D.M. v. B.J.

2025 NY Slip Op 51071(U)
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJuly 1, 2025
DocketDocket No. XXXXX
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 51071(U) (D.M. v. B.J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.M. v. B.J., 2025 NY Slip Op 51071(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

D.M. v B.J. (2025 NY Slip Op 51071(U)) [*1]
D.M. v B.J.
2025 NY Slip Op 51071(U)
Decided on July 1, 2025
Family Court, New York County
Shim, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on July 1, 2025
Family Court, New York County


D.M., Petitioner

against

B.J., Respondent.




Docket No. XXXXX

D.M., attorney of record Patricia Fersch of Fersch LLC

B.J., pro se litigant
Jonathan H. Shim, J.

I. Instant Motion:

By Order to Show Cause dated February 18, 2024, D. M. (hereinafter "Ms. M." or "Petitioner"), by counsel moves for an order: (1) awarding Petitioner counsel fees in the amount of $40,000.00 to be paid to Petitioner's attorneys, Fersch LLC in connection with her defense of the appeal of the Family Court's Decision After Trial dated April 19, 2023, filed by B. J. (hereinafter Mr. J. or Respondent) in the Appellate Division, First Department; (2) reimbursing Petitioner for the legal fees already paid for representation in the Appellate Division, First Department, in the amount of $21,406.45; (3) directing Respondent to pay $3,000.00 for legal fees incurred by Petitioner in connection with the instant application, with leave to request additional fees; and (4) granting such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper. Respondent filed an affirmation dated March 13, 2024, and his attorney's affirmation dated March 12, 2024, in opposition to Petitioner's Order to Show Cause. Petitioner, by counsel, submitted reply papers dated September 3, 2024, in further support of her application.

In her moving papers, Ms. M. alleges that Respondent is the monied party in that he earns more than $500,000.00 annually, and since 2020 she has "incurred over $200,000 in legal fees defending [herself] against Respondent's vindictive and vexatious litigation." Petitioner avers that Respondent has been harassing her through filings in court "in an effort to interfere with [her] life and put [her] into debt."

In his opposition papers, Mr. J. argues: (1) Family Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction [*2]to make a post-dispositional fee award under Family Court Act § 828; (2) Referee Adams no longer had subject matter jurisdiction to sign Petitioner's Order to Show Cause as the order of reference appointing the Referee to hear and determine the matter was terminated by the entry of the order of disposition; (3) Family Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to make a post-disposition, post-appeal counsel fee award for legal services rendered on an appeal from a final order of disposition in a Family Offense proceeding; (4) Petitioner waived any right she may have had to seek counsel fees in the underlying Family Offense proceeding by not making an application for such fees prior to the entry of a final order of disposition; (5) Petitioner's application is fatally deficient because billing statements submitted in support of the Order to Show Cause lack specificity and do not indicate the starting time and conclusion time for the services rendered; (6) Family Court does not have the authority under Family Court Act § 842(f) to award counsel fees for legal services rendered in a post-disposition application for counsel fees; and (7) a hearing to determine the reasonable value of services provided is required.[FN1]

Upon review of the foregoing papers and the record and proceedings before the Court, it is ordered that the Ms. M.'s Order to Show Cause is hereby granted in its entirety.



II. Background and Relevant Facts:

Petitioner filed a Family Offense Petition dated March 27, 2020 alleging harassment and assault by Respondent. Petitioner was granted a temporary full stay away order of protection. On June 24, 2020, Petitioner filed a Family Offense Petition on behalf of the parties' minor children alleging inter alia that Respondent has "terrorized" the children.[FN2] A temporary usual terms order of protection was issued on behalf of the parties' minor children. On February 4, 2021, Petitioner filed a Violation Petition alleging that Respondent continued to harass her by "filing another lawsuit against [her] in Houston, TX for same relief which was denied by Houston Court on Sep. 23, 2020."

Trial commenced on these petitions on September 27, 2021 and concluded on October 19, 2022. During the pendency of the trial, Petitioner filed another Violation Petition dated October 8, 2021 alleging further violation of the temporary order of protection by Respondent in that Respondent "orchestrated a pick up scenario for his weekend visitation with the children in a way that intentionally shocked, harassed and intimidated Petitioner's very young children."

By Decision and Order dated April 19, 2023, Court Attorney Referee Gail Adams adjudged that Respondent had committed the Family Offense of Harassment in the Second Degree, warranting the issuance of a final order of protection. Referee Adams further found that [*3]since the "time for a Final Order was utilized during the time period of the pending Temporary Order of Protection, the Final Order for three years is now deemed effective and satisfied beginning from March 27, 2020."

Respondent appealed the Decision and Order dated April 19, 2023, and the decision was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division, First Department by Decision and Order dated March 21, 2024.

Petitioner filed the instant Order to Show Cause, originally signed by Referee Adams, but upon declination of consent to hear and determine the Order to Show Cause by a Referee [FN3] the matter was transferred to the undersigned jurist.

This Court received Respondent's Financial Disclosure Affidavit (hereinafter "R-FDA"), dated August 16, 2024, which indicates his bi-weekly net income totals $6,839.00 (or an annual net income of $177,814.00). Mr. J. indicates that this number is derived from his monthly net income "further reduced by child support paid to Petitioner." Respondent included a paystub for payroll period February 1, 2024 to February 29, 2024 which indicates his monthly net income totals $16,956.26 (or an annual net income of $203,475.12). Respondent reported the asset of his 401K, but he failed to indicate a monetary value. Mr. J. further listed $29,031 in monthly expenses, and liabilities in the amount of $47,840 owed to the Internal Revenue Service and $224,836 in legal fees incurred from 2020 to the date of the R-FDA. Mr. J. further included his 2023 tax returns, which were filed jointly with his current spouse, indicating a total taxable income of $642,174.00, comprised of $542,602.00 from W-2 and $133,713.00 in taxable interest, less the deduction amount of $27,700.00.

This Court also received Petitioner's FDA (hereafter P-FDA), dated October 30, 2024, which indicates her bi-weekly net income totals $5,032.85 (for an annual income of $130,884.10). Petitioner included a paystub for payroll periods September 28, 2024 to October 11, 2024 and October 12, 2024 to October 25, 2024 which reflect her bi-weekly net income as $5,593.76 (for an annual income of $145,437.76).

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Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 51071(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dm-v-bj-nycfamct-2025.