G.B. v. C.A. ( 2018 )


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    17-P-924                                           Appeals Court
    G.B.   vs.   C.A.
    No. 17-P-924.
    Norfolk.     May 3, 2018. - November 1, 2018.
    Present:   Sullivan, Blake, & Englander, JJ.
    Abuse Prevention.    Protective Order.   Res Judicata.
    Complaint for protection from abuse filed in the Dedham
    Division of the District Court Department on June 30, 2016.
    A motion to extend an abuse protection order was heard by
    Paul J. McCallum, J.
    Syrie D. Fried for the defendant.
    BLAKE, J.   Following a three-day evidentiary hearing, a
    judge of the District Court extended an abuse prevention order,
    which had been issued ex parte, for a period of one year.
    2
    The defendant appeals,1 claiming that the evidence was
    insufficient to issue the G. L. c. 209A order (209A order) and
    that the doctrine of res judicata precludes entry of the order.
    We affirm.
    1.    Chapter 209A proceedings.   a.   December 4, 2015,
    complaint.    We summarize the facts as the judge may have found
    them.    Compare Aguilar v. Hernandez-Mendez, 
    66 Mass. App. Ct. 367
    , 367-368 & n.1 (2006).    The parties were involved in a
    dating relationship for close to three years.     Their
    relationship ended on December 2, 2015.     The following day,
    December 3, the defendant, a Boston police officer, appeared at
    the plaintiff's workplace.2    A struggle ensued when he attempted
    to return ceramic flowers to the plaintiff, which he had taken
    from her home after having given them to her as a gift about a
    year earlier.    The incident was captured by the plaintiff's
    workplace security cameras, from two different angles.       The
    video equipment did not record sound.
    The videotape recordings show that the plaintiff threw the
    flowers in the trash, and the defendant, who had moved behind
    the service counter, attempted to, and finally did, retrieve
    1   The plaintiff did not participate in this appeal.
    2 The plaintiff's workplace is located on a busy street in
    Boston.
    3
    them.    The plaintiff lunged at the defendant, pointing long
    fingernails toward his face, and a struggle ensued.    Some of the
    struggle appears on the recording, showing the plaintiff
    attempting to take the flowers back, and the defendant keeping
    them away from her.    The parties then went off camera for a
    period of time.    The plaintiff eventually landed on the ground,
    injuring her face and lip.3    The recording did not capture how
    she landed there or how she was injured.    The parties then came
    into the range of the camera and became visible on the
    recording.    As the plaintiff attempted to call the police, the
    defendant tried to get the cellular telephone (cell phone) away
    from her; he boxed her in to a corner of the store.    The
    plaintiff was initially unsuccessful in calling the police; the
    defendant disconnected and muted her cell phone.    The defendant
    admitted that he had done so, contending that he wanted to talk
    to the plaintiff about the situation because "it might not be
    good for [her]."    As a result of the 911 hang-up call, a 911
    operator called back and the defendant answered the plaintiff's
    cell phone.    The defendant then left the store and walked across
    the street to the police station.4    Officers arrived on the scene
    3 A Boston police detective noticed a red mark near the
    plaintiff's eye and some swelling and redness around her mouth.
    4   The defendant was not assigned to this police station.
    4
    and spoke to him at length.    They then came in the store, and
    the recording was played for them.    Initially, they did not
    speak to the plaintiff; she spoke Spanish and none of the
    officers spoke Spanish.    Eventually, a Spanish-speaking officer
    arrived and assisted in interviewing the plaintiff.    The
    plaintiff was transported to a hospital, treated, and released.
    The following day, December 4, 2015, both parties appeared
    at the West Roxbury Division of the Boston Municipal Court, each
    seeking a 209A order against the other.    The judge requested
    that the video recording of the incident be brought to the
    court.   After viewing the video, the judge denied both 209A
    requests.5
    Sergeant Detective John Hamilton, a member of the Boston
    police department domestic violence unit, was assigned to this
    case.    Following his investigation, Hamilton determined that the
    plaintiff was the aggressor.    As a result, he sought a criminal
    complaint against her for assault and battery on a family
    member, with a hearing date of February 2, 2016.    The defendant
    was not charged with any offense.    The matter was also referred
    to the police department's internal affairs division because it
    5 The only transcript in the record on appeal is for the
    evidentiary hearing held in the Dedham District Court in July,
    2016, which resulted in the extension order now on appeal. The
    defendant has not provided us with any other hearing
    transcripts.
    5
    was a domestic violence incident involving a Boston police
    officer.
    b.     January 15, 2016, complaint.    Approximately six weeks
    later, on January 15, 2016, the plaintiff returned to the West
    Roxbury court house and filed another complaint seeking a 209A
    order.   In her affidavit, the plaintiff alleged that on December
    9, 2015, the defendant followed her in his motor vehicle.       She
    stated that she was sitting in the passenger seat of a motor
    vehicle when the defendant pulled up next to her and looked at
    her with "anger in his face."    When she grabbed her phone to
    call 911, the defendant drove away.       She further alleged that,
    on January 2, 2016, the defendant solicited a friend from Spain
    to call her and "threaten [her] to not go to court" on February
    2, 2016.   The plaintiff averred that the defendant was
    intimidating her and that she did not feel safe.      A different
    judge denied her request for a 209A order.
    c.     Clerk magistrate hearing.   On February 2, 2016, the
    parties appeared before a clerk magistrate for a hearing on the
    criminal complaint application against the plaintiff stemming
    from the December 3, 2015, altercation.      After the hearing, and
    with both parties' assent, the clerk magistrate took no action.
    She told the parties that she would hold the application "in
    abeyance" for sixty days and that, if there were no further
    incidents, the complaint would be dismissed.      She also told the
    6
    parties to stay away from one another.       The application was
    ultimately dismissed with the following notations:       "no probable
    cause found," "request of complainant," and "failure to
    prosecute."
    d.    May 12, 2016, complaint.   On May 12, 2016, the
    plaintiff returned to the West Roxbury court house and filed
    another complaint seeking a 209A order.       The complaint itself
    stated that the defendant carried a gun, and listed December 3
    and 9, 2015, as prior abuse dates.       In her affidavit, which
    directed the plaintiff to "[d]escribe in detail the most recent
    incidents of abuse," she alleged that the defendant was "not
    complying with the order of not contacting me."       Specifically,
    she alleged that the defendant drove by her work; that, on May
    7, 2016, he had contacted her on an Internet application called
    "WhatsApp," and that he "went to Housing to try to tell lies."6
    She also stated that the defendant was following her from her
    children's school and that internal affairs was investigating
    him.       The plaintiff's request for a 209A order was continued for
    a two-party hearing on May 19, 2016, at which time both parties
    appeared.      A third judge denied the requested order.
    At the evidentiary hearing that resulted in the extension
    6
    order now on appeal, see part 1.e., infra, the defendant
    acknowledged sending the plaintiff a text message on WhatsApp,
    but testified that he did so in error. He hung up the call when
    he realized his mistake and did not leave a message.
    7
    e.   June 30, 2016, complaint.   On June 30, 2016, the
    plaintiff returned for a fourth time to the West Roxbury court
    house seeking a 209A order.   Because the plaintiff had moved to
    a location outside of the West Roxbury jurisdiction, she was
    referred to the Dedham District Court.    There, she applied for a
    209A order, which was granted after an ex parte hearing.      The
    extension of this order is the subject of the present appeal.
    In the June 30 complaint, the plaintiff recounted the December
    3, 2015, altercation, indicating that the defendant grabbed her,
    struck her in the face, pushed her, and slammed her against the
    ground.   She also claimed that two different judges on two
    different dates ordered the defendant to stay away from her, not
    to drive by her job, and not to contact her in any way, and that
    he had violated those orders on five separate dates.7   She stated
    that she is "tired of being afraid and always looking over [her]
    shoulders."   The judge entered an ex parte 209A order and
    scheduled the matter for a further hearing.    A different judge
    presided over a three-day evidentiary hearing and extended the
    7 When asked by the judge at the ex parte hearing in Dedham
    District Court whether her requests for 209A orders had been
    denied in the West Roxbury Division of the Boston Municipal
    Court because she did not live within that court's jurisdiction,
    she answered that the order was denied "because we both agreed
    not to talk to each other and not to contact each other." This
    was not accurate.
    8
    209A order for one year, to July 14, 2017.     This appeal
    followed.
    2.   Sufficiency of the evidence of abuse.   We review the
    issuance of a 209A order "for an abuse of discretion or other
    error of law."    E.C.O. v. Compton, 
    464 Mass. 558
    , 562 (2013).
    "[A] judge's discretionary decision constitutes an abuse of
    discretion where [the reviewing court] conclude[s] 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."    L.L. v. Commonwealth, 
    470 Mass. 169
    , 185 n.27 (2014).     A plaintiff seeking the extension
    of an abuse prevention order must prove "by a preponderance of
    the evidence . . . that the defendant has caused or attempted to
    cause physical harm, committed a sexual assault, or placed the
    plaintiff in reasonable fear of imminent serious physical harm."
    MacDonald v. Caruso, 
    467 Mass. 382
    , 386 (2014).     See Iamele v.
    Asselin, 
    444 Mass. 734
    , 736-737 (2005).     "In reviewing the
    judge's decision to [allow] the plaintiff's request for an
    extension of her protective order, we will not substitute our
    judgment for that of the trier of fact.     We do, however,
    scrutinize without deference the propriety of the legal criteria
    employed by the trial judge and the manner in which those
    criteria were applied to the facts" (quotation omitted).        
    Id. at 741.
                                                                        9
    The defendant argues that the plaintiff failed to prove, by
    a preponderance of the evidence, that she suffered abuse.8   He
    focuses his claim on the fact that the only "new" evidence
    presented by the plaintiff in support of the 209A request was an
    incident where the defendant drove by the plaintiff's workplace.
    While we might agree that that incident, in isolation, would be
    insufficient for the issuance of a 209A order, this does not end
    the inquiry.   Our cases are clear that "[i]n evaluating whether
    a plaintiff has met her burden, a judge must consider the
    totality of the circumstances of the parties' relationship."
    
    Id. at 740.
       This is so because "[s]uch consideration furthers
    the Legislature's purpose to establish a statutory framework to
    'preserv[e] . . . the fundamental human right to be protected
    from the devastating impact of family violence.'"    
    Id., quoting Champagne
    v. Champagne, 
    429 Mass. 324
    , 327 (1999).    Indeed, in
    evaluating whether an initial 209A order or its extension should
    issue, the judge must "examine the words and conduct 'in the
    context of the entire history of the parties' hostile
    relationship.'"   Vittone v. Clairmont, 
    64 Mass. App. Ct. 479
    ,
    487 (2005), quoting Pike v. Maguire, 
    47 Mass. App. Ct. 929
    , 930
    (1999).
    8 As pertinent here, abuse is defined as "attempting to
    cause or causing physical harm"; [or] "placing another in fear
    of imminent serious physical harm." G. L. c. 209A, § 1.
    10
    Here, each party sought to introduce the video recording of
    the December 3, 2015, incident, as each contended that the
    recording would vindicate him or her, respectively.   In
    discussing with counsel the evidence that would be offered, the
    judge stated, "I think I have to hear everything to make a
    decision."   In response, counsel for the plaintiff suggested
    that the parties stipulate to present evidence from "December 3,
    2015 onwards," to which counsel for the defendant responded,
    "That's fine."   The judge's statement and the parties'
    stipulation is consistent with Iamele and its progeny.     The
    touchstone of an analysis as to whether a plaintiff has met her
    burden in a 209A proceeding must include a consideration of the
    totality of the circumstances of the parties' relationship.9     The
    judge properly considered the events of December 3, 2015, and
    the subsequent actions of the defendant in considering the
    plaintiff's request for an extension of the 209A order.
    9 Here, those facts include the defendant's failure to stay
    away from the plaintiff both before and after the sixty-day
    window imposed by the clerk magistrate; the internal affairs
    investigations, which are likely to engender hostility; the
    parties' demeanor in court; and the likelihood that the parties
    will encounter one another in the course of their usual
    activities where the defendant is a Boston police officer, and
    the plaintiff's workplace is on a main thoroughfare in Boston.
    See 
    Iamele, 444 Mass. at 741
    .
    11
    We agree with the defendant that the video recording shows
    the plaintiff acting in an aggressive manner, and that the
    plaintiff's testimony was conflicting at times.    However, it was
    ultimately up to the judge to determine the credibility of the
    witnesses.   He could have believed her version of events, or
    not.   Indeed, he would have been within his discretion in
    finding that the plaintiff was the initial aggressor in the
    December, 2015, incident, or that it involved mutual combat.
    Neither finding, however, would negate the further discretion
    afforded the judge to consider this incident in the totality of
    the circumstances surrounding the request for the 209A order at
    issue in this case.
    Both parties testified to their version of what occurred on
    the video, and what occurred off camera.    As to what was not
    captured on the recordings, the judge heard conflicting
    evidence.    The plaintiff testified that the defendant hit her
    and threw her to the ground.    The defendant testified that while
    his back was turned, she grabbed him, lost her grip, and fell.
    Although we review documentary evidence de novo, we review other
    evidence under the usual standard.    See, e.g., Commonwealth v.
    Hoyt, 
    461 Mass. 143
    , 148 (2011); Commonwealth v. Bean, 
    435 Mass. 708
    , 714 n.15 (2002).
    Overall, the judge was in the best position to assess the
    parties' credibility.    Not only did he observe the parties as
    12
    they testified, but he viewed the events on the recordings, and
    he heard the testimony of all the witnesses concerning what
    happened on and off camera, as well as the conduct of each of
    the parties subsequent to the December, 2015, incident.     This
    conduct includes, but is not limited to, the defendant's efforts
    to prevent the plaintiff from calling 911, the defendant's
    repeated intrusions into the plaintiff's day-to-day activities
    over the course of the next several months, and the utter lack
    of allegations that the plaintiff attempted to contact the
    defendant during that time.   This evidence is sufficient to
    support the judge's conclusions.   See S.T. v. E.M., 80 Mass.
    App. Ct. 423, 429 (2011) ("Credibility determinations and an
    evaluation of the sufficiency of all the evidence are matters
    for the hearing judge to decide").   See also Adoption of Larry,
    
    434 Mass. 456
    , 462 (2001) (deferring to judge's assessment of
    witness credibility).
    In considering whether the plaintiff was in reasonable
    fear, the judge implicitly credited the evidence that the
    defendant interfered with the plaintiff's efforts to call 911,10
    10That the plaintiff did not include this in her affidavit
    is not dispositive. This was a factual and legal conclusion
    that the judge was permitted to make having viewed the video
    tape recording and observed the witnesses' testimony. Indeed,
    victims of domestic violence may disclose details of the abuse
    they suffered over time or in vague or contradictory terms. See
    A. Olagunju & C. Reynolds, Domestic Violence, 13 Geo. J. Gender
    13
    an action which is tantamount to intimidating a witness.11
    Hamilton testified that the plaintiff attempted to call 911
    prior to the defendant making any such call.12   As a result of
    this testimony, the following exchange occurred between the
    judge and Hamilton:
    Q.: "And further on did . . . [the defendant] ever inform
    you that he had hung up one of the calls to 911?"
    A.:   "He did not."
    Q.: "Had you known that[,] would that have given rise to
    the issuance of a criminal complaint against him?"
    A.:   "I don't know.   I, I don't believe it would have."
    . . .
    Q.: "Have you ever charged someone with intimidation of a
    witness when they hang up a phone call?"
    A.:   "I have not personally, no sir."
    Q.: "Wouldn't that give rise out of the statute to
    intimidation if someone hung up -- "
    A.:   "I believe it would, sir."
    & L. 203, 250 (2012). Moreover, the plaintiff testified in some
    detail about this incident at the evidentiary hearing.
    11Cf. Commonwealth v. Fragata, 
    480 Mass. 121
    , 129 (2018)
    (where defendant did not allow the victim to call 911 and would
    not let her leave, "the prosecutor could have argued that the
    defendant attempted or caused physical injury to the victim or
    intimidated her to prevent her from contacting the police, i.e.,
    with the intent to interfere with a criminal investigation").
    12A Boston police incident history form was admitted in
    evidence. It reflected abandoned calls during the altercation.
    14
    On direct examination the plaintiff was asked, "Do you fear
    [the defendant]?" to which she responded, "A lot, a lot, a lot,
    a lot."     There was a sufficient basis for the judge to conclude,
    based on the totality of the circumstances, that the plaintiff's
    subjective fear of physical harm was objectively reasonable.
    See Smith v. Jones, 
    75 Mass. App. Ct. 540
    , 544-545 (2009).       Cf.
    V.J. v. N.J., 
    91 Mass. App. Ct. 22
    , 25 (2017) (in a civil
    harassment prevention order proceeding, it is necessary to look
    at the whole course of the defendant's conduct).
    Although the judge did not make findings of fact, in
    extending the order, he stated, "[A]fter hearing and
    consideration of all the evidence and the reasonable inferences
    I've drawn from all the evidence, I find that the plaintiff,
    [G.B.] has met her burden of proof in this case and I'm
    extending [the] order against [C.A.] for a period of a year."
    Indeed, where we are able to discern a reasonable basis for the
    order in the judge's rulings and order, no specific findings are
    required.    See 
    S.T., 80 Mass. App. Ct. at 429
    ; Ginsberg v.
    Blacker, 
    67 Mass. App. Ct. 139
    , 140 n.3 (2006) (affirming
    extension where judge made no oral or written findings, but
    "[t]he judge's questions during the hearing and her ultimate
    decision make it clear that she credited [the plaintiff's]
    version of the evidence and rejected [the defendant's]
    conflicting testimony").     Contrast 
    Iamele, 444 Mass. at 741
                                                                       15
    (vacating and remanding where judge found that plaintiff was in
    fear, but, without further explanation, declined to extend
    c. 209A order).
    3.   Collateral estoppel.   The defendant next claims that
    the judge erred in considering the December 3, 2015, incident
    because in December, 2015, and May, 2016, two different judges
    had previously determined that the defendant's actions on
    December 3 did not constitute abuse.13   He argues that principles
    of res judicata prevent a reconsideration of the incident that
    was already litigated in his favor.    We view this issue as one
    of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel.14
    13While the record reflects that neither of the parties'
    December, 2015, c. 209A complaints resulted in stay away orders,
    the defendant did not provide a transcript of the December 4,
    2015, hearing. Nor did he provide a transcript of the May 19,
    2016, hearing. See note 
    5, supra
    . Accordingly, we are unable
    to determine the reasons that the judges declined to issue the
    requested orders. It is the appellant's burden to provide us
    with a complete record. See Mass. R. A. P. 18 (a), as amended,
    
    425 Mass. 1602
    (1997).
    14"The term 'res judicata' includes both claim preclusion,
    also known as true res judicata, and issue preclusion,
    traditionally known as collateral estoppel." Mancuso v.
    Kinchla, 
    60 Mass. App. Ct. 558
    , 564 (2004). While the defendant
    frames his argument as claim preclusion, we view it as one of
    issue preclusion, as he contends that on prior occasions judges
    determined that he did not abuse the plaintiff on December 3,
    2015. "[A] party is precluded from relitigating an issue when:
    (1) there was a final judgment on the merits in [a] prior
    adjudication; (2) the party against whom estoppel is asserted
    was a party (or in privity with a party) to the prior
    adjudication; (3) the issue in the prior adjudication is
    identical to the issue in the current litigation; and (4) the
    issue decided in the prior adjudication was essential to the
    16
    The defendant asked the judge to view the video recordings
    of the December 3 incident and stipulated to the admission of
    this evidence.   The parties agreed below that the entire course
    of conduct was relevant, see 
    Iamele, supra
    , and an appeal
    arguing a different theory of the evidence therefore is
    unavailing.   As the issue of collateral estoppel was not argued
    below, it is waived.   See Carey v. New England Organ Bank, 
    446 Mass. 270
    , 285 (2006) ("An issue not raised or argued below may
    not be argued for the first time on appeal" [quotation
    omitted]).
    Even if the defense of collateral estoppel were not waived,
    it is unavailable for a separate reason as well.   To consider
    the applicability of issue preclusion, "we look to the record to
    see what was actually litigated" in the prior proceedings.
    Kobrin v. Board of Registration in Med., 
    444 Mass. 837
    , 844
    (2005).   If the doctrine is asserted as a defense, as is the
    case here, "[t]he guiding principle . . . is whether the party
    against whom it is asserted 'lacked a full and fair opportunity
    to litigate the issue . . . .'"   Martin v. Ring, 
    401 Mass. 59
    ,
    62 (1987), quoting Fidler v. E.M. Parker Co., 
    394 Mass. 534
    , 541
    (1985).   On this record, we cannot say that the issues in the
    earlier judgment." McLaughlin v. Lowell, 
    84 Mass. App. Ct. 45
    ,
    56 (2013), quoting Porio v. Department of Revenue, 80 Mass. App.
    Ct. 57, 61-62 (2011).
    17
    prior 209A complaints, whether credited by the various judges or
    not, were identical to those in this case and therefore,
    actually litigated.   See McLaughlin v. Lowell, 
    84 Mass. App. Ct. 45
    , 56 (2013), quoting Porio v. Department of Revenue, 80 Mass.
    App. Ct. 57, 61-62 (2011).   This complaint and each complaint
    and affidavit previously filed by the plaintiff recited both
    historical and new incidents involving the defendant.     See M.B.
    v. J.B., 
    86 Mass. App. Ct. 108
    , 110-111 (2014).   Furthermore, we
    do not have the prior 209A hearing transcripts, and we are
    unable to ascertain the basis of those earlier decisions.15    As a
    result, issue preclusion is not available to the defendant, and
    the judge's decision must be upheld for this reason as well.
    See Day v. Kerkorian, 
    61 Mass. App. Ct. 804
    , 809 (2004).     Cf.
    Krapf v. Krapf, 
    439 Mass. 97
    , 109 (2003) (rejecting the
    defendant's claim of res judicata where the "record was not
    sufficiently developed to enable the court to determine the
    judge's reasons for dismissing the complaint . . . with
    prejudice").16
    15It is, however, clear from the dockets before us that
    this was the only multi-day hearing involving multiple
    witnesses. Direct and cross-examination was extensive.
    16Cf. Adoption of Frederick, 
    405 Mass. 1
    , 5-6 (1989)
    (findings of fact in a prior care and protection proceeding
    should not have preclusive effect; nor should they be
    dispositive on a subsequent petition to dispense with parental
    consent to adopt); Adoption of Karla, 
    46 Mass. App. Ct. 64
    , 70
    (1998), quoting Cennami v. Department of Pub. Welfare, 
    5 Mass. 18
    July 15, 2016, extension
    order affirmed.
    App. Ct. 403, 408 (1977) ("[i]n any proceeding involving the
    custody of a child concerns of res judicata must inevitably give
    way to an overriding concern for the welfare of the child").
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 17-P-924

Filed Date: 11/1/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/2/2018