Corrado v. Hedrick

841 N.E.2d 723, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 477, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 80, 2006 WL 213988
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2006
DocketNo. 05-P-287
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 841 N.E.2d 723 (Corrado v. Hedrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corrado v. Hedrick, 841 N.E.2d 723, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 477, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 80, 2006 WL 213988 (Mass. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Grasso, J.

In this appeal, we consider the constraints on a judge’s power to award relief under G. L. c. 209A. We conclude that when, at a contested hearing, a plaintiff fails to prove that “abuse” has occurred, a judge may not continue an ex parte order that directs the defendant to vacate and remain away from the household because of subjective concerns that violence may occur if both remain in the same household.2

[478]*4781. The ex parte orders. On Friday, August 20, 2004, Christine Corrado filed complaints for protection under G. L. c. 209A, with accompanying affidavits, that sought abuse prevention orders against her fiancé, Hunt R. Hedrick Jr. (Randy), and his twenty year old son, Hunt R. Hedrick III (Hunt HI). In her affidavit against Randy, Corrado alleged that he hit her on two occasions and threw her into a refrigerator; told her he would bury her in the backyard if she left him; had a large collection of guns in the house; was a heavy marijuana user; and was under substantial stress because of the failing health of his parents, who lived in Virginia. Corrado also related that she and Randy were involved in a dispute over ownership of the home at 12 DiCarlo Road, Hopkinton. The home was in Randy’s name, but she had invested substantial sums. Corrado had been staying at her parents’ home in Framingham in order to avoid Randy and Hunt III, who were returning from Virginia to attend Hunt Hi’s court date. Randy told her not to return to DiCarlo Road and to send someone to retrieve her belongings.

As to Hunt III, Corrado’s affidavits alleged that he was a drug dealer and user who was on probation; maintained drug paraphernalia and caused other problems in the home; had threatened to kill her and her daughter in the recent past; and had cut his father with a knife. Corrado also described his assaultive behavior, his use of knives with peers, his knowledge of his father’s guns, and her fear of living with him during Randy’s frequent travels to Virginia.

After an ex parte hearing, a District Court judge granted restraining orders that directed Randy and Hunt HI, respectively, to refrain from abuse; not to contact Corrado or her fourteen year old daughter Lalia and to remain at least fifty yards away from them; to surrender all firearms; and, significant to this appeal, to leave and remain away from the residence at 12 Di-Carlo Road.

2. The evidentiary hearing. The matters first came on for hearing on October 5, 2004. Randy appeared with counsel, who moved to dismiss the orders nunc pro tune to August 20. A different judge heard testimony from Corrado, Lalia, and Randy, and allowed Randy’s counsel limited cross-examination. Various electronic messages and notes detailing telephone calls [479]*479between Conrado and Randy during the months of May through September were admitted in evidence as exhibits.

Conrado testified that she and Randy had “very large financial issue[s]” regarding the property at 12 DiCarlo Road. They had communicated by phone while Randy was en route from Virginia. Randy told her that she was not to come back to the house and that he planned to change the locks on the door. Cerrado had no objection to telephone contact to save on attorneys’ fees, but she objected to Hunt IH remaining in the home. In the past, she had overheard him tell his father that he would kill her. Lalia testified that Randy had used crude words toward Conrado, but “[n]ot like I’ll kill you, . . . just . . . crude words.”

Randy denied ever threatening Conrado or being physically abusive to her. He confirmed that he and Conrado were locked in a dispute over her financial interest in the property and that in July he told her that she had thirty days to find a place to live and to vacate the property. They had scheduled a mediation session for August 19 to resolve their financial dispute, but Cerrado had sabotaged the mediation by misleading her as to its scheduled time and place. On the advice of his lawyer, Randy changed the locks to the property on August 19 and contacted the Hopkinton police to have a “no trespass” order issued against Conrado. On August 20, he and Conrado discussed settlement, but she rejected his offer to pay her $146,500 for her interest or to let her buy his interest for $50,000. Her response was, “I’ll see you in court and I’m' going to make your life miserable.” Conrado then obtained the restraining order against him.

Randy also testified that Conrado had a volatile temper. She would yell, scream, stomp around, slam doors, and throw things, including liquids in his face. He stated that the incident involving the refrigerator, referenced in Conrado’s affidavit, had actually occurred a year prior. According to his testimony, in the course of an argument Conrado threw a beer bottle at him. He laughed at her, causing her to become even more irritated. As he went to get a towel to clean up the beer, Conrado hit him in the testicles with the beer bottle. When he “instinctively [and] [480]*480impulsively” pushed her away from him, she “stumbled and fell into the refrigerator.”

After considering the testimony, the judge told Conrado that he found Randy’s version of events more credible than hers, and that “[Illegally I don’t feel that you have proven your case.”3 He told the parties that he intended to vacate the orders and sought their input for resolving the stalemate over the right to immediate occupancy of the property. When the parties failed to reach a resolution, the judge stated that he would vacate all protective orders except those that directed Randy (and Hunt III) to remain away from the premises and authorized them to retrieve their personal belongings in the company of the police. The judge expressed his intention to leave those orders in place for a week to allow the parties to resolve the dispute.

Before continuing the hearing, the judge reiterated to Conrado that she had not proved that Randy had physically abused her or threatened her with imminent serious physical harm. He told her that he believed that she had come to court solely to gain leverage in their ongoing property dispute. Nevertheless, the judge stated that he would extend the order that Randy and Hunt III remain away from the property for a week because of his concerns that a vacuum regarding the right to use and occupy the premises could lead to an explosive situation should both sides sit in the house and refuse to leave.

On October 12, Conrado appeared with her attorney. Counsel appeared for Randy and Hunt III, who were back in Virginia. The attorneys reported that the parties had made no headway regarding the property dispute. With respect to Conrado’s allegations against Randy, the judge restated his prior determination that Conrado had failed to meet her burden of proof against Randy and had sought a restraining order not out of fear for her safety but as a leverage in the property dispute. Although the judge recognized that maintaining the order to vacate in place [481]*481was of dubious legal validity, he again extended the order directing Randy to vacate and remain away from the property until October 20 in the hope that by that date the parties could reach an amicable civil settlement. With respect to Cerrado’s allegations against Hunt III, the judge reconsidered his previous determination that Hunt III did not pose a danger. The judge reinstated against Hunt III the previously vacated orders that Hunt HI refrain from abusing and have no contact with Conrado.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
841 N.E.2d 723, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 477, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 80, 2006 WL 213988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corrado-v-hedrick-massappct-2006.