DocketNumber: No. 506673
Judges: NORKO, J.
Filed Date: 4/3/1992
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Conn. Gen. Stats. 546b-15(b) specifically permits the court to make such orders concerning temporary child custody or visitation rights as appropriate in its discretion to protect the applicant and his/her children.1 If a present and immediate danger to the applicant is alleged, C.G.S. 546b-15(b) permits the court to issue an ex parte order temporarily suspending visitation rights until the date of the hearing which must be held no later than fourteen days following the issuance of the order. If a postponement of the hearing is granted on request by either party, the statute permits the court to extend the order for good cause shown. Deprivation of custody and other relief following the hearing are permitted by C.G.S.
Section
As to Mr. Minichino's alleged "history of psychological CT Page 3159 illness", two hospitalizations are specified in the affidavit: one in April 1990 for an attempted suicide by an overdose of muscle relaxants and a second hospitalization in February 1991 for depression. The affidavit also alleges certain incidents of a violent nature: that in September 1990, Ms. Pendleton had witnessed Mr. Minichino destroying her car in an "apparent act of aggression" relating to the divorce pending at the time; that in December 1990, Mr. Minichino had "destroyed property within the dwelling" owned jointly at that time and that during the same incident, Mr. Minichino had "placed his hands upon me on more than one occasion and pushed and shoved me. He also tore the shower curtain from the bathroom and struck me on the foot causing me to seek medical attention and miss time from work."
Ms. Pendleton's affidavit also refers to an occasion in October, 1991 on which she complained to the local police department due to Mr. Minichino "efforts to harass me including calling me at home and at work and frequently driving past my home and place of business to ``watch me.'" The affidavit indicates that a warrant issued for the arrest of Mr. Minichino on that charge of harassment on or about October 22, 1991.
The affidavit alleges an incident in which Mr. Minichino refused to return the children in accordance with the separation agreement and shared parenting agreement. According to the affidavit, Mr. Minichino did not return the children until three days after the children were due back.
The most recent incident to which the affidavit makes reference is a statement allegedly made by Mr. Minichino on January 15, 1992. The applicant stated in her affidavit: "Bruce commented to me that he was again depressed and that, "[t]his time I'm not going alone. You better watch your back." Ms. Pendleton relates in the affidavit what she understood by the remark: "In the context of our conversation, I understood this to mean that he was contemplating suicide again and that he might attempt to take the life of my children and/or me." On the day of the alleged threat, Mr. Minichino had custody of the children. The affidavit recounts that, in response to the "threat", Ms. Pendleton filed a complaint with the police which resulted in the arrest of Mr. Minichino on the charge of "threatening" and on the warrant for harassment outstanding since the previous October. The arrest was made at respondent's home in the presence of the children. The affidavit indicates a family violence protective order was issued as a result of the alleged threat which restrained Mr. Minichino with regard to Ms. Pendleton. The affidavit states that, "I was not present in court when the judge made this CT Page 3160 order or I would have requested that the relief be extended to include our children at that time."
The applicant's affidavit further alleges an apparently recent change in Mr. Minichino's behavior: "Bruce Minichino has stated to me that he has lost his job and is unemployed. He has not dealt rationally with me since before I filed for divorce and the loss of his job has, in my opinion, made him more depressed, angry and irrational than at any earlier time."
Finally, Ms. Pendleton's affidavit states, "I believe that I and my children are in physical danger and that he should not be permitted to visit with the children without supervision and that he should not be permitted to have contact with me under any circumstances." Likewise, in her application, Ms. Pendleton represents that she and her children had been "subjected to the threat of present physical pain and injury" by Mr. Minichino and that there was an "immediate and present physical danger to the Applicant and her children at the hands of the Respondent."
The relief requested by Ms. Pendleton in her application was for an ex parte order, effective immediately, to temporarily modify the existing custody orders by suspending Mr. Minichino's right of visitation while the order remained in effect. In addition, the application requested that the respondent be enjoined from the following: entering or remaining in the applicant's dwelling; imposing any restraint upon the person or liberty of the applicant or the children; abusing, harassing or threatening the applicant or the children in any way, whether in her home or in any private or public place; attacking, molesting or assaulting the applicant or the children in any way, whether in her home or in any private or public place; interfering with or invading the privacy of the applicant or the children in any way. The relief requested, including the modification of the custody arrangement, is in accordance with the relief permitted under C.G.S.
An ex parte order granting the relief requested by the applicant was issued on the date of application, January 22, 1992 at 4:58 p. m. by Jones, J. Fourteen days later, on February 4, 1992, a hearing was held at which time the respondent filed his Motion to Dismiss. After the hearing, Mr. Minichino's visitation rights were reinstated by Norko, J. but the residual orders restraining the respondent as to the applicant and the children were continued.
The Connecticut courts have stated that a matter which is capable of repetition, yet evading review is justiciable if the matter affects an ongoing program of the state's penal or civil system, the matter could affect the petitioner in the future, and the public importance of the matter makes it desirable to decide the issue. Franklin v. Berger,
The core of respondent's argument is that the failure to provide the notice and hearing prior to a temporary deprivation of visitation rights as permitted by the statute violates his constitutionally protected due process rights. He claims the present statute does not afford the procedural safeguards necessary to justify the elimination of predeprivation notice and hearing under the analysis set forth by the Supreme Court in Mathews v. Eldridge,
There can be no doubt that there is sufficient state action involved in this case to trigger due process considerations: the statute enables a victim of family violence to utilize state procedures with the "overt, significant assistance of state officials" to obtain relief. Tulsa Professional Collection Services,
A state statute has a presumption of constitutional validity. Alaska Packers Asso. v. Industrial Accident Commission of California,
Notice and the opportunity to be heard are the cornerstone of due process and must be afforded by the state in a meaningful time and meaningful manner prior to deprivation of a protected interest. Fuentes v. Shevin,
Respondent argues that notice and hearing were indispensable in this case given the interest at stake and the relative ease with which notice could have been afforded under the facts of the case. In particular, respondent argues that although there were various "divorce post judgment motions" pending at the time of the ex parte order and Mr. Minichino's attorney was physically present in the courthouse on January 22, 1992, no attempt was made to inform the court of these facts. Respondent argues notice could have been given by merely directing the sheriff to go to the courtroom and ask respondent's attorney to drop by the chambers. Applicant's attorney disputed the respondent's assertion that there was no attempt to contact Mr. Minichino's attorney and the allegation that Mr. Minichino's attorney was even present nearby at 4:58 p. m. when the order for ex parte relief was issued.3 Even if the respondent's argument were not disputed, the notion that notice must be given because it is easy to do so is a practical, not principled, argument and not a legal requirement.
When the burden of increased procedural safeguards affects not the government, but the party seeking relief under the statute, the relevant analysis to be applied in the determination of the process due is the variation of that set down by the Supreme Court in Mathews v. Eldridge in a recent case, Connecticut v. Doehr, supra, with respect to the due process protections required when a prejudgment attachment is sought ex parte:
For this type of case, therefore, the relevant inquiry requires, as in Mathews, first, consideration of the private interest that will be affected by the prejudgment measure; second, an examination of the risk of erroneous deprivation through the procedures under attack and the probable value of additional or alternative safeguards; and third, in contrast CT Page 3164 to Mathews, principal attention to the interest of the party seeking the prejudgment remedy, with, nonetheless, due regard for any ancillary interest the government may have in providing the procedure or foregoing the added burden of providing greater protections.
Connecticut v. Doehr,
Applying the first factor of the Mathews/Doehr analysis, it is clear that the respondent's private interest in his visitation rights pursuant to a joint custody order was an important and constitutionally protected liberty interest. Board of Regents v. Roth,
The second factor in the Mathews/Doehr analysis requires CT Page 3165 an assessment of the risk of erroneous deprivation through the procedure provided in the statute and the probable value of additional or alternative safeguards. Respondent argues the risk of erroneous deprivation here is too great to permit an ex parte order to issue on the basis of a "conclusory" affidavit. Essex Group Inc. v. Ducci Elect,
A review of the affidavit and application filed in this case, however, leads this court to the conclusion that the affidavit was not merely conclusory and the risk of erroneous deprivation in this case was minimal despite the potential dangers of "ulterior motives" lingering in such cases. Section
The respondent argues that the applicant's claim of present and immediate danger is undercut by the fact that she waited seven hours to call the police on the night of the alleged threat and seven days until seeking the ex parte order since this delay belies any claim of imminent danger. As a result, it might be argued, the statute was unconstitutional as applied here since it permitted the ex parte order to issue on the basis of mere verbal abuse. Indeed, as respondent notes, no claim of a "continuous threat of physical pain or physical injury" was alleged by the applicant.8 Respondent notes that C.G.S.
Family violence prevention and response: Definitions. For the purpose of sections
46b-38a to46b-38f , inclusive: (1) "Family violence" means an incident resulting in physical harm, bodily injury or assault, or an act of threatened violence that constitutes fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury or assault between family or household members. Verbal abuse or argument shall not constitute family violence unless there is present danger and the likelihood that physical violence will occur.9
Respondent argues that the alleged threat, even if it is believed to have been uttered, did not constitute "an incident resulting in physical harm, bodily injury or assault, or an act of threatened violence that constitutes a fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury or assault", the definition of family violence under
The risk of erroneous deprivation may be more significant in other cases, and is not absent here, but the party challenging the constitutionality of a statute must prove the statute has adversely affected a protected interest under the facts of his particular case and not merely under some possible or hypothetical set of facts not proven to exist. State v. Zach,
The second prong of the Mathews/Doehr analysis calls for an assessment of the value of additional or substitute safeguards in addition to consideration of the risk of erroneous deprivation. Respondent argues that a practical safeguard in this case would have been to summon the attorney from the next room. A proposed safeguard that notice should be given to every respondent's attorney where practicable would hardly be a valuable additional safeguard since it would necessarily lead to a time-consuming evidentiary hearing as to whether such notice was in fact "practicable." See endnote 5, p. iii.
The respondent asserts the value of various additional procedural safeguards: requiring, for example, the presence of the companion file and the custody affidavit before the court at the time the ex parte order is sought would be helpful to indicate the "actual" motives of the applicant if issues as to visitation, custody and support are the real source of the problem between the applicant and respondent. Respondent suggests that requiring copies of police reports, medical reports, copies of other restraining orders would provide valuable information aiding the accurate discernment of the CT Page 3168 foundation or actual motives for the application for an ex parte order. The procedural safeguards suggested could no doubt be valuable if the necessity for scrutinizing the basis for the applicant's allegations closely is apparent to a judge and, indeed, any and all of these safeguards is available to the judge considering the application if he or she believes that further investigation is warranted. Or the judge may simply deny the application for an ex parte order pending notice and a full evidentiary hearing. The question in issue here is whether any of the proposed safeguards should have been required by the judge making the determination that an ex parte order could issue. As noted above, it was not arbitrary or unreasonable for the judge to issue the ex parte order based on the documented allegations alone in this case. Respondent has not demonstrated how the companion file or the custody affidavit, or any other evidence, would indicate that the motivations were other than as the applicant represented, that is, that she believed she and/or her children were in a present and immediate physical danger.
The respondent argues that the police report concerning the arrest of the respondent on the evening after the alleged threat, for example, indicates that there was no basis for believing the children were at any risk and, indeed, the report does show that the children were found to be "in fine condition" and that "there was no indication of neglect or abuse."11 The unstated implication is that if police reports were required to be made available to the judge at the time of the ex parte order, maybe the order would not have issued. But the requirements of C.G.S.
Requiring that copies of all existing protective orders be presented to the judge reviewing the application is another proposed additional safeguard of no substantial value. Although presenting all existing protective orders to the judge may further the degree of judicial involvement as respondent argues, respondent has failed to demonstrate why, if the family violence protective order as to Ms. Pendleton were available to the judge issuing the ex parte order here, it would have precluded the court from issuing another order for the purpose of protecting the applicant's children. The court agrees with the fact that more than one protective order with respect to Ms. Pendleton existed may be exemplary of a certain degree of judicial duplication but the specific relief requested under the
The respondent argues that the statute is deficient for the failure to require posting of a bond by the applicant if seeking an ex parte order. If the law is not clear as to whether the Federal Constitution requires a bond when a prejudgment attachment is sought, Connecticut v. Doehr, supra, respondent claims the law is clear in Connecticut that when ex parte orders are sought for prejudgment attachment, bond is required to compensate the defendant if the seizure is in fact wrongful. Roundhouse Construction,
Although more procedural safeguards would admittedly be desirable, there are at least a few essential safeguards provided by this statute. First, a postseizure hearing is required in fourteen days. Respondent claims that fourteen CT Page 3170 days of deprivation of visitation rights is not prompt enough to satisfy the requirements of due process. Domestic violence statutes have been enacted in every state and the District of Columbia; thirty-seven states, of which Connecticut is one, permit ex parte orders.14 The hearing held fourteen days after the deprivation permitted by the Connecticut statute is well within the five to twenty day range found in similar statutes.15 When balanced against the applicant's interest and government interests to be considered next, a hearing fourteen days after the deprivation here cannot be said to be unreasonable. Secondly, the applicant's petition is verified since the statute requires an affidavit made under oath and there is judicial involvement since only the court may issue the ex parte order. Blazel v. Bradley,
The final step in the Mathews/Doehr analysis is consideration of, principally, the interest of the party seeking the prejudgment remedy, with due regard for any ancillary interest the government may have in providing the procedure or foregoing the added burden of providing greater protections. It is difficult to overstate the interest of the party seeking the ex parte order in the scenario of domestic violence. The legislative history specifically indicates the goal of the statute was to provide an effective legal remedy from the judicial branch for the prevention of domestic violence since the remedies available from the police department were found by the legislature to he unsatisfactory. (See endnote 12). The predecessor act of
Mr. Speaker, the subject of battered women is one of society's best kept secrets. For most women, the shame and the low self-esteem which are the results of suffering the physical and emotional trauma of abuse has caused them to hide the true dimensions of the problem. . . . we need to provide the means of relief through the courts so that those spouses living in a situation emotionally intolerable and physically dangerous will be protected.16
The Mathews/Doehr analysis also calls for "due regard for any ancillary interest the government may have in providing the procedure of foregoing the added burden of providing greater protections". Doehr, supra at 2112. The state has an interest in the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens and CT Page 3171
The legislative history to the predecessor act instituting the ex parte restraining order in Connecticut reveals the magnitude of the state's interest in passing legislation to counter the growing problem of domestic violence:
Mr. Tulisano (29th): This is a very important bill. One of the, I think, major substantive changes in our law that this general assembly will address this year. It authorizes individuals to go before the court and seek restraining orders in the case of physical abuse by either spouse. There is presently existing an evidence of a great deal of abuse going on amongst spouses . . . . It is important. It does provide a means to go to court to protect an individual in the event one of these cases do occur.17
Mr. Roberti (126th), also speaking in support, said:
I too rise in support of this bill, Mr. Speaker . . . . This problem has become an overwhelming problem in this country and I think that we have to begin to address these types of problems that people are afraid to speak about, to do anything about.18
The statute here, C.G.S.
NORKO, JUDGE.
Thomas C. Lossman v. Mary H. Pekarske ( 1983 )
Society for Savings v. Chestnut Estates, Inc. ( 1979 )
Delevieleuse v. Manson ( 1981 )
Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers Union, Local 473 v. McElroy ( 1961 )
michael-ruffalo-jr-by-his-mother-and-next-friend-donna-ruffalo-and ( 1983 )
Alaska Packers Assn. v. Industrial Accident Comm'n of Cal. ( 1935 )
Kukanskis v. Griffith ( 1980 )
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc. v. Missouri ( 1952 )
Roundhouse Construction Corporation v. Telesco Masons ... ( 1975 )
Essex Group, Inc. v. Ducci Electric Co. ( 1980 )
Connecticut Foundry Co. v. International Ladies Garment ... ( 1979 )
General Electric Supply Co. v. Southern New England ... ( 1981 )