F.W.T. v. F.T.
F.W.T. v. F.T.
Opinion of the Court
*376The plaintiff, F.W.T., is the son of the defendant, F.T. The parties agree that they have been embroiled in multiple lawsuits involving land use since May, 2014.
On December 30, 2016, the defendant filed a motion to vacate the c. 258E order, contending that: (1) he did not receive actual notice of the hearing before the c. 258E order was entered against him; (2) the plaintiff violated G. L. c. 258E, § 3(g ), by failing to disclose prior or pending court actions; and (3) the evidence proffered *338by the plaintiff at the November 22 hearing was legally inadequate to support the issuance of the c. 258E order.
Standard of review. We review an order issued under c. 258E to determine whether a fact finder could conclude "by a preponderance of the evidence, together with all permissible inferences, that the defendant had committed [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 *378and that [did] in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property." Gassman v. Reason,
Discussion. On appeal, the plaintiff asserts that there was evidence of more than three acts of harassment raised and proved before the judge. Upon review of the record, including the complaint, the plaintiff's affidavit in support of the complaint, and the transcripts of the November 16 and November 22 hearings, the plaintiff arguably alleged the existence of five incidents. Specifically, he presented evidence that the defendant had one of his employees fly a drone over the plaintiff's property on at least three occasions; that on one such occasion the drone flew "in front of" or in the "line of sight" of a contractor operating heavy machinery; and that, on at least two occasions, persons entered the property to "video the site" at the direction of the defendant. As to the *339drone in the "line of sight" incident, there is no indication in the record as to the proximity of the drone to any worker or machinery. This evidence fell short of justifying the order.
Initially, the parties dispute whether the alleged harassment was "aimed at a specific person" as required by the plain language of G. L. c. 258E, § 1, inserted by St. 2010, c. 23, defining "[h]arassment," in relevant part, as "[three] or more acts of willful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific person." The defendant contends that the conduct was, at most, aimed at property or a worker thereon. The plaintiff counters that we can infer from the circumstances that the defendant's directives were intended to target the plaintiff. See DeMayo v. Quinn,
There is no evidence in the record, and we cannot infer, that the defendant's actions were actually intended to cause fear, intimidation, abuse, or damage to property as those terms have been defined in our case law. See Gassman,
*340Moreover, flying drones over or trespassing onto the property to videotape the worksite, viewed separately or as a whole, does not constitute harassment within the meaning of c. 258E. A line of precedent clarifies that this category of conduct, however nettlesome, does not justify the issuance of a c. 258E order. See, e.g., Seney, supra at 63-64,
While the defendant's actions may have been disruptive or "abusive" in an idiomatic sense, they fall well short of satisfying the two layers of intent mandated by our jurisprudence.
Conclusion. Accordingly, the order entered February 14, 2017, denying the motion to vacate the c. 258E order is reversed.
So ordered.
That the parties have been engaged in numerous legal disputes for some time now is one of the precious few issues upon which they concur. As best we can tell from the record, these disputes primarily concern the plaintiff's purchase of the defendant's land-adjacent to the defendant's commercial property-and his subsequent development of that land. However, for purposes of deciding this appeal, we need not delve further into the lamentable history of litigation between them.
The defendant had previously filed the motion to vacate on December 15, 2016, and it was denied without prejudice on December 28, 2016, by a judge who did not issue the c. 258E order. According to the defendant, that judge denied the motion "on the grounds that the motion to vacate should be heard by the Judge who had issued the [c. 258E] order."
According to the plaintiff, and undisputed by the defendant, the January 26 hearing on the motion to vacate was a nonevidentiary hearing. The defendant represents that neither a tape recording nor a transcript of that hearing is available. The defendant did not prepare a "statement of the evidence or proceedings" pursuant to Mass.R.A.P. 8(c), as amended,
On appeal, the parties, each represented by counsel, squarely raised and briefed the issue of the sufficiency of the evidence with regard to the issuance of the c. 258E order on November 22. Accordingly, and absent any claimed procedural deficiency, we address the issue herein. See Commonwealth v. Fay,
In his opposition to the motion to vacate, the plaintiff references another incident in which a drone was allegedly flown into a subcontractor's line of sight. This evidence was not presented to the judge prior to the issuance of the c. 258E order. Even assuming that it had been presented, the evidence nonetheless suffers from the shortcomings detailed herein.
It was also error to deny the motion to vacate without affording the defendant an evidentiary hearing where there was no evidence presented at the November 22 hearing that the defendant had received actual notice of the proceeding; and the defendant made a plausible showing in the motion to vacate (which the judge did not reject) that, at the time the c. 258E order was entered against him, he had not received notice of the hearing because he had been in Florida from November 14 to November 29, 2016. See J.S.H. v. J.S.,
In addition, the evidence in the record failed to establish that the acts at issue did "in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property," as required by precedent. G. L. c. 258E, § 1. See O'Brien,
Our decision should not be construed as approving of the defendant's conduct. To the contrary, the alleged actions, if properly established, may be grounds for a claim of nuisance, trespass, or other cause of action, enforceable through properly obtained injunctive, equitable, or other relief. See Rattigan v. Wile,
At oral argument, the parties advised that the initial c. 258E order was extended in November, 2017, while this appeal was pending, and that the defendant did not appear at the extension hearing. Although the extension order is not before us, the current appeal has not become moot. See Seney,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.