Alexandra Fox v. Nathan Fox

2022 VT 27, 280 A.3d 354
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 17, 2022
Docket2021-095
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2022 VT 27 (Alexandra Fox v. Nathan Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexandra Fox v. Nathan Fox, 2022 VT 27, 280 A.3d 354 (Vt. 2022).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2022 VT 27

No. 2021-095

Alexandra Fox Supreme Court

On Appeal from v. Superior Court, Rutland Unit, Family Division

Nathan Fox November Term, 2021

David Barra, J.

Antonietta A. Girardi of Facey Goss & McPhee P.C., Rutland, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Nathan Fox, Pro Se, Poultney, Defendant-Appellant.

PRESENT: Eaton, Carroll and Cohen, JJ., and Treadwell, Supr. J., and Dooley, J. (Ret.), Specially Assigned

¶ 1. COHEN, J. Father appeals a sanctions order imposed by the family division

enjoining him from submitting filings in this case unless the filing is signed by a licensed attorney

or he first obtains permission from the court. We affirm the sanction but remand to the family

division to provide additional guidance regarding the procedure and standards for father’s future

filings.

¶ 2. The sanction on appeal follows a long procedural history. Because the amount and

content of father’s filings are important to the legal analysis, they are outlined in detail. As

explained more fully below, the court acted within its discretion in sanctioning father given his

pattern of filing numerous motions that lacked factual or legal support, failing to adhere to

procedural rules, and acting without good faith. We conclude, however, that the court’s order was overly broad in scope because it applies to all of father’s submissions to the court in this matter

and does not clearly provide father with instructions on how to comply. Therefore, we remand for

the court to amend its sanctions decision accordingly.

I. Procedural History

¶ 3. Mother and father married in 2014 and have one child together, a daughter born in

2016. They divorced in 2018, by which time mother and daughter had been living in Vermont for

over a year. At that time, father was on active military duty and stationed in Florida. In the final

divorce order based on the parties’ stipulation, mother was awarded sole physical and legal

parental rights and responsibilities (PRR) for daughter, subject to father’s right to parent-child

contact (PCC) and mother’s duty to keep father informed as to legal decisions made for daughter.

The decree provided father with the right to overnight visitation when he traveled to Vermont and

permitted father to pay for daughter to travel to Florida for long weekends. The parents agreed to

alternate holidays with daughter. In 2019, father left the military and relocated to New York state.

He began to seek increased visitation time with daughter.

¶ 4. Over the next several years, father and mother engaged in constant litigation related

to PRR, PCC, and child support. Mother had counsel throughout the process, and father

represented himself. Father regularly filed multiple motions in a short timeframe. For example,

he filed three motions on December 3, 2019, four motions on February 21, 2020, and four motions

in the span of three days in March 2020. A pattern emerged in father’s filings: they were numerous,

duplicative, lacked factual or legal support, did not conform to procedural rules, and appeared to

be made without good faith. The family division and court personnel repeatedly explained to

father how to file properly, but he either did not respond or refused to follow the correct procedure.

Many times during the litigation, mother alleged that father was abusing the court process and

continuously failed to properly serve mother when he filed motions with the court; on more than

one occasion, she sought sanctions against him. The following provides a chronological sampling

2 of father’s behavior throughout the underlying litigation. Although most of the chronology relates

to the PCC and PRR litigation, father engaged in the same behavior regarding the parties’ child-

support litigation, including making multiple requests that were without merit and not in

conformance with procedural rules.

¶ 5. The family division held a hearing in May 2020 to consider a multitude of motions

and rule on the parties’ contradictory factual assertions, including father’s allegations that he was

being denied all visitation. In its order later that month, the court concluded that the evidence and

best-interests-of-the-child factors from 15 V.S.A. § 665(b) supported sole legal and physical

custody remaining with mother. The May 2020 order created a new schedule for PCC contact that

allowed father to have visits with daughter every other weekend, provided each parent with the

right for daily fifteen-minute calls whenever daughter was with the other parent, and required each

parent to inform the other whenever they took daughter outside of their home state or changed

their contact information or residence.1

¶ 6. In August 2020, mother filed a motion for contempt and enforcement of the May

2020 order, alleging that father had violated the order by failing to inform her that his address had

changed. She also alleged that father repeatedly refused to inform her where his visitation with

daughter was occurring. As a result, mother asked the court to find father in contempt of the order

and to enforce the order by suspending PCC until father demonstrated strict compliance with the

order. The family division ordered father to respond within fourteen days, but he did not do so.

The court temporarily granted mother’s motion on September 14, 2020, suspending father’s PCC

until a hearing could be held and stating that the motion to suspend PCC and the motion for

contempt would be heard together.

1 In the period between the hearing and the court’s decision, mother filed an emergency motion for an interim order in which she requested the family division to ask father to “cease and desist filing further specious motion[s]” or, in the alternative, to suspend PCC until the court could make a final determination on the issue of PCC. This motion was not addressed in the May 2020 order, which made a final determination on the parties’ dispute over PCC. 3 ¶ 7. Over the next month, father filed at least seven motions. He filed a motion for

extension of time, which was granted. He filed motions to clarify, for additional extension of time,

to expedite, to modify the temporary PCC order, and “to cease child abuse,” all of which the court

denied on the merits or as moot. He also filed a substantive motion addressing mother’s factual

assertions, to which the family division responded that father could attend and present arguments

at the evidentiary hearing on October 14.

¶ 8. Mother responded to father’s motion to expedite the hearing, alleging that father’s

motions and claims amounted to harassment. That same day, mother also filed a motion for

contempt, asking the family division to further limit PCC to address mother’s concerns about father

allegedly violating the court’s order suspending PCC. Separately, mother responded to another of

father’s motions, denying father’s allegations, suggesting the family division order a mental

examination of father pursuant to Rule 5 of the Vermont Rules for Family Proceedings, and noting

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

S H-T v. Oneill
Vermont Superior Court, 2026
Lafayette v. Abrami
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
Sita v. Shagam
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
Zajradhara v. NMC
Sup. Ct. of the Comm. of the N. Mariana Islands, 2025
Dasler v. Washburn
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
Big Jay Tavern v. Dept Taxes
Vermont Superior Court, 2024
Rivard v. State
Vermont Superior Court, 2024
Jennifer Knapp (Dasler) v. Timothy Dasler
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2023
Nathaniel Hendricks v. Martin Heck
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2022

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 VT 27, 280 A.3d 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexandra-fox-v-nathan-fox-vt-2022.