IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF KATHRYN PARKER BLAIR (P-000300-13, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                              NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1394-19
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    ESTATE OF KATHRYN
    PARKER BLAIR, deceased.
    ________________________
    Submitted March 1, 2021 – Decided April 15, 2021
    Before Judges Hoffman and Suter.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Bergen County, Docket No.
    P-000300-13.
    Lori Ann Parker, appellant/cross-respondent pro se.
    Frank T. Luciano, attorney for respondents/cross-
    appellants Harry Parker, Jr., and the Estate of Kathryn
    Parker Blair.
    PER CURIAM
    Pro se petitioner Lori Ann Parker appeals for the fourth time in this case
    involving the Estate of Kathryn Parker Blair (the Estate), this time appealing
    from Chancery Division orders dated October 18 and 22, 2019. The October 18
    order, entered by Judge Edward A. Jerejian, denied petitioner's request to amend
    a previous order. The October 22 order, entered by Judge Bonnie J. Mizdol, the
    assignment judge for Bergen County, precluded petitioner from filing additional
    pleadings against the Estate, its beneficiaries, or its attorneys without first
    obtaining leave "from the Bergen County Assignment Judge or her designee."
    The Estate cross-appeals from the October 18 order to the extent that it denied
    the Estate's motion for monetary sanctions against petitioner. We affirm.
    I.
    We summarize the relevant facts and procedural history set forth in Judge
    Mizdol's comprehensive written opinion below, which accompanied her October
    22, 2019 order, and in our previous written opinions addressing petitioner's
    appeals in this matter. See In re Estate of Blair (Blair I), No. A-5482-13 (App.
    Div. February 1, 2016) (slip op.); In re Estate of Blair (Blair II), No. A-0100-15
    (App. Div. February 22, 2017) (slip op.); In re Estate of Blair (Blair III), No. A-
    1834-17 (App. Div. January 16, 2019) (slip op.).
    Petitioner is the niece of decedent Kathryn Parker Blair.          In 1987,
    decedent executed a will (the 1987 Will), which provided for her estate to pass
    equally to her siblings but, if a sibling predeceased her, "that sibling's share
    would pass to his or her surviving children. Petitioner's father, one of decedent's
    siblings, died in 2002." Blair III, slip op. at 2. On October 11, 2012, decedent
    A-1394-19
    2
    – then eighty years of age – executed a new will (the 2012 Will), which omitted
    petitioner as a beneficiary. Two days later, decedent died of cancer. The 2012
    Will was probated on October 24, 2012.
    On July 17, 2013, petitioner filed a complaint, seeking to vacate the
    probate of the 2012 Will, alleging it "was the product of undue influence and
    decedent lacked the testamentary capacity to execute the will." Ibid. The trial
    court ultimately granted summary judgment in favor of the Estate on April 29,
    2014, finding petitioner failed to offer sufficient evidence to support her claims
    and the Estate presented competent evidence, chiefly in the form of testimony
    from decedent's uninterested friends, establishing decedent's testamentary
    capacity and her expressed intent to disinherit her nieces and nephews.
    Following the trial court's entry of summary judgment in favor of the
    Estate in April 2014, petitioner filed more than thirty different pleadings over a
    four-year period, attempting to reverse the court's summary judgment order.
    These filings included at least five motions to reconsider or vacate the 2014
    summary judgment order as well as numerous notices of correction,
    supplemental filings, motions to stay, and amendments to motions already
    decided.
    A-1394-19
    3
    First, in May 2014, petitioner moved for reconsideration of the summary
    judgment order, which the trial court denied on June 24, 2014, "finding
    petitioner's substantive claims were meritless." Id. at 4-5. Petitioner then filed
    a second motion for reconsideration in July 2014, alleging the trial court had not
    received all the documents she submitted in support of her motion for summary
    judgment and in opposition to the Estate's motion for summary judgment,
    mainly decedent's medical records.1 On August 4, 2014, the trial court denied
    the second motion for reconsideration, indicating the allegedly missing
    documents were immaterial and actually had been considered by the court. In
    September 2014, petitioner filed a motion "to settle the record" in the trial court ,
    alleging irregularities related to the missing documents issue and the
    mishandling of evidence by the surrogate's court. The trial court denied this
    motion, finding petitioner's arguments "were 'already considered but rejected'
    by the court, and [petitioner] 'raise[d] the same unsubstantiated allegations' to
    reargue her motion."     Id. at 6. Petitioner brought a similar motion in the
    surrogate's court, which was also denied.
    1
    Adopting Judge Mizdol's terminology, we refer to this claim as "the missing
    documents issue."
    A-1394-19
    4
    Petitioner appealed the trial court's summary judgment findings and the
    denial of her first motion for reconsideration, which, we affirmed in Blair I,
    finding "insufficient merit in the arguments petitioner raise[d] to warrant further
    discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E)." Blair I, slip op. at 8.
    Petitioner separately filed an appeal from the order denying her second motion
    for reconsideration, and later filed motions requesting we also review the denials
    of her motions to settle the record. We denied these motions, and petitioner
    thereafter withdrew her appeal of the trial court's denial of her second motion
    for reconsideration.
    In April 2015, while Blair I was pending, petitioner filed a Rule 4:50-1
    motion to vacate the trial court's April 2014 summary judgment order and its
    June 2014 order denying reconsideration, again invoking the missing documents
    issue and alleging misconduct on the part of the surrogate's office. The trial
    court denied this motion to vacate in June 2015. Consequently, the Estate filed
    a cross-motion seeking sanctions against petitioner for frivolous litigation ,
    pursuant to Rule 1:4-8(b), and seeking to enjoin petitioner from filing further
    pleadings in the matter. The trial court granted the Estate's request for sanctions
    in August 2015, ordering petitioner to pay a sanction of $750; however, the court
    A-1394-19
    5
    ordered the Estate's motion to bar future filings must be directed to the
    assignment judge.
    Petitioner appealed the denial of her motion to vacate and the order
    imposing sanctions. On February 22, 2017, in Blair II, slip op. at 6, we affirmed
    the denial of the motion to vacate, finding petitioner's claims were "generalized
    and non-specific", "unsupported by corroborating documentation", and
    "meritless." However, though there was "evidence in the record supporting an
    award of sanctions," we reversed the sanctions award because the Estate's
    motion was not supported by a proper Rule 1:4-8(b)(1) certification. Id. at 10-
    13.
    In August 2016, petitioner filed a complaint in federal court against
    Bergen County, the Bergen County surrogate's office, and employees of the
    surrogate's office, again alleging these parties wrongfully mishandled
    petitioner's filings and tampered with the record. The district court rejected her
    complaint as time-barred, and the Third Circuit affirmed in June 2017, agreeing
    the complaint was untimely and expressing doubt that the complaint "state[d]
    any claim upon which relief could be granted." Parker v. Cnty. of Bergen, 
    696 Fed. Appx. 83
    , 86 (3d. Cir. 2017).
    In September 2017, petitioner filed a Probate Part motion,
    A-1394-19
    6
    requesting the [c]ourt to reopen the judgments of April
    29, 2014, and July 10, 2015, and to modify the
    judgment of April 29, 2014, in light of the failure to
    deliver the petitioner's original, filed documents to the
    trial court, and in light of the appellate court's ruling
    regarding the invalidity of the type of [Rule] 1:4-4(b)
    certifications used by [the Estate].
    [Blair III, slip op. at 8 (alterations in original).]
    The trial court denied the motion in October 2017 because it was untimely, not
    supported by new evidence, and based on arguments which had been rejected
    multiple times. Additionally, the court rejected petitioner's argument regarding
    the Estate's defective certifications because the Estate supplemented the affected
    pleadings with "properly certified versions with identical factual content[.]" Id.
    at 9. Petitioner appealed the trial court's order denying her motion, and on
    January 16, 2019, we affirmed "substantially for the reasons set forth in [the trial
    court's] written opinion" and found "insufficient merit in the arguments
    petitioner raise[d] to warrant further discussion[.]"2 Id. at 12.
    On March 29, 2019, petitioner filed a new Rule 4:50-1 motion seeking
    once again to vacate the April 29, 2014 summary judgment order upholding the
    probate of the 2012 Will.       This time, petitioner claimed her motion was
    2
    Petitioner moved for reconsideration of our decision in Blair III, as she did of
    our decisions in Blair I and Blair II. We denied the motions in all three cases.
    A-1394-19
    7
    supported by newly discovered evidence that showed the Estate's attorney
    fraudulently altered the 1987 Will to conceal a handwritten codicil. Petitioner's
    new evidence consisted of enlarged photographs that depicted decedent and the
    1987 Will, with indiscernible handwriting visible at the bottom of the will's
    signature page. The Estate opposed petitioner's motion and filed a separate
    cross-motion on May 14, 2019 seeking to bar petitioner from filing any further
    pleadings without first obtaining judicial approval.
    Judge Edward A. Jerejian heard oral argument on the motions, at which
    the Estate produced the original 1987 Will. Upon inspection, Judge Jerejian
    determined, "there was zero indication of any 'handwriting' on the document
    aside from the signatures located on the signature page. Moreover, the original
    document did not contain a scintilla of any foreign substance on the page, such
    as 'white out' or a concealing substance."3      In turn, Judge Jerejian denied
    petitioner's motion in an order dated August 2, 2019. In an accompanying
    written opinion, he cast petitioner's claims as "entirely without merit" and "yet
    3
    A footnote in petitioner's brief here indicates that in December 2019, she filed
    a tort action in federal court against the Estate's attorney for fraudulent
    concealment of a codicil to the 1987 Will, which she now asserts was written on
    a copy of the 1987 Will.
    A-1394-19
    8
    another act of recreational litigation in which [petitioner] attempts to resuscitate
    this matter through vexations and meritless motion practice."
    The August 2, 2019 order also denied without prejudice the Estate's cross-
    motion to bar petitioner from unapproved future filings on the basis that the
    Estate failed to properly serve this motion on petitioner and failed to "clearly
    indicate that the motion was to be made returnable to the Assignment Judge in
    accordance with the case law and court rules." Judge Jerejian directed the Estate
    to refile the motion properly, which the Estate did on August 16, 2019. On the
    same day, the Estate also filed a motion for monetary sanctions against petitioner
    "under [Rule] 1:4-8 and N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1 for filing a frivolous pleading."
    Petitioner, on August 26, 2019, filed a Rule 4:49-2 motion to amend Judge
    Jerejian's August 2, 2019 order "to remove all degrading and demeaning
    references to the petitioner as a 'recreational litigant'" and pursuant to Rule 1:12-
    1 requesting "Judge Jerejian recuse himself from any further proceedings in this
    matter . . . due to his long-term friendship with [the Estate's attorney], and his
    clear bias against people who represent themselves in court." On October 18,
    2019, Judge Jerejian heard arguments on petitioner's motions for amendment
    and recusal and on the Estate's motion for frivolous litigation sanctions. On that
    same date, Judge Mizdol heard the Estate's motion to bar future pleadings .
    A-1394-19
    9
    In an order dated October 18, 2019, Judge Jerejian denied petitioner's
    motion for recusal and for amendment of the August 2, 2019 order. Following
    oral argument, Judge Jerejian explained on the record that he had no relationship
    with the Estate's attorney and that the terminology used in the written opinion
    accompanying the August 2, 2019 order was not meant to offend petitioner, as
    "[i]t was terminology basically from a case." The order also denied the Estate's
    cross-motion for frivolous litigation sanctions. On the record, Judge Jerejian
    explained, that he did not "believe it would serve any purpose to escalate this
    further[,] so I'm not going to issue any sanctions."
    Judge Mizdol entered an order on October 22, 2019 granting "[t]he
    Estate's motion to preclude [petitioner] from filing any additional motions,
    applications, notices or new complaints relating to this case unless [p]etitioner
    obtains leave for the filing of a pleading from the Assignment Judge of Bergen
    County or her designee[.]" The order instructed:
    Petitioner is enjoined and restrained from filing any
    additional motions, applications or notices in the matter
    . . . unless [p]etitioner follows the following procedure:
    a. Petitioner must first file a certification with the
    Bergen County Assignment Judge or her
    designee, under penalty of perjury and other
    sanctions which might be imposed by the court,
    that the pleading she seeks leave to file does not
    address any issue previously raised in this court
    A-1394-19
    10
    or in any other court at any time in the past,
    regardless of whether the issue was previously
    adjudicated or an adjudication is still pending;
    b. Petitioner must also file a written summary
    identifying the nature of the issue(s) that
    Petitioner intends to raise in her pleading and the
    facts she can establish to support the issue(s),
    which summary shall be written in clear and
    concise language not exceeding two hundred
    (200) words and without reference to any
    generalities, suppositions or conjectures;
    c. In the event Petitioner claims that an issue in her
    pleadings should be addressed because of the
    discovery of "new evidence", then, in addition to
    the writings required previously, the Petitioner
    must support this contention by her certification
    submitted under penalty of perjury and other
    sanctions that might be imposed by the Court
    establishing the following:
    i.   the specific nature of the new evidence;
    ii.   the date the new evidence was discovered;
    iii.   the manner in which the new evidence was
    discovered; and
    iv.    the reason why the new evidence can
    materially change any prior ruling in this
    case. After review, the Bergen County
    Assignment Judge or her designee shall
    determine whether to reject frivolous or
    abusive filings or whether a meritorious
    claim exists.
    A-1394-19
    11
    Judge Mizdol also issued a well-reasoned twenty-seven-page opinion in support
    of the order that reviewed the constitutional and public policy implications of
    limiting petitioner's filings, ultimately concluding that such an order was
    permissible and necessary pursuant to Rosenblum v. Borough of Closter, 
    333 N.J. Super. 385
     (App. Div. 2000).
    Petitioner now appeals Judge Jerejian's October 18, 2019 order to the
    extent that it denied her motion to amend the August 2, 2019 order. She also
    appeals Judge Mizdol's October 22, 2019 order granting the Estate's motion to
    restrict her future pleadings. The Estate cross-appeals Judge Jerejian's October
    18, 2019 order to the extent that it denied the Estate's motion for monetary
    sanctions based on petitioner's frivolous litigation.
    Petitioner presents the following arguments on appeal:
    POINT I.
    The trial court erred in denying the appellant’s motion
    to amend, in its order of October 18, 2019, and the
    assignment judge erred in granting the appellee’s
    motion to bar pleadings in its Order of October 22,
    2019, as the criteria in Parish v. Parish was not met.
    [POINT] II.
    The Bergen County Court is Biased Against the
    Appellant[.]
    The Estate presents the following points for our review of its cross-appeal:
    A-1394-19
    12
    Point I
    Whether Trial Court’s Decision to deny the Estate’s
    request to impose financial sanctions against Lori Ann
    Parker was in error.
    Point II
    Whether the Trial Court Abused its Discretion in
    Barring Appellant from filing any further Pleadings in
    this Action, Absent Prior Court Approval[.]
    Point III
    Whether the Trial Court’s Refusal to Amend its August
    2, 2019 Order was in Error[.]
    II.
    We first address petitioner's challenge to Judge Mizdol's October 22, 2019
    order that enjoined petitioner from filing further pleadings in this matter without
    first obtaining approval from the assignment judge.
    "[C]ourts have the inherent authority, if not the obligation, to control the
    filing of frivolous motions and to curtail 'harassing and vexatious litigation.'"
    Zehl v. City of Elizabeth Bd. of Educ., 
    426 N.J. Super. 129
    , 139 (App. Div.
    2012) (quoting Rosenblum, 
    333 N.J. Super. at 387
    ). In Rosenblum, 
    333 N.J. Super. at 395-97
    , we held that where traditional sanctions have failed to deter a
    litigant from his pattern of bringing repetitive, meritless, and harassing actions,
    an assignment judge may enjoin the litigant's bringing of a further action.
    A-1394-19
    13
    However, the power to enjoin prospective harassing litigation "must be
    exercised consistently with the fundamental right of the public to access to the
    courts in order to secure adjudication of claims on their merits." 
    Id. at 396
    (quoting D'Amore v. D'Amore, 186 N.J. Super 525, 530 (App. Div. 1982)).
    Thus, a court should exercise its discretion to limit a litigant's ability to present
    a claim sparingly, reserved to those situations where the judge found past
    pleadings to be frivolous and tried to abate such abuse by employing appropriate
    sanctions. Parish v. Parish, 
    412 N.J. Super. 39
    , 54-55 (App. Div. 2010). Absent
    finding a need to control baseless litigation, restricting access to the court is an
    abuse of discretion. 
    Id. at 51
    .
    Acknowledging these standards, Judge Mizdol concluded enjoining
    petitioner from filing without approval was appropriate because "[p]etitioner has
    engaged in vexatious and confounding litigation . . . since 2013 with a futile
    stream of frivolous motions and appeals" involving the same issues and seeking
    "the same relief, relief denied by the trial court, Appellate Division and Supreme
    Court." Because petitioner's filings never relented despite the numerous court
    decisions casting petitioner's claims as meritless and her brush with Rule 1:4-8
    sanctions, which were only vacated for a procedural deficiency, Judge Mizdol
    also found "that [p]etitioner will continue to file frivolous pleadings unless
    A-1394-19
    14
    restrained, since traditional sanctions for frivolous claims have not proved a
    deterrent." Additionally, the judge expressed concern that traditional monetary
    sanctions would be ineffective, given petitioner's apparently limited income,
    which enabled her to obtain in forma pauperis status earlier in the litigation.
    We perceive no basis to disturb the October 22, 2019 order. As detailed
    in Judge Mizdol's comprehensive opinion, petitioner's repeated filings clearly
    demonstrate a pattern of frivolous and meritless litigation, designed to harass
    not only the Estate, but also its attorney, the court, and court staff. Despite the
    specter of sanctions, petitioner remains unabated from raising meritless claims,
    her appellate briefs here bearing no exception. We therefore find the order
    entered by Judge Mizdol did not constitute an abuse of discretion, but rather a
    suitable exercise of the authority to control baseless and frivolous litigation.
    Petitioner also challenges Judge Jerejian's October 18, 2019 order denying
    petitioner's motion to amend Judge Jerejian's prior order of August 2, 2019.
    Petitioner's motion actually sought to amend the Judge Jerejian's written opinion
    that accompanied the August 2, 2019 order, to omit the judge's references to
    petitioner as a vexatious and recreational litigant and characterization of her
    A-1394-19
    15
    April 2019 motion to vacate as frivolous and meritless. 4 On appeal, petitioner
    argues Judge Jerejian abused his discretion by declining to amend his opinion,
    essentially because she claims the language he used was inaccurate and
    derogatory.
    Motions "seeking to alter or amend a judgment or order" are governed by
    Rule 4:49-2, "[e]xcept as otherwise provide by [Rule] 1:13-1", which governs
    the correction of clerical mistakes in judgments. R. 4:49-2. Granting a Rule
    4:49-2 motion is a matter that is within the sound discretion of the court.
    Cummings v. Bahr, 
    295 N.J. Super. 374
    , 384 (App. Div. 1996). This discretion
    should only be exercised when required in the interest of justice. 
    Id. at 384
    .
    It is well-established that a Rule 4:49-2 motion should only be granted in
    those cases which fall into that narrow corridor in
    which either 1) the [c]ourt has expressed its decision
    based upon a palpably incorrect or irrational basis, or
    2) it is obvious that the [c]ourt either did not consider,
    or failed to appreciate the significance of probative,
    competent evidence. Said another way, a litigant must
    initially demonstrate that the [c]ourt acted in an
    arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable manner, before
    the [c]ourt should engage in the actual reconsideration
    process.
    4
    We are mindful that appeals are taken from orders, not opinions, and note that
    the order dated August 2, 2019 contained none of the language petitioner sought
    to omit through amendment.
    A-1394-19
    16
    [D'Atria v. D'Atria, 
    242 N.J. Super. 392
    , 401 (Ch. Div.
    1990).]
    Additionally, such a motion may properly be granted if a litigant brings new,
    previously unavailable evidence to the court's attention. 
    Ibid.
    When a trial court denies a party's Rule 4:49-2 motion to amend, a
    reviewing court shall overturn the denial only in the event the court abused its
    discretion. Marinelli v. Mitts & Merrill, 
    303 N.J. Super. 61
    , 77 (App. Div.
    1997). In determining whether such an abuse has taken place, a reviewing court
    should be mindful that a party is not to pursue amendment or reconsideration
    just because of "dissatisfaction with a decision of the [c]ourt." Cap. Fin. Co. of
    Del. Valley v. Asterbadi, 
    398 N.J. Super. 299
    , 310 (App. Div. 2008) (quoting
    D'Atria, 
    242 N.J. Super. at 401
    ).
    It is clear that petitioner requested to amend Judge Jerejian's August 2,
    2019 order merely because she was dissatisfied with the judge's findings and
    terminology. Petitioner presents no convincing argument that the August 2,
    2019 order, which denied petitioner's most-recent motion to vacate the April
    2014 summary judgment order, was palpably incorrect, irrational, arbitrary,
    capricious, or unreasonable. We thus discern no abuse of discretion in Judge
    A-1394-19
    17
    Jerejian's order denying petitioner's Rule 4:49-2 motion to amend the August 2,
    2019 order.
    To the extent petitioner's briefs raise any additional arguments, they lack
    sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    III.
    The Estate's cross-appeal challenges the denial of its request for the court
    to impose "financial sanctions" for petitioner's frivolous litigation.
    Rule 1:4-8 provides for the imposition of sanctions where the attorney or
    pro se party files a frivolous pleading or a motion. "For purposes of imposing
    sanctions under [Rule] 1:4-8, an assertion is deemed 'frivolous' when 'no rational
    argument can be advanced in its support, or it is not supported by any credible
    evidence, or it is completely untenable.'" United Hearts, LLC v. Zahabian, 
    407 N.J. Super. 379
    , 389 (App. Div. 2009) (quoting First Atl. Fed. Credit Union v.
    Perez, 
    391 N.J. Super. 419
    , 432 (App. Div. 2007)). See also R. 1:4-8(a).
    Further, the rule encompasses filings made with an "improper purpose, such as
    to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of
    litigation." R. 1:4-8(a)(1).
    A-1394-19
    18
    Rule 1:4-8 sanctions "are specifically designed to deter the filing or
    pursuit of frivolous litigation." LoBiondo v. Schwartz, 
    199 N.J. 62
    , 98 (2009).
    A second purpose of the rule is to compensate the opposing party in defending
    against frivolous litigation. Toll Bros., Inc. v. Twp. of W. Windsor, 
    190 N.J. 61
    , 71 (2007).
    We review the decision on a motion for frivolous lawsuit sanctions under
    an abuse of discretion standard. McDaniel v. Man Wai Lee, 
    419 N.J. Super. 482
    , 498 (App. Div. 2011). Reversal is warranted "only if [the decision] 'was
    not premised upon consideration of all relevant factors, was based upon
    consideration of irrelevant or inappropriate factors, or amounts to a clear error
    in judgment.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Masone v. Levine, 
    382 N.J. Super. 181
    , 193 (App.
    Div. 2005)). Further, an appellate court must give considerable deference to the
    fee determination of the trial court. A trial court's fee determination "will be
    disturbed only on the rarest of occasions, and then only because of a clear abuse
    of discretion." Packard-Bamberger & Co. v. Collier, 
    167 N.J. 427
    , 444 (2001)
    (quoting Rendine v. Pantzer, 
    141 N.J. 292
    , 317 (1995)).
    Applying these standards, we find no basis to disturb the decision to deny
    financial sanctions. Though the court found petitioner engaged in a pattern of
    frivolous litigation, declining to impose monetary sanctions was not an abuse of
    A-1394-19
    19
    discretion, as the court addressed petitioner's frivolous conduct by barring her
    from filing future pleadings without approval of the assignment judge. Indeed,
    the court's power to enjoin petitioner's filings derives from its authority to
    sanction frivolous litigation. See Parish, 
    412 N.J. Super. at 48-49
    . The Estate's
    cross-appeal thus amounts to a challenge of the sufficiency of the sanction
    imposed by the court. We find the court sufficiently sanctioned defendant by
    enjoining her filings and did not clearly abuse its discretion by declining to
    award additional monetary sanctions, especially in light of Judge Mizdol's
    finding that traditional monetary sanctions would be inadequate to curtail
    petitioner's frivolous litigation.
    Affirmed.
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    20