OPINION OF THE COURT
Family Court is a court of limited jurisdiction (see e.g. Matter of Walker v Walker,
Prior to July 2008, the statute provided protection to “members of the same fаmily or household,” which was defined as:
“(a) persons related by consanguinity or affinity;
“(b) persons legally married to one another;
“(c) persons formerly married to one another; and “(d) persons who have a child in common regardless whether such persons have been married or have lived together at any time” (Family Ct Act § 812 [former (1)]).
Petitioner and respondent do not fit within any of the foregoing categories: they are not and never have been married to each other, they are not otherwise relatеd by blood or marriage, and they do not have a child in common.
In July 2008, the legislature expanded the definition of “members of the same family or hоusehold” to include “persons
The Executive Director of the New York State Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence urged passage of the amendment extending protections to “couples who are dating but not yet married and couples who are dating but cannot or choose not to marry,” noting that “[i]ntimate partners whо are not married . . . are often practically indistinguishable from those who are married” (Mem from Amy Barasch to Senator George Winner аnd Assemblywoman Helene Weinstein in Support of 2008 NY Senate-Assembly Bill S8665, A11707, June 22, 2008, Bill Jacket, L 2008, ch 326). The Barasch memorandum cites a 1997 report of the State Commission on Domestic Violence Fatalities, which recommended expanding the statutory definí
Given this history, it is clear that petitioner and respondent do not have an “intimate relationship” as the legislature intended that term to mean. For a relationship to be “intimate” within the meaning of the statute, it must be direct, not one that is based upon multiple degrees of sepаration or that exists only through a shared connection with a third party. Were it otherwise, there would be virtually no limit to the number and kinds of relationshiрs that would come within Family Court’s protective jurisdiction. Petitioner and respondent have no direct relationship; they are not even “сasual acquaintance^] ” or connected by “ordinary fraternization.” Their interactions, if any, have been infrequent and brief. Their sole connection is that each of them has had a romantic relationship with the same woman at different times. While petitioner has a statutоry relationship with the woman because she and he have a child in common, and respondent and the woman have an “intimate relatiоnship” within the meaning of Family Court Act § 812 (1) (e) (see Matter of Jessica D. v Jeremy H.,
Because petitioner does not have a blood, affinity, or intimate relationship with respondent, he lacks standing to seek an order of рrotection against respondent under the Family Court Act. Therefore, his petition is dismissed.
Notes
Criticisms of the 2008 amendment centered on the impact of additional petitions for civil orders of protection on an understaffed, under-resourced Family Court system already straining under the weight оf nearly 700,000 new cases filed each year (Letter from David M. Brockway, President, Assn of Judges of Fam Ct of St of NY, to Terryl Brown Clemons, Acting Counsel to Govеrnor, July 7, 2008, RE: VETO: “Fair Access to Family Court”-S8665/ A11707, Bill Jacket, L 2008, ch 326). There is no reported discussion of vesting any other courts within the New York State Unified Court System with jurisdiction over “intimate relationship” petitions.
