57 Mass. App. Ct. 746 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2003
The plaintiff appeals from the denial of her request for a permanent abuse protection order. She claims that the judge erred, as matter of law, by refusing to consider the option of a permanent order at a renewal hearing conducted pursuant to G. L. c. 209A, § 3.
The plaintiff was divorced from the defendant in 1998. She first obtained a temporary abuse prevention order against him on October 5, 1999, in the District Court. After a short extension and at a hearing at which the defendant did not appear, the
Upon the court clerk’s announcement of the plaintiff’s request, the judge, who had not been previously involved in this case, immediately stated: “I’ll give you a year ... I think due process requires annual review dates. I don’t want to do an indefinite.” In brief exchanges with plaintiff’s counsel, the judge stated: “There’s a big dispute among judges. Some judges are doing it and some aren’t.” At that point plaintiff’s counsel, apparently referring to Crenshaw v. Macklin, 430 Mass. 633 (2000), stated, “[t]he [Supreme Judicial Court] just decided this issue . . . and made clear that a District Court judge has the discretion to issue a permanent order.” The judge replied, “Yeah, I know some, some are doing it. ... I don’t think there’s any great harm to due process to come in at least once a year to review what’s going on.” Counsel attempted to persuade the judge that it was difficult for the plaintiff to “relive this year after year,” but the judge said, “I don’t think we as judges make it real difficult for litigants .... I just have a philosophical difference with you. I don’t see the great harm that you do in reviewing these once a year.” Without taking or alluding to any evidence, the judge then denied the request for a permanent order and approved a one-year extension, telling the plaintiff: “My guess is that maybe half the judges do grant these indefinitely, so next year, you may have a good opportunity to have that.”
Discussion. Following a listing of remedial orders available to “[a] person suffering abuse,” G. L. c. 209A, § 3, provides: “Any relief granted by the court shall be for a fixed period of time not to exceed one year.” Section 3 further provides that, if
The judge, as conceded by the plaintiff, clearly recognized that he had discretion to enter a permanent order. This case, therefore, does not fall within the principle that a judge who rules, or demonstrates a belief, that he is without power to grant a permitted order commits error. Crenshaw v. Macklin, supra at 636. See Tazziz v. Tazziz, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 809, 814 & n.5 (1988). It does, however, present the troubling picture of a judge who does not even purport to exercise permitted discretion and instead idiosyncratically applies a self-imposed limitation upon his remedial jurisdiction.
The proper exercise of judicial discretion involves making a circumstantially fair and reasonable choice within a range of
We note in passing that the judge’s due process concerns
The denial of the plaintiff’s request for a permanent order is vacated, and the matter is remanded to the District Court for further hearing.
So ordered.
In pertinent part, G. L. c. 209A, § 3, as amended by St. 1990, c. 403, § 3, states: “If the plaintiff appears at the court at the date and time the order is to expire, the court shall determine whether or not to extend the order for any additional time reasonably necessary to protect the plaintiff or to enter a permanent order.”
At this time the order was modified to require the defendant not to contact the couple’s two minor children and to stay at least one hundred yards away from them.
The record indicates that the defendant had a Kansas address. A docket entry on November 6, 2000, states that a return of service was filed indicating the defendant had been served in hand with a copy of the order.
The defendant has not filed a brief in this appeal. The certificate of service filed by plaintiffs appellate counsel states that the defendant was served with copies of her brief by first class mail at his Kansas address.
Until 1990, § 3 did not expressly authorize permanent orders. In that year, an amended version of § 3 (St. 1990, c. 403, § 3) explicitly permitted the entry of such an order at a renewal hearing.
As late as December, 2000, Massachusetts Trial Court, Guidelines for Judicial Practice: Abuse Prevention Proceedings § 6:08 (rev. 1997) stated that an order “may be extended for up to another year.”
In a case addressing whether G. L. c. 208, § 18, empowered a Probate and Family Court to issue permanent orders, the court in Champagne v. Champagne, supra at 327, stated that “[although parties may receive c. 209A protective orders to supplement a divorce decree, they must renew these protective orders annually.”
Most attempts at defining judicial discretion focus on choice. A leading scholar in the field stated: “If the word discretion conveys to legal minds any solid core of meaning, one central idea above all others, it is the idea of choice” (emphasis original). Rosenberg, Judicial Discretion of the Trial Court, Viewed from Above, 22 Syracuse L. Rev. 635, 636 (1971). See Johnson v. United States, 398 A.2d 354, 361 (D.C. 1979) (“Discretion signifies choice”). For a collection of articles and cases on the subject, see Smithbum, Judicial Discretion (National Judicial College, American Bar Association 1991).
Other jurisdictions have held the application of fixed, mechanical or blanket policies in areas left to judicial discretion to be error. See, e.g., Alamance Indus., Inc. v. Filene’s, 291 F.2d 142, 146-147 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 368 U.S. 831 (1961); United States v. Hudson, 970 F.2d 948, 956 & n.2 (1st Cir. 1992); Olney v. Municipal Ct. for the El Cajon Judicial Dist. of San Diego, 133 Cal. App. 3d 455, 462 (1982); In re Marriage of Dillman, 478 N.E.2d 86, 89 (Ind. App. 1985); State v. Boston, 11 N.W.2d 407, 411-412 (Iowa 1943); State v. Carter, 124 Ohio App. 3d 423, 428-429 (1997).
Given the foreclosing nature of the judge’s remarks and the fact that “[a]t a hearing on the plaintiff’s request for an extension ... the plaintiff is not required to re-establish facts sufficient to support that initial grant of an abuse