Abuse Prevention.
Words, "Household member."
COMPLAINT for protection from abuse
filed in the Dorchester Division of
the District Court Department on November
4, 2004.
The case was heard by E. Sydney Hanlon,
J.
Terry Klein for the defendant.
GRAHAM, J.
In this appeal from an order extending
a G.L. c. 209A abuse prevention order,
we are asked to define further what
constitutes a "household member"
within the meaning of G.L. c. 209A,
§ 1. A District Court judge found
that the defendant had resided in
the same house as the plaintiff and
her boyfriend, who is the defendant's
father. He concluded that the plaintiff
and the defendant were household members
and allowed the plaintiff's request
for a protective order against the
defendant. We affirm.
Facts. On November 4, 2004, the plaintiff
obtained an emergency abuse protection
order against the defendant pursuant
to G.L. c. 209A, § 3, pending a hearing
scheduled for November 18, 2004. After
the hearing on November 18, 2004,
at which the plaintiff, the defendant,
and the defendant's father testified,
the judge extended the order for one
year.
We summarize the pertinent facts as
gleaned from the hearing transcript.
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[FN1] At the time of the
hearing, the plaintiff was the
girl friend of the defendant's
father. The plaintiff and her
two teenage children lived with
the defendant's father in unit
one at 81 Sidney Street in the
Dorchester section of Boston.
The defendant had lived in unit
one with the plaintiff and his
father for approximately two
years before he went to live
elsewhere. The defendant left
the apartment approximately
six months prior to the November
18, 2004, hearing, but still
retained keys to the unit. He
also continued to receive his
mail at the residence, regularly
took showers there, spent the
night on one occasion during
this period, and had the ability
to let himself into the unit
without making prior arrangements
with the plaintiff or his father. |
The plaintiff testified that she sought
the restraining order because the
defendant, for more than a year, had
been threatening her and told her
he would pay someone to kill her if
she did not leave his father. The
defendant, she claimed, had come to
the apartment on several occasions
uninvited, cornered her, and pushed
her. He also pushed and threatened
her two children.
Based on the testimony of the plaintiff,
the defendant's father, and the defendant
himself, the judge concluded that
the defendant fell within the reach
of G.L. c. 209A because the plaintiff
and defendant were formerly household
members. [FN2]
Discussion. The defendant contends
that, even if he and the plaintiff
resided in the same dwelling, [FN3]
they did not "resid[e] together
in the same household," and therefore
were not "household members"
as that term is used in G.L. c. 209A.
[FN4] He argues that this court should
construe the term "household
members" to exclude individuals
such as himself and the plaintiff,
with whom, he claims, he shared no
financial or "emotional connection,"
even if they once shared a living
space. Construing "household
members" to encompass himself
and the plaintiff would, he argues,
impart a significance to the words
not intended by the Legislature and
not supported by the plain meaning
of the word "household."
We disagree.
When interpreting G.L. c. 209A, we
look to the words of the statute "
'construed by the ordinary and approved
usage of the language,' examined in
light of the statute's purpose."
Crenshaw v. Macklin, 430 Mass. 633,
634 (2000), quoting from O'Brien v.
Director of the Div. of Employment
Sec., 393 Mass. 482, 487-488 (1984).
The Legislature enacted G.L. c. 209A
in 1978 to address the problem of
domestic violence through the provision
of judicial remedies. See St.1978,
c. 447, § 2. See also Turner v. Lewis,
434 Mass. 331, 334 (2001). Chapter
209A provides "a statutory mechanism
by which victims of family or household
abuse can enlist the aid of the State
to prevent further abuse." Commonwealth
v. Gordon, 407 Mass. 340, 344 (1990).
Under G.L. c. 209A, § 3, as amended
by St.1983, c. 678, § 4, "[a]
person suffering from abuse from an
adult or minor family or household
member may file a complaint in the
court requesting protection from such
abuse" (emphasis supplied). Relief
includes, but is not limited to, orders
requiring the defendant to "refrain
from abusing the plaintiff,"
to "refrain from contacting the
plaintiff," and to "vacate
forthwith and remain away from the
household, multiple family dwelling,
and workplace." G.L. c. 209A,
§ 3, as amended by St.1990, c. 403,
§ 3. These orders are designed to
prevent abuse by creating a "haven
for the abused party in which no further
abuse need be feared." Commonwealth
v. Gordon, 407 Mass. at 347.
Since the statute's enactment in 1978,
the Legislature has consistently broadened
the categories of persons eligible
for protection as "[f]amily or
household members." [FN5] See
C.O. v. M.M., 442 Mass. 648, 651 (2004).
The Supreme Judicial Court has also
repeatedly emphasized the need for
a broad interpretation of the statute's
terms, noting that "the Legislature
drafted the statute with purposeful
flexibility in its definitions."
Ibid. See Turner v. Lewis, supra.
Cf. Sorgman v. Sorgman, 49 Mass.App.Ct.
416, 417-418 (2000) (if the Legislature
had intended to exclude former stepchildren
or impose a time limitation in the
definition of "household members,"
it would have done so).
We note that G.L. c. 209A has always
reflected a " 'significant decision
by the [L]egislature ... to broaden
the definition of persons eligible
to seek protection from abuse and
domestic violence beyond the "family"
and to also include other persons
having some "family-like"
connection.' " Turner v. Lewis,
supra, quoting Kindregan & Inker,
Family Law and Practice § 57:5 (2d
ed.1996). A similarly broad and flexible
interpretation is appropriate in the
case of household members. By residing
in the same dwelling with his father
and the plaintiff, the defendant was
a "household member" with
the plaintiff as the term is used
in G.L. c. 209A. The statute is intended
to provide protection from domestic
abuse in such situations.
For these reasons, we conclude that
the plaintiff and the defendant are
household members for purposes of
G.L. c. 209A, and that the judge's
ruling is consonant with the Commonwealth's
public policy against domestic abuse.
Accordingly, we affirm the extension
of the protective order.
So ordered.
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FN1. While the judge did
not make written findings, the
transcript contains fairly extensive
oral findings on the issue of
jurisdiction under G.L. c. 209A. |
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FN2. Although the defendant
testified that he never considered
81 Sidney to be his home while
the plaintiff was living there,
the judge made oral findings
crediting the plaintiff's testimony
over the defendant's. |
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FN3. The judge did not abuse
his broad discretion, see Litchfield
v. Litchfield, 55 Mass.App.Ct.
354, 356 (2002), in concluding
that the evidence showed by
a preponderance that the plaintiff
and the defendant had resided
for some period of time in the
same dwelling. See Frizado v.
Frizado, 420 Mass. 592, 597
(1995). |
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FN4. General Laws c. 209A,
§ 1, inserted by St.1990, c.
403, § 2, defines "[f]amily
or household members" as
"persons who: (a) are or
were married to one another;
(b) are or were residing together
in the same household; (c) are
or were related by blood or
marriage; (d) having a child
in common regardless of whether
they have ever married or lived
together; or (e) are or have
been in a substantive dating
or engagement relationship."
The defendant |
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acknowledges that his appeal
turns on that portion of the
statute defining "household
members." |
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FN5. The original definition
of "[f]amily or household
members" in G.L. c. 209A,
§ 1, as enacted in 1978, St.1978,
c. 447, § 2, was as follows:
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"household member,
a spouse, former spouse or their
minor children or blood relative."
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This definition was expanded
in 1986 to include a "former
household member" and a
"person who, though unrelated
by blood or marriage, is the
parent of the plaintiff's minor
child." St.1986, c. 310,
§ 15. The definition was again
revised in 1990 to its present
form. The current definition
contains more expansive language
than either of the previous
versions, and has added several
new categories to the definition.
See note 4, supra. |