The issue we resolve in this case is whether a party who unsuccessfully petitions the trial court to hold an adversary in constructive civil contempt of court may appeal the denial of that petition. The Court of Special Appeals held that, where the order denying the contempt petition is so closely intertwined with a separate, appealable order as to be reviewable as a part of that judgment, the petitioning party does have a right to appeal.
Howard County v. The Pack Shack, Inc.,
I.
Howard County adopted, as a part of its Zoning Regulations, CB 65-1997, which regulated the location in the County of adult entertainment businesses. Pack Shack, Inc., the petitioner, operates an adult book or video store, as defined in the Zoning Regulations. It filed a declaratory judgment action in the Circuit Court for Howard County, challenging the constitutionality, as applied to its premises, of those portions of the respondent Howard County’s Zoning Regulations that restrict adult book or video stores to certain areas of the County. The court upheld those zoning regulations and issued a permanent injunction that enjoined the petitioner from using its leased premises in violation of the County’s zoning regulations. The petitioner noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.
While that appeal was pending in the intermediate appellate court, the respondent filed in the trial court, in the declaratory judgment action, a petition for constructive civil contempt to enforce the injunction previously entered against the petitioner. The petition was filed following an inspection conducted by the respondent of the petitioner’s premises. From that inspection, the respondent concluded that the petitioner was continuing to operate its adult book or video store more than a year after the effective date of CB 65-1997 and in violation of the injunction against doing so that had been issued by the trial court less than a week before. 1 The court found that there was insufficient evidence to hold the petitioner in contempt and, therefore, ruled that the verdict was not guilty. 2
*247
Dissatisfied with that decision, the respondent, as the petitioner had done a week or so before, noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. In that court, it moved to consolidate its appeal with the petitioner’s then still pending appeal in that court. The petitioner, for its part, moved to dismiss the respondent’s appeal, arguing that it was not permitted because there was no statutory basis for it. The Court of Special Appeals ultimately denied both motions. With respect to the declaratory judgment case, it affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
The Pack Shack, Inc. v. Howard County,
II.
The right to appeal in this State is wholly statutory.
Prince George’s County v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp.,
As in State v. Green, supra, this case turns on the statutory construction of the relevant appeals statutes, Md.Code (1974, 1998 Replacement Volume) §§ 12-101 et. seq. of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article. It is appropriate, therefore, that we begin our inquiry with those appeals statutes for, if there is a right to appeal in this case, it must be grounded there.
The statutory scheme is structured to confer a broad, general right of appeal, that subsequently is limited by enumerated “exceptions.”
See State v. Green,
“Except as provided in § 12-302 of this subtitle, a party-may appeal from a final judgment entered in a civil or criminal case by a circuit court. The right of appeal exists from a final judgment entered by a court in the exercise of original, special, limited, statutory jurisdiction, unless in a particular case the right of appeal is expressly denied by law. In a criminal case, the defendant may appeal even though imposition or execution of sentence has been suspended. In a civil case, a plaintiff who has accepted a remittitur may cross-appeal from the final judgment.”
Section 12-302 contains the exceptions, or limitations, on that general right of appeal. 5 Relevant to this case is § 12-302(b). It expressly states that “[sjection 12-301 of this subtitle does not apply to appeals in contempt cases, which are governed by §§ 12-304 and 12-402 of this title.” 6 Section 12-304 provides:
“(a) Scope of review. — Any person may appeal from any order or judgment passed to preserve the power or vindicate the dignity of the court and adjudging him in contempt of court, including an interlocutory order, remedial in nature, adjudging any person in contempt, whether or not a party to the action.
“(b) Exception. — This section does not apply to an adjudication of contempt for violation of an interlocutory order for the payment of alimony.”
*251
The petitioner argues that the respondent had no right to appeal the Circuit Court’s denial of its contempt petition. Noting that § 12-304 is the only source for the right of appeal in contempt cases, it asserts that the language of that section clearly limits the appeal right to persons adjudged in contempt. The petitioner relies on
Tyler v. Baltimore Co.,
“Our view is that ordinarily these two statutes offer the only right in Maryland to appellate review in cases of either civil or criminal contempt, and they offer the right only to those adjudged in contempt, not to those who unsuccessfully seek to have another held to be contemptuous.”
Id.
at 70-71,
In response, the respondent contends that “by misconstruing certain appeal provisions contained in the Courts & Judi *252 cial Proceedings Article of the Maryland Annotated Code ..., [the petitioner] seeks to strip the County, and any moving party in a civil contempt proceeding, of the right to appeal a final civil judgment of a trial court refusing to enforce a previous court order through a civil contempt order.” It maintains that it has a right of appeal under § 12-301, which, by “providing that ‘a party may appeal from a final judgment entered in a civil ... case by a circuit court,’ supplies the statutory authority....” Section 12-304 does not govern its appeal, the respondent submits. In fact, the respondent asserts, § 12-304 merely supplements the general right of appeal provided in § 12-301, by expressly conferring that right in certain types of contempt cases: its main clause (“Any person may appeal from any order or judgment passed to preserve the power or vindicate the dignity of the court and adjudging him in contempt of court”) expressly authorizes appeals in criminal contempt cases, while it’s subordinate clause (“including an interlocutory order, remedial in nature, adjudging any person in contempt”) authorizes appeals from contempt judgments relating to the enforcement of a temporary injunction or restraining order. Noting that the term “contempt” is not defined in § 12-302(b) and, thus, does not differentiate between civil and criminal, but contending that, from its terms and the way it has been interpreted, § 12-304 clearly applies only to criminal contempt and orders enforcing interlocutory orders, neither of which characterizes the order in this case, the respondent concludes that its appeal is not of the type specifically referenced in § 12-304, with the result that the appeal is authorized under § 12-301’s general right of appeal.
The respondent further argues, advancing the rationale adopted by the Court of Special Appeals, that, even if § 12-301 did not authorize its appeal, the appeal is authorized because it is so closely intertwined with the separate permanent injunction, which the petitioner appealed. Here, the respondent relies, as did the intermediate appellate court, on language in
Tyler v. Baltimore Co., supra,
III.
On numerous occasions, we have stated “that the cardinal rule [of statutory construction] is to ascertain and effectuate the legislative intent.”
See Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. Chase,
*254
Applying these well-settled principles to the facts of this case, we agree with the petitioner that § 12-304 clearly and unambiguously limits the right to appeal in contempt cases to persons adjudged in contempt. Its plain language says as much; to be appealable, § 12-304 requires the order or judgment to be passed to preserve the power and dignity of the court and to have adjudged the person appealing in contempt of court. As we explained in
State v. Green, supra,
The Court of Special Appeals thus correctly concluded that “the express language of the applicable statutes point[s] to the conclusion that there is no right of appeal by a party who unsuccessfully seeks to have another party held in contempt.”
Howard County v. The Pack Shack, Inc.,
The respondent submits that § 12-304 was not intended to apply to cases like the instant one, where a moving party in a constructive civil contempt action appeals a refusal to enforce a permanent final injunction. It finds significant, in that regard, that neither § 12-302 nor § 12-304 expressly differentiates between civil and criminal contempt, referring merely to “contempt.” Despite not defining “contempt” as referring to civil or criminal contempt, the respondent contends, nevertheless, that, by describing the kinds of cases in which it applies, § 12-304 was intended by the Legislature “to provide express and supplementary authority in certain types of contempt cases in addition to the general authority for appeals provided in CJ Section 12-301.” Those types of contempt cases, the respondent concludes, are criminal contempt cases and contempt orders or judgments relating to the enforcement of a temporary injunction or restraining order. And, because neither is involved in the case sub judice, it asserts, the general authority for appeals prescribed in § 12-301 controls.
That neither § 12-302(b) nor § 12-304 differentiates between civil and criminal contempt cases does not lead inexorably to the conclusion that the generic reference to “contempt cases” in those provisions means that § 12-301 applies to any contempt cases to which § 12-304 does not apply. Nor is there significance in the fact that the Maryland Rules did not differentiate between criminal and civil contempt until this Court’s Order of June 7, 1996, effective January 1, 1997, adopting new contempt rules, Maryland Rules 15-201 to 15-208. Our cases have long recognized and discussed the distinction between civil and criminal contempt.
Kelly v. Monte-bello Park Co.,
Important to the resolution of this case is this Court’s decision in
Tyler v. Baltimore Co., supra.
There, the issue was whether an order by the Circuit Court of Baltimore, granting summary judgment in favor of defendants that the plaintiff sought to have held in contempt of court for failing to issue a permit that the court had ordered issued, thus refusing to hold them in contempt, was appealable. Preliminarily, we explained that the predecessors to the current appeals statutes were enacted by the Legislature in response to
Ex Parte Sturm, supra,
in which this Court held that a judgment imposing a fine for criminal contempt was not appealable because there was no statute that specially authorized appeal, that abrogated the rule that there was no right of appellate review in contempt cases, and
Kelly v. Montebello Park Co., supra,
holding, for the same reason, that a party adjudged in constructive criminal contempt for violating a temporary injunction had no right to appeal.
It is quite interesting that, in reaching that holding, the Court discussed
Chambers v. State,
“The actual holding in Kelly was not this broad. It held that the contempt there involved was criminal and that there had been no relaxation in Maryland of the rule that no appellate review was available in cases of criminal contempt. Kelly can be read to say that the common law rule is the Maryland rule and as engaging in a somewhat vague and rambling discussion not necessary to the holdings made that *257 generally there is more relaxation of the rule in cases of civil contempt than in criminal and that perhaps some cases of civil contempt might be reviewable in Maryland.”
Tyler v. Baltimore County,
Two principles, recently recalled and reiterated in
Blevins v. Baltimore County,
The second principle is that “a change in a statute as part of a general recodification will ordinarily not be deemed to modify the law unless the change is such that the intention of the Legislature to modify the law is unmistakable.”
Duffy v. Conaway,
“In view of the broad language of § 12-301, the need for a special contempt appeal provision may be questioned. However, there is an unusual history with respect to appeals in contempt cases. At common law, the judgment of *258 the trial court in a contempt case was conclusive and not reviewable by any other tribunal in the absence of express statutory authority; Kelly v. Montebello Park Co.,141 Md. 194 ,118 A. 600 (1922). It was not until after Kelly had been reaffirmed in Ex Parte Sturm,152 Md. 114 ,136 A. 312 (1927) that Maryland adopted the predecessor of Art. 5, § 18; see Ch. 357, Laws of 1927. In view of this historical situation, it is thought wise to retain an express authority for appeals in contempt cases.”
Two decisions of the Court of Special Appeals, subsequent to recodification, support this proposition.
See Becker v. Becker,
IV.
We also reject the respondent’s alternate argument, grounded in the rationale ultimately adopted by the Court of Special Appeals, that the appeal was authorized because it was closely intertwined with the declaratory judgment and permanent injunction, which the petitioner appealed. That rationale is based on dicta in Tyler v. Baltimore County, supra. Having concluded that the respondent in that case had no right of appeal, the Court observed:
“There may be occasional instances in which the order imposing the punishment for civil contempt or refusing to impose the order for civil contempt is so much a part of or so closely intertwined with a judgment or decree which is appealable as to be reviewable on appeal as part of or in connection with the main judgment, as in Williamson v. Carnan, 1 G. & J. 184, and Longley v. McGeoch, 115 Md. *259 182,80 A. 843 (in which no point was made as to the right to appeal; cfi Emergency Hospital v. Stevens,146 Md. 159 , 164-165,126 A. 101 ).”
Tyler v. Baltimore County,
To say that two orders or judgments are closely intertwined does not make it so. In the case sub judice, such a statement is, in fact, belied by the actions of the Court of Special Appeals in ruling on the respondent’s motion to consolidate the petitioner’s appeal of the declaratory judgment and injunction with its appeal of the dismissal of its contempt petition. To put it quite plainly, we are hard pressed to understand, in light of its denial of the respondent’s motion to consolidate the appeals, how the intermediate appellate court could have reached such a conclusion.
8
Indeed, the intermediate appellate court all but conceded that the cases were not connected, stating, “[W]e denied that motion [the respondent’s motion to consolidate the appeals] but, had it been granted, the contempt proceeding
would have been
“intertwined” with the injunction case then pending in this Court.”
Howard County v. The Pack Shack,
None of the cases on which the
Tyler
Court relied is applicable to the situation
sub judice.
In each, the appealing party was the person that had been adjudged in contempt and, in each, there was a separate final judgment as to which there was no dispute the contempt finding was closely related and intertwined. In
Williamson v. Carnan,
it was the defendant who sought to appeal a contempt order entered against him and the appeal was allowed because the result of a separate appeal of the injunction out of which the contempt order arose, would determine whether the defendant should have been held in contempt in the first instance. 1 G. & J. 184 (1829).
Longley v. McGeoch,
In any event, the continued vitality of this exception, which was a very narrow one to begin with, is highly doubtful. Although we need not reach that issue here, because we have concluded that the contempt ruling and the declaratory judgment are not closely intertwined, that exception very likely would not apply when the appeal is filed by a person who was not held in contempt, however closely related and intertwined it is with other orders or judgments also pending appeal. Tyler simply does not support affording the losing party to a contempt action the right of appeal.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO DISMISS THE APPEAL. COSTS IN THIS COURT AND IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID BY HOWARD COUNTY.
Notes
. CB 65-1997 was made effective February 3, 1998 and provided for an amortization period of one year from that date, during which an adult entertainment business validly established before that date could continue to operate.
. The court reasoned:
*247 "Tlie Court is satisfied that this is a separate proceeding. That in order to be found guilty, the County has the obligation of establishing that a significant and substantial portion of the stock in trade is characterized by an emphasis on matters depicting, describing or relating to sexual activities. That's a heavy burden.”
Petitioner contended that it was no longer operating a prohibited adult or video store and presented testimony to support that contention, focusing on whether "a significant or substantial portion of its stock in trade is characterized by an emphasis on matters depicting, describing or relating to sexual activities.” The respondent, of course, countered with evidence to the contrary.
.
See also Howard County v. JJM, Inc.,
. In
Robinson
v.
State,
"To be sure, the language of the 1996 assault statutes contain no specific words of repeal or abrogation, nor is there any conflict between those statutes and the common law. We have determined, however, that the statutes as adopted represent the entire subject matter of the law of assault and battery in Maryland, and as such, abrogate the common law on the subject.”
. In addition to limiting appeals in contempt cases, § 12-302 limits criminal appeals by the State, see § 12-302(c), appeals from Circuit Courts exercising appellate jurisdiction in reviewing decisions of District Courts, see § 12-302(a), appeals from decisions of the Circuit Courts sitting in banc, pursuant to Article IV § 22 of the Constitution, see § 12-302(d), and appeals from orders of a sentence review panel of a Circuit Court, under Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Replacement Volume) Article 27 §§ 645JA through 645JG. See § 12-302(f).
. Section 12-402 is substantively the same as Section 12-304, but, because it only applies to appeals in contempt cases from the District Court of Maryland, is not relevant to the resolution of this case.
. The right to appeal in contempt cases, codified in § 12-304(a), formerly was addressed in two separate statutes. Maryland Code (1957, 1968 Repl.Vol.), Art. 5, § 18, entitled "Appeals in Contempt Cases,” provided that "[a]ny person may appeal to the Court of Appeals from any order or judgment passed to preserve the power or to vindicate the dignity of the court and adjudging him in contempt of court.” Maryland Code (1957, 1968 Repl.Vol.), Art. 5, § 7(e), entitled "Appeals from Certain Interlocutory Orders,” authorized appeal from "[a]n order, remedial in its nature, adjudging in contempt of court any party to a cause or any person not a party thereto, except orders entered requiring the payment of alimony.” These sections were combined when the Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article was adopted as part of Code Revision in 1973. See 1973 Md. Laws Special Session ch. 2, Section 1. The Revisor’s Note to § 12-301 states that the recodification was not intended to change the general rules as to appealability, with one exception not relevant to the right of appeal in contempt cases, and directs readers to § 12-304 with respect to appeals in contempt cases.
. Maryland Rule 2-503, although applicable to trial consolidations, provides a valid analogy. It provides:
"(1) When permitted. — When actions involve a common question of law or fact or a common subject matter, the court, on motion or on its own initiative, may order a joint hearing or trial or consolidation of any or all of the claims, issues, or actions. An action instituted in the District Court may be consolidated with an action pending in a circuit court under the circumstances described in Code, Courts Article, § 6-104(b). The court may enter any order regulating the proceeding, including the filing and serving of papers, that will tend to avoid unnecessary costs or delay.”
At the very least, to be intertwined, not to mention closely so, the matters must qualify for consolidation. Here, the contempt action and the declaratory judgment share subject matter, the zoning regulations being at the center of each. The issues — the questions of law and fact— in the two cases, however, are decidedly different.
