Thеre are two issues presented in this case: (1) the appealability of an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City requiring the Baltimore City Department of Social Services (BCDSS), the appellant, to disclose to James Stein, one of the defendants below 1 and the appellee herein, any records it may have on Stephen Ray, the minor plaintiff below, and Annette Hunter and Mickey Ray, his parents, hereinafter, collectively “the plaintiffs,” and (2) the correctness of that ruling. The circuit court’s order prompted the appellant to appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. We issued the writ of certiorari prior to argument in that court to consider the important issues raised. We shall reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Annette Hunter and Mickey Ray, for themselves, and on behalf of Stephen Ray, their child, sued the appellee, and others, for physical, mental, and emotional injury allegedly caused by lead paint poisoning Stephen suffered, as a result of the appellee’s negligence, while residing in a home owned and managed by the appellee Stein. The plaintiffs did not name the appellant as a defendant, nor did appellee join it as a party.
Having filed answers to the plaintiffs’ amended complaint 2 , the appellee engaged in discovery. He filed and served a Notice To Take Deposition duces tecum on the appellant. That notice set a date for taking the deposition of the appellant’s custodian of records, in this case, its Director, who was requested to produce
*4 “[t]he entire file regarding Annette Hunter ... Mickey-Ray ... and their child, Steven Ray ... to include all payments made by Social Services to them on their behalf or on behalf of all their dependents (welfare payments, medical assistance payments, W/C payments, etc.) and all records of the Department of Social Services, the Department of Protective Services and/or Division of Daycare.”
Resisting the subpoena issued pursuant to the notice, the appellant filed a Motion For Protective Order. 3 It offered several reasons for objection: (1) relying on Maryland Code (1957, 1991 Repl.Vоl.) Article 88A, § 6, 4 that the records are *5 confidential and may be released only pursuant to court order; (2) that the records are protected by executive or governmental immunity; (3) that executive or governmental privilege exempts the records from disclosure; and (4) that the social worker, and/or psychologist/psychiatrist-patient, privilege “may apply to all or portions of the requested records.”
The appellee moved to compel. In his motion, he acknowledged that “the Department is not unjustified in interposing the present objection, and in requiring a court order to produce the requested materials.” He argued, however, that what he sought
may be and most likely, will be directly pertinent and vital to the completion of meaningful discovery in this case. Quite clearly, should these records reveal instances of child abuse or neglect, or matters of psychological or psychiatric problems, all of the information would be directly relevant. Defendants must be permitted to have access to this information in order to have full oppоrtunity for an adequate defense. This is all the more obvious since Plaintiff and/or her family or counsel would have access to much or all of the information contained in these records.
Also, the appellee did not entirely reject in camera inspection as an option; rather, he took the position that, while in camera inspection is not absolutely necessary, he would not object if the court were to find it appropriate. In addition, the appellee did not challenge the need to maintain confidentiality, by redacting identity information with respect to child abuse or neglect informants. Finally, the appellee rejected the appellant’s argument that records relating to Social Services’ intervention, other than through Child Protective Services, are irrelevant. He asserted, on the con *6 trary, that because it relates to the social environment, “information as to where the infant Plaintiff resides, who is charged with the responsibility of supervising the infant Plaintiff and commentary as to the adequacy and propriety of the care given to the infant Plaintiff”, is crucial. The appellee concluded:
Thus, an investigation into the social environment of the infant Plaintiff is crucial. The nature of the caregiving environment is clearly a relevant inquiry into the source and factors contributing to the alleged lead intoxication of the minor Plaintiff. Further, the records sought by the Defendants may clearly show evidence of causes contributing to the claimed injuries of the minor Plaintiff. The Plaintiff has put her mental, emotional and social status at issue by filing a lawsuit. The defense of this lawsuit would be severely hampered if the clearly relevant information contained in the records of the Department is categorically denied to the Defendants.
In neither the Notice For Deposition duces tecum nor the Motion To Compel did the appellee proffer precisely what evidence regarding the minor plaintiff and the cause of action it believed the appellant’s files would reveal. He simply asserted that evidence that shows the social circumstances under which the minor plaintiff was raised was relevant.
Notwithstanding that both the appellant and the appellee requested a hearing, 5 the trial court decided the issue with *7 оut one. It denied the appellant’s motion for protective order and granted the appellee’s motion to compel.
II.
Anticipating an avenue of attack by the appellee, the appellant argues that the circuit court’s discovery order requiring disclosure of any files it might have on the plaintiffs is appealable. Conceding that the order is not a “final judgment” within the meaning of Maryland Code (1974, 1989 Repl.Vol., 1991 Cumm.Supp.) § 12-301 of the Courts and Judicial Proc. Article, the appellant maintains that it is appealable under the “collateral order doctrine,” a recognized exception to the “final judgment” rule.
While acknowledging that the order from which it has appealed is a discovery order, which normally is interlocutory and, consequently, nonappealable,
see Public Service Comm’n v. Patuxent Valley,
The appellee agrees that the correct analysis is under the collateral order doctrine. Unlike the appellant, however, he denies that all of the doctrine’s prerequisites have been met in this case. Specifically, relying on
Sigma Repro. Health Cen., supra,
B.
Maryland Code (1974, 1989 Repl.Vol.) § 12-301 of the Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article provides that “[A] party may appeal from a final judgment entered in a civil ... case”, whether entered in the exercise of original, special, limited, or statutory authority, unless “expressly denied by law.” Its purpose is to discourage the piecemeal appeal of issues generated at various stages of the litigation.
Cant v. Bartlett,
(a) Generally. — Except as provided in Section (b) of this Rule, an order or other form of decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer than all of the claims in an action (whether raised by original clаim, counter-claim, cross-claim, or third-party claim), or that adjudicates less *9 than an entire claim, or that adjudicates the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties to the action:
(1) is not a final judgment;
(2) does not terminate the action as to any of the claims or any of the parties; and
(3) is subject to revision at any time before the entry of a judgment that adjudicates all of the claims by and against all of the parties.
(b) When allowed. — If the court expressly determines in a written order that there is no just reason for delay, it may direct in the order the entry of a final judgment:
(1) as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties; or
(2) pursuant to Rule 2-501(e)(3), for some but less than all of the amount requested in a claim seeking money relief only.
Section 12-101(f) defines “final judgment” as “a judgment ... or other action by a court ..., from which an appeal, application for leave to appeal, or petition for certiorari may be taken.” This definition, because it does not specify the elements of finality, leaves to this court the ultimate determination of which judgments are final аnd, therefore, appealable under § 12-301.
Cant v. Bartlett,
We have interpreted “finality” for appeal purposes as involving settlement, determination, and conclusion of the rights of the parties. Thus, we have said that to be a “final
*10
judgment”, the judgment “must be so far final as to determine and conclude the rights involved in the action, or to deny to the party seeking redress by the appeal the means of further prosecuting or defending his rights and interests in the subject matter of the proceeding.”
In re Buckler Trusts,
There are exceptions to the final judgment appealability rule. Section 12-303 permits a party to appeal certain interlocutory orders. In addition, we have “adopted the so-called ‘collateral order doctrine,’ which treats as final and appealable a limited class of orders which do not terminate litigation in the trial court.”
Patuxent Valley,
To fall within the collateral order exception, the “ ‘order must [(1)] conclusively determine the disputed question, [ (2) ] resolve an important issue[, (3 be] completely separate from the merits of the action, and [(4)] be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.’ ”
Patux
*11
ent Valley,
Cases decided under the collateral order doctrine, like those addressed by the Maryland Rules on judgment finality,
see e.g. Quartertime Video v. Hanna,
First, the order to produce documents pursuant to the subpoena duces tecum is not completely separable from the merits of the criminal proceedings. As noted in [United States v. ] Nixon,418 U.S. 683 ,94 S.Ct. 3090 ,41 L.Ed.2d 1039 [(1974)], “[enforcement of a pretrial subpoena duces tecum must necessarily be committed to the sound discretion of the trial court since the necessity for the subpoena most often turns upon a determination of factual issues.”418 U.S. at 702 ,94 S.Ct. at 3104 [,41 L.Ed.2d at 1060 ]. Second, the order to produce does not finally and conclusively determine Sigma’s claim. Rath *12 er, if Sigma had failed to comply with the order and had been cited for contempt, then there would have been a final order____ The denial of a motion to quash itself was not a final disposition. Third, although the order involved an important right — the privacy rights of Sigma and its patients — the right would not have been lost on appeal if Sigma had been cited for contempt.
Patuxent Valley, supra,
also decided upon a collateral оrder doctrine rationale, stands in stark contrast to
Sigma Repro. Health
Center.
8
In that case, subpoenas, which required them to appear for pretrial depositions, were issued to the individual Public Service Commissioners. The State of Maryland and the Public Service Commission, both parties to the ongoing action, moved to quash and, when that was unsuccessful, appealed. We pointed out,
C.
The collateral order doctrine does not apply to the facts
sub judice. See United States v. Harrod,
With regard to the appellant and the appellee, the ruling has all of the attributes of finality recognized by this Court: it settles the rights of the appellant and appellee in the records sought to be discovered, thereby, concluding that phase of the action, and it has been entered on the docket.
Estep,
D.
Notwithstanding the conclusive effect of the order as between the appellant and the appellee, the order is one
*14
entered in the context of ongoing litigation, and, as to the appellee, may have significance during the progress of that litigation. Moreover, the order is one entered in a discovery matter. It is well settled in Maryland that discovery orders usually are not immediately appealable.
Sigma Repro. Health Center,
... “[o]rdinarily, an order granting or denying discovery does not finally determine the rights of any party . . .” Alford v. Commissioner, supra, 227 Md. [45,] 47,175 A.2d 23 [, 24 (1961)]. Also, in the usual case, the party or individual opposing the discovery order does not suffer sufficient immediate harm to warrant an appeal prior to the final termination of the litigation. Moreover, a party is generally able to seek effective review of the order upon an appeal from an adverse final judgment terminating the case.
See also Price v. Orrison,
The Supreme Court has held that the finality, hence, appealability, of a discovery order is not determined by the status of the party against whom discovery is sought. In
Alexander v. United States,
*15 In a certain sense finality can be asserted of the orders under review, so, in a certain sense, finality can be asserted of any order of a court. And such an order may coerce a witness, leaving to him no alternative but to obey or be punished. It may have the effect and the same characteristic of finality as the orders under review, but from such a ruling it will not be contended there is an appeal. Let the court go further and punish the witness for contempt of its order, then arrives a right of review, and this is adequate for his protection without unduly impeding the progress of the case. Why should greater rights be given a witness to justify his contumacy when summoned before an examiner than when summoned before a court? Testimony, at times, must be taken out of court. In instances like those in the case at bar the officer who takes the testimony, having no power to issue process, is given the aid of the clerk of a court of the United States; having no power to enforce obedience to the process or to command testimony, he is given the aid of the judge of the court whose clerk issued the process, and if there be disobedience of the process, or refusal to testify or to produce documents, such judge may “proceed to enforce obedience ... or punish the disobedience in like manner as any court of the United States may proceed in case of disobedience to like process issued by such court____” This power to punish being exercised the mattеr becomes personal to the witness and a judgment as to him. Prior to that the proceedings are interlocutory in the original suit, (citations omitted)
[t]o allow immediate review on the denial of a motion to quash a subpoena may produce an appeal that otherwise would not occur, since the case may be settled, or the party proposing to call the witness or the witness himself may have second thoughts. Also, ... postponing the appeal until the witness has placed himself in contempt would normally provide the appellate court with a record of just what questions the witness had been asked and refused to answer which is generally unavailable on the denial of a motion to quash.
Kaufman v. Edelstein,
E.
We have declined to follow the
Alexander
rule, at least when, in the procedural posture of the case, the only matter before the trial court is the discovery order,
i.e.
the motion to quash. Thus, in
In re Special Investigation No. 244,
It has consistently been held in this State that where a court proceeding is commenced to quash or to enforce an administrative subpoena, summons, search warrant, or similar process issued by an administrative agency or official, where the court refuses to quash or orders enforcement, and where the court’s order terminates the court proceeding, the order is final and appealable. The fact that the administrative proceedings may not be terminated does not render the court order interlocutory if nothing remains to be done in the trial court. We have rejected the argument that, in this situation, one must be adjudged in contempt of the court order in order to obtain appellate review.
This case does not involve an administrative subpoena and, moreover, the proceedings out of which it arose are still pending before the trial court. Consequently, this case is more akin to
Alexander
and
Sigma Repro. Health Center,
both
supra,
than to the special investigation cases out of which the rule just quoted arose. Moreover, the facts of this case are not consistent with those upon which the Supreme Court formulated an exception to the
Alexander
rule. The subpoenaed material is not in the hands of a third party who could not be expected to subject him or herself to contempt in order that the owner of the material may take an immediate appeal.
See Perlman v. United States,
F.
Although, as we have seen, it was decided on the basis of the collateral order doctrine, our analysis in
Patuxent Valley
is nevertheless instructive as to the issues
sub judice.
We made clear, in that case, that “we continue to adhere to the general rule that discovery orders are interlocutory and ordinarily cannot be appealed prior to a final judgment terminating the case.”
[T]he harm that will result from deposing Commission members prior to trial, should they be immune from this type of scrutiny, will occur from the instant they are subjected to a probing of their decision making processes. Furthermore, the harm to the State and its agencies, and consequently to the public, because of the disruption of the governmental process which could result from orders such as this, is potentially much greater than the harm to private individuals аnd entities.
G.
A similar rationale is applicable to the confidentiality claim asserted by the appellant in this case. A governmental agency charged, by statute, with ensuring the confidentiality of the records it is required to maintain, — their disclosure being determined by the agency alone or by court order — occupies a position quite similar to that of the government official claiming immunity. Were appellate review of the court’s order that the records be disclosed be deferred until after disclosure has been made, the purpose of the statute would be frustrated and the confidentiality claim would be forever lost. Discovery of the contents of the agency file is itself the harm to be avoided. Once the *20 file has been disclosed, an appellate court will be unable to provide effective relief. See Patuxent Valley, supra.
In the case sub judice, the answer to the questions, whether the Social Services’ file may be discovered by the appellee, and, if so, what is the proper procedure for reviewing them for relevant evidence?, and by whom?, dеpends upon an interpretation of Article 88A § 6, an issue separate from the merits of the tort action. Article 88A, § 6 will have significance on the tort action only if the interpretation given it makes the Social Services' files available for review, in some fashion. At that point the admissibility, or inadmissibility, of evidence that file may contain will have to be determined on the basis of its relevance to the issues in the tort action.
Moreover, aside from the fact that the harm will have already occurred, unless permitted to do so now, the appellant may never be able to obtain review of the discovery order; consequently, the need to resolve the issue at the time that it arises, rather than as if an integral part of the merits, is critical. An appeal after the trial of the merits has concluded may have no effect on the decision rendered and may well be moot; it may not be possible for the matter to be resolved, at least meaningfully, on an appeal from the final judgment in the underlying action. See
Mann v. State’s Atty. for Mont. County,
We hold that a discovery order directed to a governmental agency, a non-party to the underlying action, requiring the disclosure of files which contain information which, by statute, is confidential except when disclosed by the agency or by court order, is immediately appealable by the
*21
agency. The harm which will occur to the agency and the public — the potential inability of the agency to acquire information essential to its mission — were we to hold otherwise is much greater than it would be for private individuals and entities. This is consistent with the result reached by other jurisdictions addressing similar issues.
Kerttula v. Abood,
That, prior to seeking appellate review, neither the appellant nor its custodian of records was held in contempt for the refusal to disclose the files sought is neither fatal to, nor dispositive of, the appellant’s right to appeal. The appellant’s right to appeal is not dependent upon its being held in contempt. The rаtionale for requiring a contempt finding as a prerequisite to allowing a nonparty to seek, and receive, appellate review of the denial of a motion to quash a subpoena
duces tecum
is to ensure the separability of the issue from the merits and that it is an important one. As
Sigma Repro. Health Cen.,
only an appeal from a contempt order, as opposed to an order to produce documents pursuant to the subpoena, is final enough and separable enough from the merits to confer the power of review on an appellate court.
See also Kaufman,
The Baltimore City Department of Social Services is bound by Art. 88A, § 6 and its purpose, pursuant to which it is required to maintain the confidentiality of its files. It is not simply a matter of personal concern to the director, or the employees of the Department, that unauthorized disclosures be avoided; it is a matter of legislative, and public, policy.
A critical concern when an exception to the finality rule is sought to be made, as reflected by the collateral order doctrine cases, is that the issue sought to be reviewed is an important one, which is effectively unreviewable otherwise. Such requirements, especially when coupled with the rule that the appealability of a discovery order by a non-party requires a contempt finding, also ensure that the asserted basis for an appeal is not a “sham,”
see In re Search Warrant (Sealed),
*23 The appellant’s custodian of records is its director. Although the director of the Baltimore City Department of Social Services is not so high an official as the President of the United States, he or she is nevertheless on a par with the individual Public Service Commissioners in Patuxent Valley. As such, he or she is a sufficiently “high-level government decision maker,” we hold, as to whom it would be “unseemly”, Nixon, supra, to require subjection to a finding of contempt before appellate review of the propriety of a discovery order directed to him, or her, will be allowed. All that requiring the appellant’s director to subject him-or herself to a finding of contempt would accomplish would be to make the judgment personal as to the director and, thereby insure that, from the director’s perspective, the issue is taken seriously and prosecuted vigorously. As we have already noted, however, that is not necessary where the need to prosecute the confidentiality issue is a matter of Legislative intent and public policy.
The appellee contends that the order is not appealable because the federal due process claim has not been decided finally and the petitioner has not been found in contempt of court. As to the former, it is clear thаt the order finally has resolved the scope and breadth of Art. 88A § 6. It does not matter on what basis that decision was made so long as the confidentiality requirement of § 6 has been determined to be of insufficient importance to prevent disclosure.
III.
Turning to the merits, we address whether the Social Services records of a minor child, the plaintiff in a personal injury action, and those of his parents, in the possession of the appellant, are discoverable by the appellee. Resolution of the issue requires an analysis of the scope of Art. 88A, § 6. By its express terms, § 6 limits disclosure of “any information concerning any applicant for or recipient of” certain social services programs or benefits, subsection (a), and of “records and reports concerning child abuse or neglect”, Subsection (b). Subsection (b), which expressly *24 states that such records “are confidential”, and makes their unauthorized disclosure a criminal offense. Thus, while permitting disclosure via court order, the statute provides precious little guidance as to when a court order should issue.
In
State v. Runge,
The issue in this case is different from that addressed in
Runge
and in
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
Citing
In re Cager,
Furthermore, the appellant argues that, in any event, the discovery granted was too broad. Rather than ordering complete disclosure of all files, the court first should have reviewed the records for potentially relevant information. Permitting blanket disclosure, the appellant contends, disregards entirely the privacy rights of the plaintiffs and those from whom social service or health care practitioners may have obtained much of the information contained in those records. It is also violative of the legislative intent reflected in § 6. Moreover, the blanket order passed in this case apparently assumed, from the nature of the records, that they were possibly relevant to the civil action before the court.
The appellee responds that his property interest entitles him to as much protection of the due process clause of the
*26
Fourteenth Amendment as does the liberty interest of a criminal defendant. Thus, he says, the plaintiffs, having alleged physical, mental, and emotional injury as a result of the housing he provided may not suppress information contained in records maintained by a State agency, necessary to rebut those allegations. Because “[d]ue process requires that there be an opportunity to present every available defense,”
Lindsey v. Normet,
Our recent opinion in
Zaal v. State,
Because, he noted, he was aware that the victim had an emotional disability requiring special education and he denied her allegations, the case would likely turn on the victim’s credibility. Therefore, he continued, it was necessary that he be able to attack her credibility and, specifically, to explore her motivation, bias and veracity. This would not be possible, he proffered, “without access to some records indicating the nature and extent of the child’s disability.” Moreover, he suggested that the records might reveal “a pattern of behavior pre-existing that would impinge upon [the victim’s] believability in the statement.” In fact, that the victim was in a “special classroom” as a result of an “emotional disturbance” bears, he asserts, on whether there was “a physical basis that would relate to her capacity to observe аnd relate” or “a mental deficiency leading to an inability to control actions.” Furthermore, petitioner noted “the extreme antagonism [that] had existed for a number of years between himself and the victim’s father,” contending that *27 the victim’s awareness of that hostility may indicate a bias on her part which caused her to fabricate the incident.
Id.
at 62-63,
Rather than allowing Zaal, through his attorney, to review the records, the court conducted an
in camera
review, after which, it granted the Board’s motion to quash. Concluding that “ ‘there is really nothing I can see that in any significant way would relate to truth telling to this or to any other occasion’ and, certainly, nothing ‘showing] an inveterate tendency to lie,’ ”
We equated “need to inspect” with relevance and the existence of “a reasonable possibility that review of the records would result in discovery of usable evidence.”
This Court also noted that the defendant’s need to have access to the records in that case entailed consideration of several factors: the nature of the charges brought against the defendant, and, the relationship between the charges, the information sought, and the likelihood that review of the records would result in the discovery of relevant information.
Id.
at 81-82,
And how specific the proffer is with respect to what is sought will have a direct bearing on whether direсt access to the records, by the defendant or his or her representative, is necessary; the more specific the information sought to be uncovered, the less the necessity for direct access.
Id.
Another relevant factor was the issue before the court. Again, we said that the defendant’s proffer of what was sought to be uncovered was critical. We recognized that “[t]he specificity of the proffer of what is sought necessarily depends on the nature of the issue, rather than the extent of the defendant’s knowledge of the contents of the records.” Id. Implicitly, therefore, we acknowledged that the nature of the issue, rather than the specificity of the proffer, will determine whether the records require review by the advocate’s eye. Id.
On the other hand, we were sensitive to the need to ensure that the victim’s privacy interests were neither overlooked nor infringed.
See
“How significant that concern is, however, depends directly on the options available to the court; to the extent that the court has only two options — in camera review by the сourt alone or ordering unqualified access of the records to the accused — vindication of the victim’s privacy rights may require a more restrictive attitude with respect to the accused’s access to the victim’s records. If there are other options, an intermediate position, perhaps, the accused’s access may be expanded.”
Id.
at 84,
Relying on
Commonwealth v. Stockhammer,
We also provided some guidance as to when an expanded in camera proceeding should be used:
Which oрtion the court chooses must depend on various factors, including the degree of sensitivity of the material to be inspected; the strength of the showing of the “need to inspect”; whether the information sought is readily identifiable; considerations of judicial economy, etc. The greater the “need to inspect" showing, i.e., as here, where it is self-evident, and the less sensitive the information, for example, the more likely the records will be reviewed jointly by the court and counsel or by counsel as officers of the court.
Id.
at 87,
This is a civil, not a criminal, case. Nevertheless, the stakes involved are high. Although no “charges” have been lodged against the appellee, the civil equivalent, “causes of action” permits a party to seek recovery of monetary relief. In that sense, the causes of action are *30 extremely serious. Indeed, the plaintiffs seek to recovеr millions of dollars from the appellee.
If the plaintiffs are to prevail in this action, they must prove that the appellee is responsible for the minor plaintiffs lead poisoning; they must show that the appellee’s acts of commission, or omission, proximately caused the minor plaintiff’s injury. They must also demonstrate the effects, present and future, of that injury; they have to prove to what extent the minor plaintiff was damaged. The plaintiffs have alleged that, in addition to having to undergo painful testing and treatment, the minor plaintiff “has suffered serious developmental and behavioral injuries” and is expected to undergo “pain, anguish, mental distress, and temporary and permanent physical, mental and developmental injury.” It was to rebut these allegations as well as the allegation that he proximately caused the injury that the appellee sought to compel the appellant to release any records it has on the plaintiff and his family. To the extent that the records contain information bearing on the child’s behavior, particulаrly during the relevant period, the trier of fact will be able to assess whether that behavior was caused by lead poisoning or something else. The appellee has alleged a potential and plausible relationship between the records and the plaintiffs’ causes of action. He has proffered, given the circumstances, a “need to inspect,” that is, “a reasonable possibility that review of the records would result in discovery of usable evidence.”
Zaal,
The appellee’s proffer is not overly specific. That is to be expected, however, since the appellee has not seen the records and cannot possibly know what is in them. Moreover, the defense that the appellee seeks to raise is quite similar to credibility. As with credibility, whether information will be useful in rebutting the plaintiff’s case or impeaching the plaintiff “depends upon the circumstances, including context, and, to a large extent, the perception of the person interpreting it.”
Zaal,
*31
As we did in
Zaal,
we conclude that the appellee’s proffer is not frivоlous, and, indeed, “placed before the court the [appellee’s] legitimate concerns and gave plausibility to his stated need to review the records for relevant information.”
Id.
at 83,
The plaintiffs’ privacy concerns are, as we have seen, protected by § 6. Thus, there should be no greater disclosure allowed than is necessary to meet the “need to inspect” shown by the appellee. That extent can only be determined upon review of the records. In that regard the options we identified in Zaal are available for use in making that review.
The trial court ordered the appellant to release any records it had on the plaintiffs to the appellee without a hearing and, so far as this record reveals, without itself having reviewed the records for relevant information. Because we have already determined that the appellee’s proffer was not frivolous and, indeed, indicated a legitimate “need to inspect,” in so doing, it gave insufficient consideration to the confidentiality policy of § 6. The court erred. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of thе circuit court granting unrestricted disclosure of the appellants’ files and remand for further proceedings, consistent with the principles enunciated in Part VI of
Zaal,
JUDGMENT REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE CITY FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS NOT INCONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION.
COSTS IN THIS COURT TO BE EQUALLY DIVIDED BETWEEN THE PARTIES.
Notes
. The other defendants were Consumer Management Corp., and Cleoniki Hanson. Only Stein filed a brief in this Court. Thus, we refer only to him when discussing the proceedings below.
. Appellee Stein’s answer purported to be to "counts 1 and 2 of plaintiffs’ amended complaint,” while defendant Hanson’s answer was not restricted in any fashion.
. By their Motion In Support Of The Baltimore City Department Of Social Services’ Motion For Protective Order, filed May 17, 1991, the plaintiffs "support[ed] the reasoning, analysis and contentions outlined in the motion filed by DSS.” In addition, however, they reserved their right to raise any privilege they might have against the disclosure of any of the information sought by the respondents. Moreover, the plaintiffs asserted that "they did not receive any assistance from DSS between the years 1984 and 1990. Steven Ray, the infant plaintiff who alleges lead paint poisoning, was born in 1986. The family moved out of the premises at issue in 1990. Thus, plaintiffs received no assistance from DSS during any time period pertinent to the instant case.” Finally, the plaintiffs challenged the sufficiency of Stein’s proffer that the records are relevant, insisting that to permit discovery in this case "would be a gross violation of the plaintiffs’ privacy and would serve no useful purpose.”
. In pertinent part, that section provides:
(a) In General. — Except in accordance with a court order or to an authorized officer or employee of the State, or the United States, or a fiduciary institution having a right thereto in an official capacity, and as necessary to discharge responsibilities to administer public assistance, medical assistance, or social services programs, it shall be unlawful for any person or persons to divulge or make known in any manner any information concerning any applicant for or recipient of social services, child welfare services, cash assistance, food stamps, or medical assistance, directly or indirectly derived from the records, papers, files, investigations or communications of the State, county or city, or subdivisions or agencies thereof, or acquired in the course of the performance of official duties.
(b) Child Abuse or neglect. — Except as otherwise provided in Title 5, Subtitle 7 of the Family Law Article, all records and reports concerning child abuse or neglect are confidential, and their unauthorized disclosure is a criminal offense subject to the penalty set out in subsection (e) of this section. Information contained in reports or records concerning child abuse or neglect may be disclosed only:
*5 (1) Under a court order;
******
Maryland Code (1974, 1991 Repl.Vol.) Title 5, Subtitle 7 of the Family Law Article pertains to Divorce. Subsection (e) provides for a penalty of a $500.00 fine or 90 days imprisonment, or both.
. Maryland Rule 2-311(f) provides:
(f) Hearing — other motions. — A party desiring a hearing on a motion, other than a motion filed pursuant to Rule 2-532, 2-533, or 2-534, shall so request in the motion or response under the heading "Request for Hearing.” Except when a rule expressly provides for a hearing, the court shall determine in each case whether a hearing will be held, but it may not render a decision that is dispositive of a claim or defense without a hearing if one was requested as provided in this section.
The propriety of granting the motion without holding a hearing has not been presented for review. Accordingly, we do not address it.
. The appellant did not postpone noting its appeal until after it had been held in contempt, believing that "an agency of the State of Maryland should not be subjected to the indignity and ultimate sanction of a contempt order in order to protect its legitimate interest in maintaining confidentiality of Social Services’ records from unnecessary and inappropriate disclosure.”
. By preventing piecemeal appeals, the statute necessarily prevents the interruption of ongoing judicial proceedings,
Sigma Repro. Health Center v. State,
. We continue of the view that the result in Sigma Repro. Health Center was correct. We no longer endorse the rationale used to reach it.
. This rule permits protective orders to be filed by “a party or the party from whom discovery is sought.” The plaintiffs in this case filed a motion in support of the appellant’s motion for protective order in which they requested the court to “grant DSS’ Motion for Protective Order and issue an Order quashing the defendant Stein’s subpoena on deposition issued to DSS;" they did not, however, note an appeal from the denial of appellant’s motion.
. Alternatively, we expressed our belief that a person, in this day and age, should not “be obliged to decide whether he should risk contempt in order to test the validity of a subpoena duces tecum, particularly where, as here, the person to whom the subpoena is directed may not be one of the targets of the investigation but a possibly innocent custodian."
In re Special Investigation, No. 244, 296
Md. 80, 86,
. That case was a criminal proceeding and we addressed the issue in that context.
See Sigma Repro. Health,
. The appellant has expressed concern that allowing its records to be subpoenaed without a proffer requiring the trial court to review them for relevance places a tremendous burden on the trial judge since many of the records are quite thick. An expanded in camera proceeding would alleviate that concern; the court could, under an appropriate order, permit counsel to conduct the review.
