PER CURIAM ORDER.
The petition for writ of certiorari in the above-entitled case having been granted and argued, it is this 20th day of May, 2011,
ORDERED, by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, that the writ of certiorari be, and it is hereby, dismissed with costs, the petition having been improvidently granted.
MURPHY, J., Dissents.
MURPHY, J., dissenting.
The petition for writ of certiorari that was filed in the case at bar presents the question of whether (in the words of the petition) "a Temporary Protection Order (TPO) issued by one Circuit Court Judge [can] be `quashed' by another `Duty' Circuit Court Judge on an unscheduled, ex parte hearing[?]" I am persuaded that, even though the case at bar is now moot, the question presented involves "unresolved issues of public importance, which are likely to recur, and for which there is a manifest urgency of establishing a rule of future conduct." Hagerstown Repro. Health Serv. v. Fritz, 295 Md. 268, 273, 454 A.2d 846, 848 (1983). I therefore dissent from the decision to deny the petition before us on the ground that it was improvidently granted.
In In re Najasha B., 409 Md. 20, 972 A.2d 845 (2009), this Court stated:
Id. at 33, 972 A.2d at 852-53.
While I would not dissent from a decision that leaves to another day the issues of whether the "stay away" and/or "put out" provisions of a TPO can be quashed prior to an adversary hearing, in my opinion, this Court should squarely hold that the "custody" provision in a TPO does not operate to prevent the Circuit Court from exercising its parens patriae authority when presented with information that a child is in need of protection from the parent who obtained the TPO.
It is clear that an appeal from a custody order does not divest the Circuit Court of jurisdiction to decide the merits of a claim that, as a result of a material change in circumstances that has occurred after the