Robinson v. Robinson ( 2023 )


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  •             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    PETER ROBINSON,1                              §
    § No. 234, 2022
    Respondent Below,                      §
    Appellant,                             § Court Below—Family Court
    § of the State of Delaware
    v.                                     §
    § File No. CN01-07655
    MELISSA ROBINSON,                             § Petition No. 21-27095
    §
    Petitioner Below,                      §
    Appellee.                              §
    Submitted: February 24, 2023
    Decided:   April 27, 2023
    Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and TRAYNOR, Justices.
    ORDER
    Upon consideration of the parties’ briefs and the record below, it appears to
    the Court that:
    (1)    The respondent below-appellant, Peter Robinson (“the Father”), filed
    this appeal from the Family Court’s May 31, 2022 order reversing the
    Commissioner’s March 4, 2022 order denying the petition for a protection from
    abuse (“PFA”) order filed by the petitioner below-appellee, Melissa Robinson (“the
    Mother”), and the Family Court’s June 27, 2022 order granting the Mother’s motion
    1
    The Court previously assigned pseudonyms to the parties under Supreme Court Rule 7(d).
    for attorneys’ fees. We find no error or abuse of discretion in the Family Court’s
    decision. Accordingly, we affirm the Family Court’s judgment.
    (2)    The parties are the parents of a 19-year-old daughter (“the Daughter”)
    and a 15-year-old son (“the Son”). On October 14, 2021, the Father was charged
    with harassing the Mother. The Father’s conditions-of-release included that he have
    no contact with the Mother. On November 8, 2021, the Family Court awarded sole
    legal custody of the children to the Mother.2
    (3)    On November 16, 2021, the Mother filed a pro se petition for a PFA
    order. She alleged that the Father had violated no-contact orders with her and others
    and repeatedly sent her harassing texts and emails. On December 6, 2021, the Father
    filed a pro se petition for a PFA order. He alleged that the Mother had filed frivolous
    complaints against him with the police.
    (4)    On February 25, 2022 and March 4, 2022, a Family Court
    Commissioner held a hearing on the parties’ PFA petitions. The Mother was
    represented by counsel at the hearings. The Commissioner denied the Mother’s
    request to amend her petition to include a request for attorneys’ fees, but said she
    could file a motion for attorneys’ fees if her petition was successful. The Father
    2
    The custody order provided that the Family Court had no jurisdiction over the Daughter’s custody
    when she turned eighteen.
    2
    suggested several times that both petitions be dismissed, but the Mother wished to
    pursue her petition.
    (5)     The Father called as witnesses two police officers, the family’s former
    therapist who was treating the Father, one of his employees, his nephew, and a
    friend. He also testified on his own behalf. The Mother called the Daughter and the
    Father as witnesses. She also testified on her own behalf. At the end of the second
    day of testimony, the Commissioner denied both PFA petitions.
    (6)     On April 4, 2022, the Mother filed a petition for review of the
    Commissioner’s order and sought attorneys’ fees. The Father responded to the
    petition. On May 31, 2022, the Family Court reversed the Commissioner’s ruling
    as to the Mother’s petition and granted the Mother’s petition for a two-year PFA.
    Based on text messages the Father sent to the Mother between September 26, 2021
    and October 10, 2021, the Family Court found that the Father had engaged “in a
    course of alarming or distressing conduct in a manner which is likely to cause fear
    or emotional distress or to provoke a violent or disorderly response.”3 The Family
    Court also held that the Mother could file a motion for attorneys’ fees.
    (7)     On June 10, 2022, the Mother’s counsel filed a motion for $7,227.50 of
    attorneys’ fees she incurred in pursuing her PFA petition and opposing the Father’s
    PFA petition. The Father opposed the motion. On June 27, 2022, the Family Court
    3
    10 Del. C. § 1041(1)(d).
    3
    granted the Mother’s motion and ordered the Father to pay $4,940.00 of the Mother’s
    attorneys’ fees. This appeal followed.
    (8)    On appeal, the Father argues that the Family Court erred in reversing
    the Commissioner’s decision and finding that he committed acts of abuse against the
    Mother. He also contends that the Family Court erred in awarding attorneys’ fees
    to the Mother.
    (9)    This Court’s review of a Family Court order, including the Family
    Court’s review of a Commissioner’s order, extends to a review of the facts and the
    law, as well as to the inferences and deductions made by the judge.4 We review
    issues of law de novo.5 If the Family Court has correctly applied the law, our
    standard of review is abuse of discretion.6
    (10) To obtain a PFA order, the Mother had to establish by a preponderance
    of the evidence that the Father had committed an act of domestic violence.7 A person
    commits domestic violence against a former spouse if the person “[e]ngag[es] in a
    course of alarming or distressing conduct in a manner which is likely to cause fear
    or emotional distress or to provoke a violent or disorderly response.”8 Relying on
    4
    Kraft v. Mason, 
    2010 WL 5341918
    , at *2 (Del. Dec. 20, 2010) (citing Solis v. Tea, 
    468 A.2d 1276
    , 1279 (Del. 1983)).
    5
    In re Heller, 
    669 A.2d 25
    , 29 (Del. 1995).
    6
    Jones v. Lang, 
    591 A.2d 185
    , 187 (Del. 1991).
    7
    10 Del. C. § 1044(b).
    8
    10 Del. C. § 1041(1)(d), 2(a).
    4
    this Court’s decision in Painter v. Painter,9 the Family Court judge held that the
    Commissioner erred in finding that a barrage of text messages the Father sent the
    Mother between September 26, 2021 and October 10, 2021 did not constitute an
    alarming or distressing course of conduct likely to cause fear or emotional distress
    under Section 1041(1)(d).
    (11) The Father started sending the text messages after the Son told him to
    stop coming to his school on September 26th. The Father denied coming to the
    school and questioned why the Son would think he was there. The Mother told him
    to stop calling the Son a liar because the Son had seen him at his school two days
    earlier.
    (12) Later on September 26th, the Father texted the Mother “[y]ou’re
    indicating our son is having paranoid delusions. This is extremely serious.”10 The
    Mother accused the Father of gaslighting and advised him to stop. Instead, he sent
    her multiple text messages over the course of eighty minutes. In those texts, the
    Father: (i) accused the Mother of having worsening “psychotic snaps,” making “very
    serious allegations” about the children’s “declining mental health,” and being a
    “VERY VERY sick person;”11 (ii) threatened to tell the Family Court to protect the
    9
    
    2019 WL 6320455
     (Del. 2019) (affirming the Family Court’s issuance of a two-year PFA order
    based on the father repeatedly sending lengthy, accusatory, and insulting text messages to the
    mother).
    10
    Respondent’s Ex. 2.
    11
    
    Id.
    5
    children and to involve the Son’s school; (iii) claimed her own mother was afraid of
    her and that the Son had told the Family Court judge she was “psychologically
    abusing him;”12 and (iv) repeatedly described the Mother as abusive. Between
    September 27th and October 10th, the Father continued to send the Mother
    messages, despite her repeated pleas for him to stop, accusing her of abuse, not
    caring that the Son was suffering delusions or encountering strangers at school, and
    calling her sick and deluded.
    (13) Having reviewed the text messages in the context of this Court’s
    decision in Painter, the Family Court did not err in concluding that the Mother had
    established by a preponderance of the evidence that the Father had “[e]ngag[ed] in
    a course of alarming or distressing conduct in a manner…likely to cause fear or
    emotional distress.”13 Over a two-week period, the Father repeatedly sent texts
    accusing the Mother of sick and abusive behavior that caused the Son to suffer from
    mental delusions. He continued to engage in this conduct even after the Mother
    begged him to stop harassing her and leave her alone. While every insulting or
    obnoxious text does not constitute abuse, the Family Court could appropriately
    determine, based on the number and content of the Father’s texts, that the Father had
    12
    
    Id.
    13
    10 Del. C. § 1041(1)(d), 2(b), 1044(b).
    6
    engaged in an alarming or distressing course of conduct likely to cause fear or
    emotional distress.
    (14) The Father contends that his conduct cannot constitute abuse because
    he was simply defending himself against the Mother’s false accusations, protecting
    the Son from abuse, and trying to obtain information about the Son’s welfare. He
    is mistaken. Repeatedly accusing the Mother of abusing the Son to the point he
    suffered paranoid delusions was unnecessary to accomplish any of those objectives.
    The fact that the Father continued sending abusive texts even after the Mother
    stopped responding and accusing him of going to the Son’s school further belies his
    claims of self-defense. The Father also contends that the Family Court ignored
    innocuous texts he sent to the Mother about the children between September 26th
    and October 10th, but the fact that he sent some unobjectionable texts does not make
    his other texts during that time period non-abusive.
    (15) Contrary to the Father’s contentions, the Family Court applied the
    proper standards in reviewing the Commissioner’s order.                         In reviewing a
    Commissioner’s order, the Family Court must make “a de novo determination of
    those portions of the Commissioner’s order to which objection is made.”14 The
    14
    10 Del. C. § 915(d)(1). See also Fam. Ct. Civ. R. 53.1(e) (“From an appeal of a commissioner's
    final order, the Court shall make a de novo determination of the matter (that is, the matter shall be
    decided anew by a judge), based on the record below.”).
    7
    Family Court “may accept, reject or modify in whole or in part the order of the
    Commissioner.”15
    (16) The Father also argues that the Family Court gave insufficient weight
    to the Commissioner’s factual findings, especially as to witness credibility, but
    ignores or mischaracterizes key aspects of the Commissioner’s findings.                  For
    example, as to the Father’s claims concerning the Son suffering a breakdown or
    delusions, the Commissioner stated:
    Some of the things that you said in the text messages I think on 9/27
    and on 9/26, it’s disturbing, okay, the language that you use, and I’m
    quite puzzled, quite frankly, that you keep coming back to the idea of
    [the Son] suffering some type of psychotic break or having delusions.
    Sir, I’ve listened to the record, I’ve read [the Son’s] letter, I listened to
    the witnesses, and I’m not convinced that he had any such thing or
    maybe he mistook you for somebody else...or maybe he thought he saw
    you and didn’t….But I have not been presented any evidence with any
    sort of psychotic break or delusion. But yet you keep bringing it up and
    bringing it up and using those words.16
    The Family Court applied the proper legal standards in determining that the Father’s
    text messages constituted acts of domestic violence.
    (17) Finally, the Father challenges the Family Court’s award of attorneys’
    fees to the Mother. He argues that he cannot be held liable for the Mother’s
    attorneys’ fees under 13 Del. C. § 1515 because the Family Court failed to consider
    15
    10 Del. C. § 915(d)(1).
    16
    March 4, 2022 Hearing Tr. at 129.
    8
    the financial resources of both parties and there was no evidence that the Father acted
    in bad faith. Section 1515 provides that the Family Court may, after considering the
    financial resources of both parties, order a party to pay all or part of the attorneys’
    fees incurred by the other party in maintaining or defending any proceeding under
    Title 13.
    (18) The Mother invoked 10 Del. C. § 1045, not Section 1515, in her motion
    for attorneys’ fees. Under Section 1045(a)(7), the Family Court may order the
    respondent to pay attorneys’ fees incurred by the petitioner because of domestic
    violence committed by the respondent. The Mother also argued that she was entitled
    to attorneys’ fees she incurred as a result of the Father’s overly litigious conduct,
    which included his repeated efforts to relitigate the November 8, 2021 custody order
    despite her counsel’s objections and the Commissioner’s admonishments throughout
    the two-day PFA hearing. The record supports the Family Court’s award of
    attorneys’ fees to the Mother.
    NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the judgment of the Family
    Court is AFFIRMED.
    BY THE COURT:
    /s/ Collins J. Seitz, Jr.
    Chief Justice
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 234, 2022

Judges: Seitz C.J.

Filed Date: 4/27/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/28/2023