428 Mass. 1003 | Mass. | 1998
The plaintiff’s primary challenge is to the issuance and subsequent extensions of a protective order, pursuant to G. L. c. 209A (c. 209A order), by a judge of the Brookline District Court. The 209A order was first issued on a preliminary ex parte basis on December 17, 1993. Following a hearing on January 13, 1994, during which both the plaintiff and the defendant testified, the judge issued the 209A order for a one-year period of time. In January, 1995, and again in January, 1996, the defendant succeeded in having the 209A orders extended for additional one-year periods.
On December 12, 1996, the plaintiff filed a petition for relief, pursuant to G. L. c. 211, § 3, seeking to vacate the original 209A order and its most recent extension. At the time of that filing, as well as the date of the single justice’s hearing on January 2, 1997, the 209A order was still in effect. It was, however, due to expire on January 7, 1997. The single justice denied both the plaintiff’s request for relief and her subsequent motion for reconsideration of that denial, thereby leading her to initiate this appeal on January 31, 1997.
We have previously expressed our reluctance to reach the merits of appeals concerning moot 209A orders absent some important public interest or a likelihood that the issue would be repeated or would tend to evade appellate review. See Cobb v. Cobb, 406 Mass. 21, 23 (1989). See also Zullo v. Goguen, 423 Mass. 679, 680 (1996); Frizado v. Frizado, 420 Mass. 592, 593-594 (1995). In the present case, the most recent extension of the 209A order expired well over a year ago and the defendant did not seek a renewal.
There are no issues of Statewide legal significance or public interest that warrant taking this case out of the general rule against deciding moot cases.
Accordingly, we dismiss the plaintiff’s appeal as moot. We deny her request for sanctions and costs against the defendant and his counsel.
Appeal dismissed.
We note that the appeal was not moot at the time the single justice acted on the petition because the c. 209A order had not yet expired. However, we reiterate that the appropriate avenue for review of c. 209A orders now is the filing of an appeal in the Appeals Court. Zullo v. Goguen, 423 Mass. 679, 681 (1996).
Although not dispositive, the plaintiff’s claim that “[e]verything that she has worked hard for during her entire lifetime has been severely damaged” by the issuance of the c. 209A order is belied by the fact that she waited three years from the issuance of the original order to seek appellate review of the order.