In the Matter of NAMI ARITA, Appellant, v ROBERT GOODMAN, Respondent.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Third Department, New York
18 NYS3d 473
Petitioner and respondent lived together as roommates in an apartment from August 2013 until April 2014, at which time petitioner left the residence—approximately four months prior to the expiration of the lease—as a result of alleged incidents of domestic violence perpetrated upon her by respondent. Petitioner then commenced the instant proceeding pursuant to
Initially, petitioner’s pleadings unambiguously allege that respondent committed family offenses. Petitioner alleges that respondent had destroyed items of her property, thrown items at her, shoved her and threatened to, among other things, “kick [her] ass.” Such factual allegations were sufficient to allege, at a minimum, the family offenses of menacing in the third degree (see
Further, we agree with petitioner that her implicit acknowledgment that she had not had a sexual relationship with respondent did not justify Family Court ruling, as a matter of law, that the two did not have an intimate relationship within the meaning of
Considering these enumerated factors, the Legislature unambiguously established that the phrase “intimate relationship” is not limited to relationships that include sexual intimacy (
