Haines v. Vogel , 250 Md. App. 209 ( 2021 )


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  • Gregory Haines v. Gretchen Vogel, No.1789, September Term 2019. Opinion by Wells, J.
    CIVIL PROCEEDURE – MOTION TO DISMISS – FAILURE TO STATE A
    CLAIM – STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Appellate courts apply a de novo standard of review to determine whether a trial court’s
    dismissal of a complaint was legally correct.
    TORTS – INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH PARENTAL RELATIONS –
    REQUIRED ELEMENTS OF THE COMPLAINT
    Based on the precedent established by this Court in Lapides v. Trabbic, 
    134 Md. App. 51
    (2000), and the precedent established by the Court of Appeals in Hixon v. Buchberger, 
    306 Md. 72
     (1986) and Khalifa v. Shannon, 
    404 Md. 107
     (2008), we hold that to properly assert
    a complaint for intentional interference with custody or visitation, a petitioner must allege
    the physical removal and harboring of the child from the other parent.
    TORTS – INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH PARENTAL RELATIONS –
    REQUIRED ELEMENTS OF THE COMPLAINT
    Allegations that amount to “emotionally distancing” a child from a parent, regardless of
    severity, and even if such actions lead to a child’s refusal to visit with a parent, are an
    insufficient basis on which to sustain a complaint for intentional interference with custody
    or visitation as that tort has been defined in Maryland.
    TORTS – INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH PARENTAL RELATIONS –
    REQUIRED ELEMENTS OF THE COMPLAINT
    Here, the complaint did not allege that a parent had physical removed or harbored a child
    from the other parent so as to frustrate that parent’s visitation or make visitation impossible.
    Therefore, the circuit court properly dismissed Count I of the complaint.
    TORTS – INTENTIONAL INFLICTION EMOTIONAL DISTRESS
    To sustain a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress one must allege that: (1)
    the conduct at issue was intentional or reckless; (2) the conduct was extreme and
    outrageous; (3) there is causal connection between the extreme and outrageous conduct and
    the resultant distress; and (4) the emotional distress is severe.
    TORTS – INTENTIONAL INFLICTION EMOTIONAL DISTRESS
    In this case, the appellant’s allegations were not “extreme or outrageous,” as defined by
    precedent, nor did the appellant allege “severe” emotional distress. Consequently, the
    circuit court properly dismissed Count II of the complaint.
    Circuit Court for Carroll County
    Case No. C-06-CV-19-0126
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1789
    September Term, 2019
    _____________________________________
    GREGORY HAINES
    v.
    GRETCHEN VOGEL
    _____________________________________
    Graeff,
    Wells,
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    _____________________________________
    Opinion by Wells, J.
    _____________________________________
    Filed: April 7, 2021
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2021-04-07
    09:28-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Appellant, Gregory Haines, filed a complaint against appellee, Gretchen Vogel, his
    former wife and the mother of their two children, alleging that her conduct toward him
    amounted to (1) tortious interference with visitation and custody and (2) intentional
    infliction of emotional distress. The Circuit Court for Carroll County dismissed the
    complaint with prejudice.
    Mr. Haines filed a timely appeal and poses two questions which we have reworded:1
    1. Did the circuit court properly dismiss appellant’s claim for intentional interference
    with visitation and custody?
    2. Did the circuit court properly dismiss appellant’s claim for intentional infliction of
    emotional distress?
    For the reasons that we explain below, the circuit court properly dismissed the
    complaint. We, therefore, affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Gregory Haines, (hereafter “Father”) and Gretchen Vogel, (hereafter “Mother”), a
    married couple, had two children, J. born in 2000, and T., born in 2005.2 The parties
    1
    Mr. Haines’ verbatim questions read:
    I. Did the Circuit Court for Carroll County err in dismissing Count I of Appellant’s
    Complaint, Intentional Interference with Visitation and Custody?
    II. Did the Circuit Court for Carroll County err in dismissing Count II of
    Appellant’s Complaint and Amended Complaint, Intentional Infliction of
    Emotional Distress?
    2
    For the children’s privacy, we shall refer to them by the initial of their first names.
    Also, we note that by the time Father filed the complaint, J. was an adult.
    separated in October 2013 for various reasons including Father’s self-admitted “marital
    misconduct.” After the separation, it is undisputed that Mother had de facto physical and
    legal custody of the children.
    Mother filed for divorce in December 2013, and according to Father, he was
    permitted access with the children, “six and a half hours a week.” In February 2014,
    Mother filed a petition seeking domestic violence protection from Father. Although a court
    denied the petition, according to Father, the court entered a temporary order allowing him
    alternating weekend visitation with the children, plus one evening during the week.
    We will discuss Father’s allegations against Mother in detail later. For now, it is
    enough to say that for various reasons, the children grew reluctant or outright refused to
    visit with him. From October 2014 through October 2015, the parties turned to Amy
    Mazer, LCSW-C,3 to help them try to repair the relationship between the children and
    Father. That effort seemed marginally helpful, because the parties retained Dr. Paul
    Berman, Ph.D., a psychologist, to assess the parties, their children, and make “access and
    treatment recommendations” aimed at restoring some sort of relationship between the
    children and Father. Dr. Berman’s report, dated July 13, 2016, is included in the joint
    record extract. About one year later, July 3, 2017, the circuit court appointed Rebecca
    Snyder, Psy.D., “to serve as the forensic reunification therapist.” The outcome of these
    3
    LCSW-C or Licensed Certified Social Worker-Clinical is the highest level of
    licensure for a Social Worker. This level allows the license-holder to have a private
    practice, perform clinical social work, and train LCSW’s. See Maryland Code Annotated
    (1981, 2014 repl.), Health Occupations, Title 19; COMAR 10.42.01-10.
    2
    interventions are unknown. Based on what happened next, it did not seem that either Dr.
    Berman’s or Dr. Snyder’s efforts led to positive results.
    On March 20, 2019, Father filed a complaint against Mother alleging in Count I,
    intentional interference with visitation and custody, and in Count II, intentional infliction
    of emotional distress. In Count I, Father alleged that Mother’s continuing conduct had
    “deliberately and maliciously” deprived him of his “custodial and/or visitation rights and
    has alienated the children” from him such that a relationship with them was now
    “impossible.” He demanded damages exceeding $75,000.00. In Count II Father alleged
    that Mother’s conduct had caused him “extreme emotional distress.” He demanded
    damages in excess of $75,000.00.
    Mother moved to dismiss. She asserted that the complaint failed to state a cause of
    action. Specifically, with regard to Count I, she argued that the holdings in Hixon v.
    Buchberger, 
    306 Md. 72
     (1986), Lapides v. Trabbic, 
    134 Md. App. 51
     (2000), and Khalifa
    v. Shannon, 
    404 Md. 107
     (2008), require finding that for Father to succeed on a claim of
    intentional interference of visitation or custody, he must allege that Mother physically
    removed the children so that it would be impossible for Father to visit with the children.
    As for Count II, citing primarily, Batson v. Shifflett, 
    325 Md. 684
     (1992), Mother claimed
    that Father’s allegations, even if believed, did not amount to the type of outrageous conduct
    required to sustain an allegation of intentional infliction of emotional distress. Therefore,
    the circuit court properly dismissed the complaint.
    Father maintained that “the lessons” from the holdings of the cited cases, is “that
    the conduct and the harm must be serious” to successfully prove intentional interference
    3
    with custody. In Father’s estimation the allegations he raised were several orders of
    magnitude more severe than the conduct in either Hixon or Lapides. Father argued that
    Mother’s conduct was on par with the conduct under scrutiny in Khalifa. There, a mother
    moved her two minor children to Egypt without telling the children’s father. A jury found
    that the mother had interfered with the father’s custody and awarded him substantial money
    damages. 
    404 Md. at 113
    . Father also argued that Mother’s continuing efforts to keep the
    children from him were so outrageous that her conduct met the standard to support his
    claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress
    On June 21, 2019, the circuit court held a hearing on Mother’s motion to dismiss.
    After listening to counsels’ arguments, the court dismissed the complaint, but permitted
    Father to amend within thirty days. He did.
    The amended complaint essentially restated Mother’s alleged misconduct and added
    other examples, none of which alleged that Mother had physically removed the children to
    prevent Father from having contact with them. After a hearing on Mother’s renewed
    motion to dismiss, the court dismissed Father’s amended complaint with prejudice. Father
    subsequently filed this timely appeal. Additional facts are discussed below as necessary.
    DISCUSSION
    We review a circuit court’s grant of a motion to dismiss without deference. “In
    determining whether the decision of a lower court was legally correct, we give no deference
    to the trial court findings and review the decision under a de novo standard of review.”
    Lamson v. Montgomery Cnty., 
    460 Md. 349
    , 360 2018 (quoting Walter v. Gunter, 
    367 Md. 386
    , 392 (2002); Howard v. Crumlin, 
    239 Md. App. 515
    , 521 (2018) (“[T]he standard of
    4
    review of the grant or denial of a motion to dismiss is whether the trial court was legally
    correct.”
    I. Intentional Interference with Visitation and Custody
    Both parties rely for support on the previously cited cases of Hixon, Lapides, and
    Khalifa. We examine each case separately.
    1. Hixon v. Buchberger
    Jonathan Hixon and Linda Liebelt had a child during their relationship. A court
    order granted Liebelt residential custody of the child and granted Hixon specified
    visitation. 
    306 Md. at 73-74
    . Liebelt began living with and later married Paul Buchberger.
    Hixon sued Buchberger, claiming,
    [t]hat on November 16, 1984, at a time when [Hixon] lawfully went
    to [Liebelt’s and Buchberger’s] address to pick up the minor child for
    visitation purposes, the Defendant Buchberger began making belligerent and
    hostile statements to [Hixon] in the presence of the minor child, stating that
    [Hixon] was not really the child’s father. The said Defendant Buchberger
    made it difficult for the Plaintiff, Jonathan D. Hixon, to physically take his
    child with him to exercise normal visitation, at times the Defendant flatly
    refused to surrender the child to [Hixon] and repeatedly threatened violence.
    
    Id. at 74
    . The circuit court dismissed Hixon’s claim of tortious interference with visitation
    and Hixon appealed to this Court.4 
    Id. at 75
    . Before we could consider the appeal, the
    Court of Appeals granted certiorari.
    4
    As was the case here, Hixon’s complaint consisted of two counts. The first count
    sought an injunction. The second count claimed intentional interference with visitation
    and demanded compensatory and punitive damages totaling $85,000.00. Hixon, 
    306 Md. at 75
    .
    5
    In evaluating the circuit court’s dismissal of Hixon’s complaint, the Court reviewed
    decisions from the turn of the last century, observing that those cases dealt with tortious
    interference with domestic relations known as enticement or abduction of a child. 
    Id.
    However, the Court determined that the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1977)
    (“Restatement”), section 700 was more applicable. That section states:
    [o]ne who, with knowledge that the parent does not consent, abducts
    or otherwise compels or induces a minor child to leave a parent legally
    entitled to its custody or not to return to the parent after it has been left him,
    is subject to liability to the parent.
    Hixon, 
    306 Md. at 78
    . The Court concluded that comment g of the Restatement section
    700 permitted,
    a custodial parent who suffers the tort [to] recover damages for the
    loss of society of the child, for emotional distress resulting from abduction
    or enticement, for loss of service, and for the reasonable expenses of
    regaining the child and in treating any harm suffered by the child as a result
    of the tortious conduct.
    
    Id.
    Hixon acknowledged this lineage of cases but urged the Court to instead rely on the
    holding in Ruffalo v. United States, 
    590 F. Supp. 706
     (W.D.Mo.1984), arguing that the
    cause of action should not be limited to the custodial parent. 
    Id. at 79
    . In Ruffalo, the
    United States Court for the Western District of Missouri granted a mother a money
    judgment after she successfully sued for tortious interference of custody. There, the mother
    had legal custody of the parties’ minor son. The father and the child entered the Federal
    Witness Protection Program and were given new identities. Ruffalo, 590 F. Supp. at 709.
    The federal court found that the father’s and son’s entry into the Witness Protection
    6
    Program “had the effect of destroying [the mother’s] pre-existing legal right.” The court
    found that “[i]ntentional interference with visitation rights may therefore be imputed to the
    governmental sponsor of the Witness Protection Program.” Id. The court suggested that
    “state courts could well restrict this type of claim to situations that are not insubstantial in
    duration and effect” but, “the possibility of truly petty damage suits does not argue
    persuasively against recognition of a right to sue.” Id. at 713. The court then made “an
    educated guess,” that Missouri would recognize a damage suit for interference with
    visitation rights and assessed damages to the mother for the deprivation of those rights. Id.
    After examining Ruffalo and appellate precedent from other jurisdictions, the Court
    of Appeals declined to expressly rule on Mr. Hixon’s contention that “Maryland law should
    not limit monetary recoveries in cases of intentional interference with parent/child relations
    to interferences with custody.” Hixon, 
    306 Md. at 78
    . Instead, the Court stated that “a
    proper recognition of the interests of a parent who is awarded visitation rights includes
    recognition of a cause of action for damages for intentional interference with visitation
    rights.” 
    Id. at 79
    .
    Significantly, the Court concluded that “the interference alleged here falls short, by
    a considerable distance, of the more substantial interferences presented in many of the
    cases relied upon by Hixon.” 
    Id.
     The Court concluded that the “belligerent words” that
    Buchberger used were “so minor” that that they did not amount to an interference with
    Hixon’s visitation rights. 
    Id.
    Indeed, the Court rejected Ruffalo’s reasoning which suggested that the bringing of
    a tortious interference of custody suit might deter illegal conduct. 
    Id. at 83
    . The Court
    7
    concluded that damage suits are an undesirable remedy for a relatively minor interference
    with visitation rights.
    Overarching all of the contentions in disputes concerning custody
    or visitation is the best interest of the child. But a damage action for
    interference with the transfer of a child from custody to a visitation, or
    vice versa, based on words spoken, even if they are objectively hostile
    and belligerent, would not seem to be generally in the best interest of the
    child involved. Inevitably the defense in such cases will be that the claimed
    interference by speaking was really an effort to protect the child from some
    detriment. Such issues should be resolved by the chancellor as an adjunct
    to jurisdiction over the child and not by a jury in the context of awarding
    or withholding damages between litigating adults.
    
    Id. at 83-84
     (emphasis supplied). The Court concluded by stating that Hixon had “a variety
    of equitable remedies” available to him without adding “an additional weapon” to “the
    arsenals of divorced or separated parents.” 
    Id. 2
    . Lapides v. Trabbic
    Jeffrey Lapides had joint residential custody of his three children with Kathy
    Gabriel. Lapides sued Gabriel’s domestic partner, Kristen Trabbic, alleging that she
    interfered in his relationship with his teenage daughter, Jessica, who was living with
    Gabriel and Trabbic. 134 Md. App. at 54. Lapides alleged that Trabbic’s interference,
    included refusing and denying him the opportunity to speak with
    Jessica on the telephone; interfering with his telephone calls to Jessica;
    making deliberate plans to interrupt his time spent with Jessica; instructing
    Jessica to not speak to him; directing Jessica to disregard his authority; and
    advising Jessica that he was not the parent responsible for disciplining her.
    8
    Id. at 54-55. Among the four counts in Lapides’ complaint, was one for “[i]ntentional
    interference with parent/child relations.”5 Id. at 54. After a hearing, the circuit court
    granted Trabbic’s motion to dismiss and Lapides appealed to this Court. Id. at 55.
    We began our analysis of Lapides’ claims by reviewing the Court of Appeals’
    analysis in Hixon. Although not cited by the Court of Appeals in Hixon, nor in either of
    the briefs submitted in Lapides, we determined that Restatement section 699 was “critical”
    to fully understanding Restatement section 700, previously quoted. Restatement section
    699 states:
    One who, without more, alienates from its parent the affections of a
    child, whether a minor or of full age, is not liable to the child’s parent.
    Viewing both sections together, “we [saw] that under the Restatement view, an actionable
    tort must be predicated on proof of acts other than the mere persuasion of a child to transfer
    its affection from its parent.” Lapides, 134 Md. App. at 59.
    We concluded that Lapides’ allegations revealed that Trabbic’s conduct was “mere
    persuasion.” Nevertheless, Lapides implored us to see that Trabbic’s actions were more
    serious and formed “a pattern of continuing intentional disruptive conduct.” Id. Still,
    Lapides did not assert that Trabbic “induce[d] or encourage[d] Jessica to live with her
    mother, rather than appellant.” Id. We acknowledged that Lapides’ allegations were
    serious and could properly be the subject of a contempt action or a petition for modification
    5
    The other counts alleged negligence, enticement, and fraud. Lapides, 134 Md.
    App. at 54.
    9
    of custody. However, we held that Lapides’ allegations did not “transform a family law
    issue into a tort claim under either existing Maryland law or precedent in other states.” Id.
    In reaching this conclusion, we examined cases from other jurisdictions, including
    Murphy v. I.S.K. Con. of New England, Inc., 
    571 N.E.2d 340
    , cert. denied, 
    502 U.S. 865
    ,
    (1991), where the Massachusetts court observed that the
    tortious conduct referred to [in previous Massachusetts cases]
    includes the abduction, enticement, and harboring and secreting of
    minor children from their parents, or in other words, the intentional
    interference with parental interests or rights. The elements of these causes
    of action are well established. Abduction is the physical taking of a minor
    child from the parent having legal custody. An action for enticement will lie
    where one, through an ‘active and wrongful effort’ and knowing that the
    parent does not consent, induces a child to leave the parent’s home. One
    ‘harbors’ a minor child by inducing or encouraging a child, who is away from
    the parent without the parent’s consent, to remain away from the parent[.]
    
    Id. at 351
     (emphasis supplied) (citations omitted). And, Stone v. Wall, 
    734 So.2d 1038
    (Fla.1999), where the Florida Supreme Court relying, in part, on the analysis in Murphy,
    recognized the cause of action for interference with parent/child relations when a
    grandparent and others intentionally abducted the child. 
    Id. at 1046
    .
    Based on these cases, we held that “physical removal of the child from the custodial
    parent would be essential to such action.” Lapides, 134 Md. App. at 63. Specifically, we
    held that the heightened “potential for injury resulting from physical removal may warrant
    the imposition of tort damages.” Id. However, any lesser interference with a parent’s
    custodial rights would be outweighed in balancing the merits of the tort action as a deterrent
    to interference, and the great potential for injury to children that will result from such
    additional litigation. Id. We concluded that this would be the result even if Lapides’
    10
    allegation was that Trabbic “induced and compelled Jessica not to reside with appellant,”
    because the parents had agreed that Jessica could choose which parent she wished to live
    with on a weekly basis. Id. at 64-65.
    3. Khalifa v. Shannon
    Michael Shannon sued his ex-wife, Nermeen Khalifa Shannon, and her mother, Afaf
    Nassar Khalifa, in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County for intentional interference
    with custody and visitation after the mother and grandmother took the couple’s two minor
    sons to Egypt to live, without his knowledge. 
    404 Md. 112
    . The mother and grandmother
    moved to dismiss the father’s complaint, arguing, among other things, that intentional
    interference with custody and visitation was not recognized in Maryland. 
    Id. at 113
    . The
    circuit court declined to dismiss, and the matter proceeded to a jury trial. The jury returned
    a verdict exceeding $3 million in compensatory and punitive damages. 
    Id.
     The mother
    and grandmother appealed to this Court. Before we could consider the appeal, the Court
    of Appeals issued a writ of certiorari. 
    Id. at 114
    .
    The Court of Appeals saw its task as determining “whether the tort of interference
    with custody and visitation rights exists, and whether a parent, who has both legal custody
    and visitation rights under court order at the time of the abduction and harboring of minor
    children, has to plead and prove that he or she has suffered an economic loss as a result of
    the abduction and harboring.” 
    Id. at 115
    . The Court began its analysis with a review of
    the abduction and harboring children cases from the early twentieth century in Maryland
    and other jurisdictions. Those cases, exemplified by Baumgartner v. Eigenbrot, 
    100 Md. 508
     (1905), recognized a tort cause of action resulting from the harboring or the abduction
    11
    a child from a parent or anyone having custody. “Abduction is the unlawful taking or
    detention by force, fraud, or persuasion of a person…a child or a ward, from the possession,
    custody, or control of the person legally entitled thereto.” Khalifa, 
    404 Md. 116
     (quoting
    Baumgartner, 
    100 Md. at 513
    ). The Court acknowledged that cases like Baumgartner and
    those from other jurisdictions, such as Murphy, which the Court also cited, were precursors
    to its decision in Hixon.
    The Court recognized that Hixon offered it the first occasion in which to determine
    whether abduction and harboring could be the basis of a cause of action for interference
    with parent-child relations. Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 124
    . Focusing on Judge Rodowsky’s
    reasoning in Hixon, the Court determined that the allegations there were insufficient to
    sustain a tort cause of action for assault, battery, or intentional infliction of emotional
    distress. In short, the conduct there did not describe conduct that was “outrageous” and
    “so extreme, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency.” Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 124
    (quoting Hixon, 306 Md.at 77) (internal citation omitted). The Court observed that Hixon
    underscored that the Court’s “decisions involving interference with the relationship
    between parent and child…recognized that abduction and enticement were the precursor
    causes of action for interference with parent-child relations.” Khalifa, 
    404 Md. 125
    (quoting Hixon, 
    306 Md. at 77
    ) (emphasis suppled). The Court concluded its analysis
    stating that with Hixon the Court of Appeals “not only recognized that the tort of
    interference with parent-child relations was extant, but also defined the elements and
    applied them to the factual allegations.” Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 127
    . Consequently, the Court
    held that the father’s complaint was sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss, because he
    12
    alleged that the mother and grandmother deliberately and intentionally deceived him into
    thinking that they were taking the children on a trip to New York City “to visit relatives,”
    when in fact they “did abduct the boys and harbor them in Egypt.” 
    404 Md. at 127
    .
    The Court went on to determine three additional issues. First, that the father need
    not have plead loss of services to sustain an allegation of intentional interference in parent-
    child relations. 
    Id. at 138-39
    . Second, that the complaint had alleged a “substantial”
    interference in the father’s visitation rights. 
    Id. at 141
    . And, third, that the gravity of the
    mother’s actions justified the deterrent value of the punitive damages award. 
    Id. at 148
    -
    49.6
    4. The Amended Complaint
    In the first count of the amended complaint, alleging intentional interference with
    visitation and custody, Father’s prime allegation is that Mother made “deliberate efforts to
    6
    In a concurring opinion, Judge Raker, who happened to be the trial judge in Hixon,
    took issue with Khalifa’s reading of that case. Judge Raker opined that Hixon did not
    recognize a tort cause of action for interference with parent-child relations. Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 149
    . To make her point, Judge Raker quoted the following passage from Hixon:
    We need not decide in this case whether, or, if so, under what circumstances
    a damage action might lie for interference with visitation rights. We hold
    simply that a parent or that parent’s ally who, without committing any tort
    presently recognized in Maryland, speaks hostilely to the other parent about
    that parent’s exercise of custody or visitation rights does not thereby become
    liable in damages.
    Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 150
     (quoting Hixon, 
    306 Md. at 72
    ). Judge Raker concluded by saying
    that if the Court chose to recognize a new cause of action, which it had the authority to do,
    it should do so clearly, and explain its rationale. Otherwise policy decisions with such
    “potentially far-reaching social and legal consequences” should be left to the General
    Assembly to consider. Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 150
    .
    13
    alienate the children from [him].” Specifically, he states that Mother made inappropriate
    comments about him in front of the children. He then cites several examples of comments
    that Mother allegedly made.
    Aside from comments Mother allegedly made, Father also alleged that (1) Mother
    gave each of the children a cell phone, so, Father claims, she could communicate with them
    during his visitation and thereby deny him “meaningful visits;” (2) Mother once “sped off,”
    leaving T. (then aged 9) at a Maryland State Police Barracks after T. allegedly “took too
    long to hug and say goodbye,” during a visitation exchange; (3) Mother encouraged the
    children not to return Father’s phone calls; (4) Father made a comment to his therapist,
    which he claims was merely a metaphorical allusion to his frustration with Mother. 7
    Apparently though, the therapist was concerned enough about Father’s comment that the
    therapist reported it “to various people, including Mother.” Afterward, Father alleged that
    Mother told the children what Father had said, “with the sole intent of worsening [his]
    relationship with them;” (5) Father complains about the length of visitation at a community
    center. And as a result, over time, the children grew so angry with him that they refused
    to see him. According to the amended complaint, Mother did nothing to encourage the
    children to see Father; (6) Father quotes several passages from Dr. Berman’s written report
    which describe the children’s hostility toward Father. Father alleges the children’s warped
    view of him was caused by Mother’s behavior.
    7
    Father admits that he said something along the lines of, “Sometimes I get so
    frustrated I could strangle her.”
    14
    5. Parties’ Contentions
    Father’s argument begins with this question: “[W]hat is the difference between
    inducing a minor child not to return to a parent in conformity with a court order and
    alienating a child’s affection from that parent?” He continues, starkly arguing that if this
    Court concludes that Mother’s actions fall under the Restatement section 700, he “wins
    this appeal.” On the other hand, Father argues, if this Court concludes that Mother’s actions
    fall under Restatement 699, alienation of affection, “he loses this appeal.”
    Mother argues that the circuit court properly determined that the allegations that
    Father raises amount to alienation of affection. Mother asserts that to state a claim for
    intentional interference with custody or visitation, the complaint must allege “some sort of
    physical abduction or harboring or enticement.”
    6. Analysis
    Hixon and Khalifa’s comprehensive review of cases that have addressed tort suits
    alleging interference with domestic relations from the beginning of the last century until
    now, show that this specific tort was grounded in two other torts: abduction and enticement.
    Significantly, in Khalifa, the Court of Appeals accepted that appellate authority from other
    jurisdictions, as well as the limited jurisprudence from the Court of Appeals’ “decisions
    involving interference with the relationship between parent and child…recognized that
    abduction and enticement were the precursor causes of action for interference with parent-
    child relations.” Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 125
     (quoting Hixon, 
    306 Md. at 77
    ) (emphasis
    supplied). On this point, Khalifa and Lapides both favorably cite the rationale of the
    Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts which, in Murphy, stated:
    15
    Implicit in each action [of tortious interference with the parent-child
    relationship] is the requirement that the child be physically absent from the
    home for a continuous period of time. To allow recovery for interference
    with parental interests without physical absence of the minor child from the
    home would be to allow an action for alienation of affections, for which
    recovery cannot be had.
    Murphy, 
    571 N.E.2d at 351
    ; see Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 122-23
    .
    In Lapides, we categorically stated that “[w]ere Maryland to recognize an action for
    tortious interference with parent/child relations, we think that physical removal of the child
    from the custodial parent would be essential to such action.” 134 Md. App. at 63-64. At
    the same time, this Court in Lapides, 134 Md. App. at 58-59, and to a lesser degree the
    Court of Appeals in Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 127 n.8,
     recognized that Restatement 699,
    alienation of affection, cannot form the basis of a tort claim. Finally, each of the Maryland
    appellate decisions now examined have held that the alleged interference must be
    “outrageous” and “extreme.” Khalifa, 
    404 Md. at 124
    ; Hixon, 306 Md.at 77; Lapides, 134
    Md. App. at 63-64.
    Consequently, we take from the holdings in Hixon, Lapides, and Khalifa, and the
    other authorities cited, that the basis of a tort claim for interference with custody and
    visitation, is that the conduct must be: (1) intentional, (2) outrageous, and (3) involve the
    physical removal and harboring of the child from the parent. With regard to the last point,
    the tort is based on cases of abduction. Indeed, Khalifa and Lapides make clear that
    physical removal must be alleged and proven to sustain a charge of interference with a
    parental relationship as defined in the Restatement, section 700. Further, while the level
    of outrageousness is not defined, we have for guidance the conduct of the mother in
    16
    Khalifa, as an example of what the Court of Appeals has determined is “outrageous” and
    “extreme.” There, the mother intentionally deceived the father about where she was taking
    the children, and with her mother’s help, took the minor children to another country.
    Consequently, the requisite outrageous conduct cannot be merely words or acts that cause
    estrangement but conduct that results in the physical removal of the child from a parent.
    Based on this analysis, Father falls short of alleging that Mother’s conduct, though
    perhaps vexing and hurtful to him, constitutes intentional interference with the parent-child
    relationship as we have concluded it is defined in Maryland. While Father has alleged that
    Mother’s conduct was intentional, he has not alleged conduct that was outrageous. To be
    sure, Mother’s alleged actions, if proven, could be said to have contributed to the children’s
    estrangement from Father. We cannot say, however, that Mother’s behaviors constituted
    conduct that was objectively “outrageous,” “extreme,” or “beyond the pale.”
    More importantly, Father does not allege that Mother attempted to physically
    remove the children from Father, as did the mother in Khalifa. Here, Father alleges that
    Mother, by allegedly badmouthing him and doing other things, has distanced the children
    emotionally from him. Khalifa’s holding, and the reasoning presented in Lapides and
    Hixon, show that an allegation of intentional interference with custody or visitation must
    allege the spatial movement of a child away from a parent.
    Father seems to argue that if Mother’s conduct is deemed outrageous enough, then
    that would be sufficient to sustain his claim for intentional interference with custody. We
    disagree. Under the precedent cited, the type of inducement required is to facilitate the
    physical removal of the child, not the psychological or emotional distancing of the child
    17
    from a parent, no matter how bad the conduct. Khalifa and Lapides make abundantly clear
    that physical removal is what is required. Father does not make this allegation. The
    behaviors that Father alleges reflect his belief that Mother’s intentional conduct alone has
    alienated him from the children’s affections. Under Restatement section 699, this cannot
    form the basis of an actionable tort claim.8 We conclude that the appellate authority we
    have examined makes abundantly clear that before a trial court will permit an intentional
    interference of custody case to go forward, the conduct alleged must be intentional, beyond
    the pale, and result in the physical removal of a child before the case may proceed. As that
    was not done here, the circuit court properly dismissed Count I of the complaint.
    Mother’s behaviors, if proven, may appropriately form the basis of a civil contempt
    petition or a motion to modify custody or visitation. It is conceivable that the court could
    modify custody or visitation, provided that Father proves a material change in
    circumstances and that the proposed modification is in the child’s best interests. See
    Wagner v. Wagner, 
    109 Md. App. 1
    , 28, cert. denied, 
    343 Md. 334
     (1996) Separately,
    Mother’s actions may amount to a willful disregard of the court’s visitation order. See
    generally Kowalczyk v. Bresler, 
    231 Md. App. 203
     (2016). Importantly, both actions
    would allow the court, rather than a jury, to resolve what will undoubtedly be conflicting
    and emotion-laden testimony. Either remedy would allow the court to make what, based
    on the record, could well be a complex assessment of the dynamics between the minor
    child and his parents. In this way the circuit court would preserve its role “as both a
    8
    Father recognizes that the amended complaint concerned only T., as he was a
    minor at the time that the amended complaint was filed.
    18
    protector of the child and as the resolver of a dispute between the parents.” McMahon v.
    Piazze, 
    162 Md. App. 588
    , 594 (2006). The court would be best positioned to resolve the
    central issue at the heart of this controversy: whether the court should use its equitable
    powers to address Mother’s alleged behaviors. Either petition would be a more prudent
    course than allowing one parent to sue the other for money damages to resolve these
    important issues.
    II. The Court Properly Dismissed Count II for Failure to State a Claim of IIED
    Father argues that Mother’s previously described conduct forms the basis of a claim
    for intentional infliction of emotional distress (hereafter, “IIED”). Mother maintains that
    Father’s allegations do not meet the test for “outrageousness” required by Maryland
    appellate precedent, nor does Father claim that Mother’s conduct has caused him severe
    emotional distress. We agree with Mother and explain.
    The Restatement of Torts, Chapter 2, Emotional Distress, section 46, specifies that
    for a plaintiff to recover for IIED they must prove that:
    (1) The conduct at issue was intentional or reckless; (2) the conduct
    was extreme and outrageous; (3) there is causal connection between the
    extreme and outrageous conduct and the resultant distress; and (4) the
    emotional distress is severe.
    Restatement § 46. See also Harris v. Jones, 
    281 Md. 560
    , 566 (1977). In Figueiredo-
    Torres v. Nickel, 
    321 Md. 642
    , 653 (1991), the Court of Appeals cautioned that liability for
    the tort of IIED should be imposed sparingly and “‘its balm reserved for those wounds that
    are truly severe and incapable of healing themselves.’” (quoting Hamilton v. Ford Motor
    Credit Co., 
    66 Md. App. 46
    , 61, cert. denied, 
    306 Md. 118
     (1986)). Consequently, Father
    19
    bears the burden of proving that Mother’s conduct meets the four elements to sustain a
    claim for IIED. We now examine each element.
    a. The conduct must be intentional or reckless
    IIED occurs when the actor “desires to inflict severe emotional distress, and also
    where he knows that such distress is certain, or substantially certain, to result from his
    conduct; or where the defendant acts recklessly in deliberate disregard of a high degree of
    probability that the emotional distress will follow.” Harris, 
    281 Md. at 567
    . We have
    reviewed Father’s allegations as outlined in the previous section of this opinion. We think
    that Father’s allegations show that Mother’s conduct, at least in some instances, may have
    been intentional or reckless. For example, Father alleges that Mother sped away from a
    visitation exchange, allegedly because T. took too long saying farewell to Father, thus
    leaving the minor in the parking lot of a Maryland State Police Barracks with Father.
    Father cites this as an example of Mother’s disapproval of the children showing displays
    of affection toward Father.
    b. The conduct must be outrageous
    To sustain an allegation of IIED the alleged conduct must be both extreme and
    outrageous. Batson v. Shiflett, 
    325 Md. 684
    , 734 (1992) (“For conduct to meet the test of
    ‘outrageousness,’ it must be ‘so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of
    decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized
    community.’”). In making this determination, a court must consider not only the conduct
    itself but also the “personality of the individual to whom the misconduct is directed.” 
    Id.
    This high standard of culpability exists to screen out claims amounting to “mere insults,
    20
    indignities, threats, annoyances, petty oppressions, or other trivialities” that simply must
    be endured as part of life. 
    Id.
     Further, the alleged conduct must “go beyond all possible
    bounds of decency and is to be regarded as atrocious and utterly intolerable in a civilized
    community.” Lasater v. Guttmann, 
    194 Md. App. 431
    , 448 (2010). Restatement § 46,
    cmt. d. “Whether the conduct complained of meets this test is, in the first instance, for the
    court to determine[.]” Baston, 
    325 Md. at 734
    .
    A claim for IIED has been sustained in Maryland four times. And, indeed, the tort
    has been found to exist in only the most extreme circumstances. See Faya v. Almaraz, 
    329 Md. 435
     (1993) (reversing dismissal when HIV-positive9 surgeon operated on the
    appellants without their knowledge of his disease); Figueiredo-Torres, supra (reversing
    dismissal when plaintiff alleged psychologist engaged in sexual relations with plaintiff’s
    wife during the time he was counseling the couple); B.N. v. K.K., 
    312 Md. 135
     (1988)
    (sustaining cause of action for IIED when a physician with herpes had sex with nurse
    without informing her that he had the disease and infected her); Young v. Hartford Accident
    & Indem. Co., 
    303 Md. 182
     (1985) (reversing dismissal when workers’ compensation
    insurer insisted that claimant submit to psychiatric evaluation for the “sole purpose” of
    harassing her and forcing her to drop her claim or commit suicide).
    We discern from these cases that the accused had a unique relationship with the
    person claiming emotional distress. For example, in Figueiredo-Torres, a psychologist
    9
    Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a chronic, potentially life-
    threatening condition caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). By damaging
    the immune system, HIV interferes with the body’s ability to fight infection and disease.
    Diseases-HIV, Mayo Clinic, https://mayocl.in/2M2kGsU.
    21
    who engaged in sexual relations with the plaintiff’s wife while giving the couple marriage
    counseling was found liable for IIED. 321 Md. at 653. The Court of Appeals held that the
    psychologist was in a unique position to influence the patient’s emotional well-being and
    took advantage of that position, knowing the emotional impact on the husband would have
    been great if he discovered that his counsellor was having an affair with his wife. Id.
    Here, the relationship is that of estranged former spouses, both being the parents of
    one minor child, T. We are unwilling to say that simply because Mother has residential
    custody of T., that presents the type of unique relationship exhibited in the cited cases. To
    be sure, we understand that a power dynamic may very well be at play here. We note that
    although Father alleges that Mother has turned T. and his adult sister, J., against him, he
    does not specifically allege that Mother’s status as custodial parent is the source of the
    emotional harm. In other words, Mother’s conduct is Father’s focus, not her status.
    Nonetheless, we recognize that a parent’s status as the custodial parent may affect the non-
    custodial parent’s relationship with a child and may be a factor constituting outrageous
    conduct. Harris, 
    281 Md. at 569
     (“the extreme and outrageous character of the defendant’s
    conduct may arise from his abuse of a position, or relation with another person, which gives
    him actual or apparent authority over him, or power to affect his interests”) (citing
    Restatement § 46 comment e (1965)).
    We now consider whether Mother’s alleged conduct “exceeded all bounds of
    decency.” Lasater, 194 Md. App. at 448. Mother’s alleged behaviors, if believed, were
    not on the scale of the acts described in Faya, Figueiredo-Torres, Batson, or Harris.
    Clearly, Father is concerned about his relationship with both of his children and what he
    22
    believes to be Mother’s concerted efforts to deny him a meaningful relationship with his
    children. We are mindful of the potentially corrosive effects that one parent’s behaviors
    might have on a child’s perception of the other parent. Further, we agree that there may be
    evidence to back up Father’s claims, such as some of the comments from Dr. Berman that
    Father quoted in his complaint and mentioned at oral argument. But this Court concludes
    that Mother’s behavior is not of the type of conduct that has previously sustained a finding
    of IIED. To sustain an allegation of IIED, the conduct must rise to the level of being
    “intolerable” and “outrageous.” Mother’s alleged conduct, while perhaps vexing and
    inappropriate, cannot be said to be extreme or outrageous, as has been defined. See, e.g.,
    Young v. Hartford Accident & Idem. Co., 
    303 Md. 182
     (1985).
    c. The severity of emotional distress
    Finally, Father must allege that the emotional distress that he experienced was so
    severe that “no reasonable person could be expected to endure it.” Leese v. Balt. Cnty., 
    64 Md. App. 442
    , 471 (1985); Harris, 
    281 Md. at 570-71
    . One must be unable to function or
    “to tend to necessary matters.” Leese, 64 Md. App. at 472; Vance, 
    41 Md. App. 135
     (1979).
    In the amended complaint, Father does not claim that he cannot function or carry on
    with “necessary matters.” To be sure, he alleges that his relationship with his children has
    suffered severely but he does not allege that Mother’s actions have taken such an emotional
    toll that he cannot carry on or endure. See Harris, 
    281 Md. at 571
    . Again, we understand
    Father’s concern with this situation. But as noted, claims of IIED are reserved for the most
    serious and emotionally devastating acts. Batson, 
    325 Md. at 734
    ; see Kentucky Fried
    Chicken Nat’l Mgmt. Co. v. Weathersby, 
    326 Md. 663
    , 670 (1992) (“[T]he tort is to be used
    23
    sparingly and only for opprobrious conduct that includes truly outrageous conduct.”). This
    is an appropriate limitation on application of the tort, so that it is limited to truly outrageous
    conduct and will not form a basis for a tort claim that might arise in the context of a custody
    dispute, where equitable remedies such as contempt and modification are available to an
    aggrieved parent.
    Finally, absent an allegation of truly outrageous conduct, we leave for future
    consideration the causal connection between the alleged outrageous conduct and the
    alleged emotional distress. Since Father does not allege the requisite conduct nor a severe
    enough injury here, we do not think it necessary to discuss the required causal link.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
    COURT FOR CARROLL COUNTY
    AFFIRMED. APPELLANT TO PAY
    COSTS.
    24