DocketNumber: No. 17-P-1587
Citation Numbers: 120 N.E.3d 737, 95 Mass. App. Ct. 18
Judges: Green, Hanlon, Maldonado
Filed Date: 3/7/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
*18After a hearing, a District Court judge denied the defendant's motion to terminate a permanent abuse prevention order issued pursuant to G. L. c. 209A (209A order).
Background. This case began with an emergency ex parte 209A order issued on September 23, 2000, a Saturday. See G. L. c. 209A, § 5. The judge ordered the defendant not to abuse the plaintiff, not to contact her directly or indirectly, and to stay one hundred yards away from her and her children. He also ordered the defendant to immediately surrender to the local police department all "guns, ammunition, gun licenses and FID [firearms identification] cards." An order providing essentially the same relief was issued ex parte by another judge in the District Court on the following Monday, September 25, 2000, and a hearing after notice was scheduled for October 2, 2000.
At the time, the parties had been married for approximately two and one-half years. According to the plaintiff's affidavit filed in support of her complaint,
On the same day as the ex parte hearing, September 25, 2000, *20the defendant was arraigned in the District Court on charges of assault by means of a dangerous weapon and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon.
At the hearing after notice on October 2, 2000, the 209A order was extended until October 2, 2001; the face of the order indicates that the defendant was present, and the "no contact" provision of the order was amended to provide that "th[e] defendant remain 300 feet away from the plaintiff," as opposed to the one hundred yards provision specified in the emergency 209A order. In addition, the judge specified that "the order shall not be construed so as to prevent either party from using the ways of the town to enter or [leave] his or her home." On October 2, 2001, with both parties present, the 209A order was extended without modification until April 2, 2002.
Approximately fourteen years later, on September 6, 2016, the *21defendant filed the *740motion at issue here, seeking to terminate the 209A order because of a change of circumstances. In his affidavit in support of the motion, the defendant represented that he had had no contact with the plaintiff since "on or about August, 2001." He now lives in Nevada and has been married to another woman since 2010. His current wife is from the Philippines and she has dual citizenship; the couple travel to the Philippines at least once a year. He is "stopped by U.S. Customs and Border Officials almost every trip" and "detained for approximately 45 minutes." Further, the defendant is employed as a commercial truck driver for a company that "performs a majority of its work on Federal Government worksites and for Prisons." As a result of the 209A order, neither the defendant nor the company that employs him is "allowed to work on certain" government or prison worksites.
As noted, both parties were present for a hearing on the defendant's motion on September 22, 2016. The defendant was represented by counsel; the plaintiff appeared pro se, accompanied by a civil advocate. The parties have stipulated that "[t]he transcript prepared from the ... tape in this matter begins with the proceedings already in progress and is approximately 4 pages in length." Unfortunately, the transcript begins near the end of the plaintiff's testimony, and the defendant's lawyer repeatedly interrupted the testimony that appears in the transcript. However, the transcript reveals that the plaintiff did testify to the following at least: "[T]hat piece of paper is the only thing that keeps me from looking over my shoulder 24/7; and it has for 14 years, and I'd like to keep it that way." When the judge asked, "You're still in fear of him?" the plaintiff responded, "Unh-huh, because I don't know what he would do next. I never do. He violated the order numerous times for years, and it took a long time to get -- and then, now I'm here *22again when I shouldn't be here." At that point, the defendant's lawyer interrupted to say, among other things, that "some of the violations ... that was before it became permanent." The plaintiff responded that the defendant had screamed and yelled at her outside the court house following an earlier hearing "for being in here and taking him to court" and that "[h]e would follow us numerous times, everywhere we went."
The five-page stipulation submitted by the parties "as to the unrecorded portion of the electronic recording of the hearing" was approved by the judge. The only references to the plaintiff in the stipulation state that she appeared pro se, accompanied by a representative from "Independence House," and that she "did oppose the Motion and stated that she was still in fear of [the defendant] and was always looking over her shoulder." The stipulation also reiterates that the plaintiff "informed [the judge] that she was still in fear for her life." The balance of the stipulation contains the defense attorney's representations and argument about the defendant's situation and the inconvenience that the permanent 209A order causes him. Neither *741the defendant nor his current wife testified at the hearing.
Discussion. The issue is whether the judge abused his discretion when he denied the defendant's motion to terminate the 209A order. We therefore ask whether "the judge made 'a clear error of judgment in weighing' the factors relevant to the decision, such that the decision falls outside the range of reasonable alternatives" (citation omitted). L.L. v. Commonwealth,
A defendant who seeks to terminate a permanent 209A order "must show by clear and convincing evidence that, as a result of a significant change in circumstances, it is no longer equitable for the order to continue because the protected party no longer has a reasonable fear of imminent serious physical harm." MacDonald v. Caruso,
At first glance, the facts are similar to those in MacDonald. There, the defendant argued that the 209A order was twelve years old; he had moved from New York to Utah; he had remarried in 2004 and retired from "the business world, and ... clearly moved on with his life." MacDonald,
*23In MacDonald, the court agreed that the distance between the parties was a relevant consideration, citing Iamele v. Asselin,
However, the court in MacDonald,
In the present case, while the defendant did submit criminal record information from both Massachusetts and NCIC, there is no affidavit from local police, and no affidavit or testimony from his current wife. On this record, it is impossible to say whether the defendant has resolved his problems with domestic abuse or merely become more adept at hiding them. Also, as noted, the defendant himself did not testify or submit to cross-examination on the issue of whether he had been abusive in subsequent relationships; the judge would have been warranted in drawing a negative inference from that failure. See Singh v. Capuano,
*742Frizado v. Frizado,
Further, in MacDonald,
In addition, while in MacDonald the plaintiff did not appear at the hearing on the defendant's motion to terminate the 209A order,
In MacDonald,
*25Finally, the court in MacDonald referred in a footnote to factors deemed relevant by other jurisdictions in considering similar motions and suggested some additional factors that might be relevant to the issue of whether the defendant had met his burden. These include "the restrained party's alcohol and drug involvement, if any ... [the] age and health of the restrained party ... [and] whether the *743victim is acting in good faith to oppose the motion." MacDonald,
On the record before it, the court in MacDonald,
So ordered.
The defendant's motion was titled "motion to vacate"; however, in this court, he clarified his position, stating that "the relief the defendant sought was not to vacate the original order but to terminate the current order due to a significant change of circumstances since the order had been made permanent." See MacDonald v. Caruso,
Neither party provided this court with the affidavit; we obtained a copy from the District Court. We note that, as the defendant was the appellant, it was his obligation to include the affidavit in the record. See Mass. R. A. P. 18 (a), as amended,
The defendant later pleaded guilty to the charge of assault by means of a dangerous weapon, and he was placed on probation for one year. The police report contained in the record reveals that both the plaintiff's eleven year old daughter and a neighbor corroborated the plaintiff's account of what had happened. The daughter told the police officer that she, too, had thrown flowers at the defendant's vehicle as he was backing up and that he then "put the vehicle into drive and drove at her. She state[d] she had to jump behind a tree or he would have hit her." A witness from across the street said that he saw the girl throw flowers at the vehicle and "he then observed the vehicle pull forward and drive at the young girl. The girl ran behind a tree. [The witness stated] that if the girl did not move as fast as she did the vehicle would have struck her."
The record also contains the defendant's Court Activity Record Information (CARI), which reveals that, in addition to his conviction of assault by means of a dangerous weapon, the defendant was convicted of five violations of the 209A order based on incidents occurring in 2000 and 2001, and shown on the CARI report with dates of October 6, 2000, October 17, 2000, and October 2, 2001. On the three cases related to the October 6, 2000 date, the convictions were placed on file with the defendant's consent. Similarly, the conviction related to the October 17, 2000 date was also placed on file. For the last conviction related to the October 2, 2001 CARI entry, the defendant received a sentence of thirty days in the house of correction. There are no subsequent criminal charges on the defendant's Massachusetts CARI report. In addition, the record appendix contains a criminal history from the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), showing no subsequent arrests recorded from anywhere in the United States.
The defendant was not present at the April 2, 2002, hearing; however, as we have indicated, he had been served in hand with a copy of the order setting that date for the hearing. In addition, the return of service in the record indicates that he received a copy of the 209A order "in hand" the next day, April 3, 2002.
The defendant's representations are corroborated in the record appendix by a copy of a Nevada commercial driver's license in his name; a Nevada marriage certificate indicating his 2010 marriage to his current wife; a pay stub, indicating his employment with the trucking company; and a letter on the trucking company's stationery, from the owner of the company, dated September 12, 2016, reciting that the defendant has been a "valued employee" for six years and reiterating the fact that the defendant has been refused entrance to Federal property, including military bases, and to State penitentiary property because of the outstanding 209A order. The letter also states that the issue is a "burden on [the] company" and "costly" when the defendant cannot do that work.
Even so, the court in MacDonald,