This сase presents a narrow question of statutory interpretation, namely, whether Maryland Code (1980, 1983 Cum.Supp.), § 3-829 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, authorizes a juvenile court to order the State tо pay restitution to a victim of a delinquent act committed by a juvenile while in the lawful custody of the State. In pertinent part, § 3-829 provides that the court may
“enter a judgment of restitution against the parent of a child, or the child in any case in which the cоurt finds a child has committed a delinquent act . . . . ” (Emphasis supplied.)
(1)
The facts are not in dispute. Four juvenile offenders were committed to the State Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) and plaсed at the Regional Institute for Children and Adolescents (RICA), a State residen *518 tial treatment facility for emotionally disturbed youths. The juveniles eloped from the institution in December of 1982, and thereafter assaultеd and injured 74-year-old Amelia Hogan during an attempted robbery. Ms. Hogan incurred unreimbursed bills for medical expenses in the amount of $318.40.
The District Court of Maryland, sitting as a juvenile court in Montgomery County, found that the juvenilеs had attempted to rob Ms. Hogan and had therefore committed delinquent acts as charged in the juvenile petitions. The State’s Attorney for Montgomery County subsequently filed restitution claims on the victim’s behalf аgainst the four juveniles. In addition, he sought a judgment of restitution against the State, DHMH and RICA (the State), on the theory that the State stood in loco parentis to the juveniles and was therefore a “parent” within the contemplation оf § 3-829. 1 The juvenile court agreed with the State’s Attorney; it entered judgment for Ms. Hogan against the juveniles and the State in the amount of $318.40. The State appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. We granted certiorari prior to decision by the intermediate appellate court to consider the important issue of statutory interpretation raised in the case.
(2)
Section 3-829 is one of thirty-fivе sections comprising the Juvenile Causes Subtitle of the Courts Article; the term “parent” is not defined in any of these sections. Interpreting the provisions of § 3-829 in
In Re James D.,
The juvenile court read James D. in light of § 3-829 “to provide the victim [of a delinquent act] with some means of compensation for loss of property or personal injury.” It said that no such remedy was available against the child’s parents where the State had custody of the juvenile at the time of the delinquent act and, further, that it was not realistic to believe that the juvenile would satisfy a judgment of restitution. Consequently, the trial judge concluded that the legislature did not intend to restrict the word “parent” in § 3-829 to the child’s biological parents but rather intendеd to include one standing in loco parentis to the juvenile, other than the natural parents. He said that the State’s custody and control of a committed juvenile placed it in such an in loco parentis position and that it would, therefore, bе “liable for the full restitution to a victim in a situation in which a juvenile escaped or eloped from state custody, and committed some type of offense against the person or property of another.”
The State argues before us that nothing in James D. requires a holding that the State, while having legal custody of a delinquent child, is a “parent” within the sense contemplated by § 3-829. It maintains that the ordinary and plain meaning of the word “parent” does nоt embrace the State. In support of the lower court’s ruling, the State’s Attorney argues that James D. is authority for the proposition that a “parent” under § 3-829 includes parental substitutes, and that as the State stands in loco parentis to the juveniles, it is *520 by neсessary implication a “parent” within the meaning of the statute. He points out that under chapter 900 (Juvenile Causes) of the Maryland Rules, and specifically Rule 901 b 4, a “parent” specifically includes “a child’s parent, guardian and custodian”; and that § 3 — 801(j) of the Juvenile Causes Subtitle of the Courts Article defines a “Custodian” to mean “a person or agency to whom legal custody of a child has been given by order of the court, other than the child’s parent or legal guardian.” Reading the statute and the rule together, the State’s Attorney reasons that the term “parent” in § 3-829 embraces and includes the State as custоdian where, as here, the delinquent child has been lawfully committed to its care and custody. Particularly is this so, it is further argued, because the dual purpose of the statute, as recognized in James D., is to compеnsate innocent victims of delinquent acts committed by juvenile offenders and to deter them from such acts by encouraging close supervision and control by those standing in loco parentis, including the State. Not to include the State as a “parent” under § 3-829, according to the State’s Attorney, is to render the statute ineffective, there being no other source from which to pay compensation to the victim, and no other entity capable of exercising supervision over the child.
(3)
We have said time and again that the cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the legislative intention.
Koyce v. State, Central Collection Unit,
The cases indicate that the word “parent” in a statute should be afforded its common and ordinary meaning.
See, e.g., Nunn v. Nunn,
We think it fully evident that the plain and popularly understood meaning of the term parent is, as we said in
James D.,
“a father or a mother.”
We think the juvenile court lost sight of these basic and controlling principles when it entered a judgment of restitution against the State. The Stаte’s Attorney’s arguments in support of the juvenile court’s decision, as previously set forth, are similarly flawed; they are clearly contrary to the plain meaning rule of statutory interpretation. To accept the State’s Attorney’s construction of § 3-829 is to rewrite the statute by extending its provisions well beyond their plain import by requiring the State to indemnify the losses of all victims of delinquent acts perpetratеd by juveniles committed to State institutions. No such result was intended by the legislature. In so concluding, we have considered the provisions of § 3-829, not in isolation, but together with other pertinent parts of the Juvenile Causеs Subtitle of the *523 Courts Article, which bear on the proper interpretation to be afforded to § 3-829. 3
In view of our conclusion, we need not consider the further question raised in the case as to whether thе doctrine of sovereign immunity bars restitution against the State and its agencies under § 3-829.
JUDGMENT REVERSED, COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE APPELLEE.
Notes
. The propriety of the State’s Attorney’s action against the State and its agencies has not been questioned and we express no view of its legality.
. Black’s Law Dictionary 1003 (5th ed. 1977) defines “parent” to mean “the lawful father or mother of a person.” Ballentine’s Law Dictionary 911 (3rd ed. 1969) defines “parent” to mean “[i]n common parlance, the lawful father or mother by blood.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1641 (Unabridged 1961) defines a “parent” “as including a person standing in loco parentis, although not a natural parent.” None of these definitions include the State as a “parent.”
. Another argument presented by the State’s Attorney to support his interpretation of § 3-829 is that under the child abuse statute, Code (1982 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, § 35A, persons standing in loco parentis to a minor, other than the child’s parents or adoptive parents, are subject tо prosecution. The plain words of the statute require this interpretation. Nothing in our cases is authority, by analogy or otherwise, for the conclusion that under § 3-829 the State is a “parent” and, as such, subject to the statute’s provisions.
