maus was not, and indeed, could not be committed by a court to the Second Genesis facility, the Court reasoned that residence in Second Genesis was not
*369
“custody” within the meaning of § 6380(a), and so Maus was not entitled to credit against his sentence for the time spent in Second Genesis.
Id.
at 105,
Appellant’s only attempt to distinguish his situation from that in Maus is to argue that the facility involved in that case had “therapeutic goal[s]; [and is] not in any sense ‘punitive,’ ” while here, “appellant’s treatment needs were to be served elsewhere.” Granted, the facility in Maus had “therapeutic goals”; that factor was not, however, in any way the basis of the court’s holding. Rather, its holding that residence in a facility like Second Genesis was “not custody” within the context of the statute, was based on two factors. First, and more significantly, the court concluded that, although such confinement was restrictive, it was not imposed as punishment by the sentencing court, but was chosen by the defendant himself and so could not constitute “custody.” Second, it noted that Second Genesis was a private facility and so there was no custody in a public institution.
At least the first consideration is equally applicable here. 5 The Second Genesis program involved restrictions that removed the defendant from the home and placed him in an institutional-like setting in which he had to conform to the *370 rules of the facility. The Court of Appeals held that even such removal from the home and restrictions on behavior and activities was not “custody,” within the meaning of § 638C because it was voluntary and not court imposed. Given this holding, certainly voluntary home detention, a situation in which a defendant can leave his home to go to work, and has freedom of movement and association within his home, cannot be considered “custodial,” or the equivalent of custody. On the contrary, the reason appellant requested that he be permitted to participate in home confinement is because it is not the equivalent of custody, i.e., he could tend to his responsibilities and maintain his job. Thus, we reject appellant’s argument that voluntary home confinement is the equivalent of “custody,” and hold that, contrary to his claim, he is not entitled, as a matter of right, to sentencing credit for the 45 days he spent in voluntary home confinement. 6
Our holding is in accord with that of other jurisdictions. For example, in
State v. Pettis,
See also United States v. Wickman,
Thus, the trial court did not err in finding that appellant was not entitled credit, as of right, against his original sentence for the time he spent in voluntary home confinement.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. This opinion does not address the "home detention" program described in Md.Ann.Code art 27, § 689A. Participation in that program *366 is limited to “inmates committed to the custody" of the Commissioner of Correction. Md.Ann.Code art. 27, § 689A(b). Appellant was never “committed to the custody" of the Commissioner.
. Although the home confinement program is not described with specificity in the record, appellant’s trial counsel indicated that it involved wearing “an ankle or a wrist bracelet that is passive. If he walks away from the phone and is 700 feet away, snap, an alarm goes off and he has violated” but it would permit appellant to continue to work and to go to AA programs.
. Appellant makes no constitutional claim.
.
See also Stinchcomb
v.
State,
. The record is not clear whether the home confinement program at issue here is a private program or under the auspices of the local law enforcement authorities.
But see, supra,
n. 1. Hence, it is conceivable that appellant, unlike Maus, is under the supervision of public, rather than private, officials. This distinction (which is not even raised by appellant) is, however, not determinative because it is as clear here, as it was in
Maus
(and perhaps more so), that appellant was not "in custody.” Thus, even when an intermediate appellate court held, contrary to
Maus,
that time spent in a drug rehabilitation program as a condition of probation was time spent "in custody" for purposes of sentencing credit it noted that "confinement to one’s own home as a condition of probation would
not
qualify a defendant for presentence incarceration credit.”
State v. Reynolds,
. Of course, the circuit court may, in its discretion, weigh the time a ' defendant spent in home confinement in determining the appropriate disposition following the defendant’s violation of probation.
See Maus,
. The Wisconsin statute provided in its entirety:
A convicted offender shall be given credit toward the service of his or her sentence for all days spent in custody in connection with the course of conduct for which sentence was imposed.
Wis.Stat.Ann. § 973.155(l)(a) (1985).
