ORLA O. v. PATIENCE P.

100 Mass. App. Ct. 126
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 12, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 Mass. App. Ct. 126 (ORLA O. v. PATIENCE P.) 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
ORLA O. v. PATIENCE P., 100 Mass. App. Ct. 126 (Mass. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

ORLA O. vs. PATIENCE P., 100 Mass. App. Ct. 126

ORLA O. vs. PATIENCE P.

100 Mass. App. Ct. 126

April 8, 2021 - August 12, 2021

Court Below: Juvenile Court, Worcester Division

Present: Neyman, Sacks, & Lemire, JJ.

Civil Harassment. Harassment Prevention. Protective Order.

This court vacated a civil harassment prevention order pursuant to G. L. c. 258E that had been extended by a Juvenile Court judge, where the conduct of the juvenile defendant, who engaged in one continuous event over a very brief period (i.e., confronting, threatening, and following the plaintiff in a shopping mall as she tried to flee, and then forcing her into a bathroom, locking her in, assaulting her, and threatening to stab her if she told anyone what had happened), failed to satisfy the threshold requirement of having committed three or more separate acts of harassment within the meaning of the statute. [127-130] Sacks, J., dissenting.


COMPLAINT for protection from harassment filed in the Worcester Division of the Juvenile Court Department on August 9, 2019.

A hearing to extend the harassment prevention order was had before Carol A. Erskine, J.

Taylor Henley, Committee for Public Counsel Services, for the defendant.

Gregory A. Geiman for the plaintiff.


NEYMAN, J. The issue before us is whether the juvenile defendant committed three or more separate acts of harassment within the meaning of G. L. c. 258E, § 1. Because the defendant engaged in one continuous event over a very brief period, we conclude that the harassment prevention order must be vacated and set aside.

Background. We recite the Juvenile Court judge's essential factual findings, none of which is challenged as clearly erroneous. [Note 1] On August 6, 2019, the defendant and two other girls confronted the plaintiff at a shopping mall. [Note 2] The defendant and the other girls told the plaintiff to go to the parking lot because

Page 127

they wanted to fight her. When the plaintiff refused and attempted to walk away, the defendant and the other girls followed her. The plaintiff walked into a nearby "family bathroom . . . to try and get away from the other girls." When she then tried to leave the bathroom, the defendant and the other girls pushed her back inside; they followed her into the bathroom and locked the door. The defendant and the other girls then kicked, punched, and otherwise physically harmed the plaintiff. The defendant "smashed [the plaintiff's] head into the wall," causing her to bleed, and continued to punch her. Eventually, a mall employee "walked in on the interaction and brought security to the scene." While "the other girls were being removed from the family bathroom," the defendant threatened to stab the plaintiff "if she told anyone what had happened." [Note 3]

The plaintiff filed a complaint under c. 258E and obtained a temporary order. After an evidentiary hearing at which both parties appeared, the judge extended the order, ruling that the above conduct constituted not one continuous act but "multiple acts of various types even though it occurred over a single period of time." The defendant appealed.

Discussion. Chapter 258E defines "harassment" in pertinent part as "[three] or more acts of willful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific person committed with the intent to cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property and that does in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property." G. L. c. 258E, § 1. See O'Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 419-420, 426 (2012). The essential question in this case is whether the defendant's conduct constituted merely one continuous act of harassment, [Note 4] as she contends, or, instead, three or more acts of harassment, albeit close in time to one another, as the judge ruled.

Page 128

Two critical principles guide our analysis in determining whether the defendant's actions constituted separate acts of harassment. First, "one continuous act cannot be divided into multiple discrete acts in order to satisfy the requirements of G. L. c. 258E, § 1." F.K. v. S.C., 481 Mass. 325, 333 (2019). Second, harassing conduct that occurs "within a very short period of time" has been held to constitute one continuous act of harassment in certain circumstances. Smith v. Mastalerz, 467 Mass. 1001, 1001 (2014). Neither Smith, supra, nor F.K., supra, requires that acts must be separated by any particular amount of time in order to be distinguished from one another. That notwithstanding, the temporal proximity of events remains an important part of our inquiry. See Smith, supra.

Here, the defendant, assisted by two others, confronted the plaintiff at a shopping mall, threatened her, followed her "down the hall" as she tried to flee, forced her into the bathroom, locked her in, physically assaulted her, and threatened to stab her "if she told anyone what had happened." The entire event occurred over what appears to be a ten- to eleven-minute period. There is no dispute that the acts at issue occurred "within a very short period of time." Smith, 467 Mass. at 1001. There is also no dispute that the conduct was continuous in that it occurred without any temporal or material pause or interruption. Accordingly, the defendant's "conduct, troubling and offensive as it was, failed to satisfy the threshold requirement of G. L. c. 258E, § 1." F.K., 481 Mass. at 334.

The dissent nonetheless concludes that although acts of the same type occurring close together in time cannot be considered separate acts, the acts in the present case "were of three different types," post at 130, and thus were by their nature three distinct acts. In other words, the dissent contends that different types of conduct -- even continuous conduct that occurs within a very short period -- may satisfy the separate acts requirement of c. 258E.

Neither the language of the statute, nor our case law, comport with such an interpretation. In F.K., 481 Mass. at 332, the Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) held only that "[o]ne continuous act cannot be parsed into its constituent parts." The SJC did not hold in that case, or any other, that one continuous act of the same type can be parsed into its constituent parts. Thus, the dissent's view

Page 129

contravenes the SJC's clear admonition. See id. at 332-333. [Note 5] Moreover, the effort to separate conduct by the type of act creates an arbitrary and unconvincing distinction in the application of G. L. c. 258E. [Note 6]

In short, the plain language of the statute speaks to "[three] or more acts of willful and malicious conduct." G. L. c. 258E, § 1. Where, as here, the defendant engaged in one continuous event over a very brief period, the harassment prevention order should not have issued. [Note 7] We therefore remand the case to the Juvenile Court for entry of an order vacating and setting aside the harassment prevention order, and for further actions required by G. L.

Page 130

c. 258E, § 9. [Note 8], [Note 9]

So ordered.


SACKS, J. (dissenting). I respectfully disagree with the majority's conclusion that the defendant committed only a single, indivisible act of harassment for c. 258E purposes.

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