Bill Text: HI HB2657 | 2024 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Relating To Abusive Litigation.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Passed) 2024-07-09 - Act 252, 07/09/2024 (Gov. Msg. No. 1357). [HB2657 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2024-HB2657-Amended.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2657 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 |
H.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO ABUSIVE LITIGATION.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that abusive litigation in the intimate partner violence context is a unique issue that needs to be addressed. Individuals who abuse their intimate partners may also take advantage of court proceedings to control, harass, intimidate, coerce, and impoverish the abused partner, even after a relationship has ended. Abusive litigation arises in a variety of contexts, often in family law cases, and it is not uncommon for abusers to file civil lawsuits against survivors. Even if a lawsuit is meritless, forcing a survivor to spend time, money, and emotional resources responding to the action provides a means for the abuser to assert power and control over the survivor.
The legislature further finds that the term "abusive
litigation" is the most common term for this issue. Two states, Tennessee and Washington, have
already enacted laws to prevent and remedy abusive litigation.
The purpose of this Act is to establish
judicial procedures to prevent and remedy abusive litigation.
SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"Chapter
Abusive
Litigation
§ -1
Purpose and intent. The
legislature finds and declares that court proceedings can provide a means for domestic
violence abusers to control, harass, intimidate, coerce, and impoverish their
intimate partner during the relationship and after it has ended. Misused in this way, the legal system
unwittingly becomes another avenue that abusers exploit to cause psychological,
emotional, and financial harm. Abusive
litigation arises in a variety of contexts such as marriage dissolutions, legal
separations, parenting plan actions or modifications, and protection order
proceedings, and it is not uncommon for abusers to file civil lawsuits against
survivors for defamation, tort, or breach of contract. Even if a lawsuit is meritless, forcing the
partner to spend time, money, and emotional resources responding to the action
provides a means for the abuser to assert power and control. The purpose of this chapter is to provide the
courts with a process to curb abusive litigation and to mitigate the harms
abusive litigation perpetuates. It is
the legislature's intent that this chapter be liberally construed to
effectuate the goal of protecting survivors of domestic violence from abusive
litigation.
§ -2
Definitions. As used in this chapter:
"Intimate partner" means:
(1) Current or former spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries;
(2) Persons who have a child in common regardless of whether they have been married or have lived together at any time; or
(3) Persons who have or have had a dating relationship as that term is defined in section 586-1.
For the purposes of this definition, "intimate" has no romantic connotations.
"Litigation" means any civil action or proceeding
commenced, maintained, or pending in any state or federal court of record.
§ -3 Abusive litigation; defined. (a) Abusive
litigation occurs where the following apply:
(1) The opposing parties have a current or former intimate partner relationship or have filed on behalf of a minor or incapacitated person who has a current or former intimate partner relationship;
(2) The party who is filing, initiating, advancing, or continuing the litigation has been found by a court to have committed intimate partner violence against the other party, including by a temporary restraining order or order for protection that the court found was necessary due to domestic violence or the parties had agreed to an order for protection in a case of domestic violence, pursuant to:
(A) An order or decree issued pursuant to section 571-46 or 580-74;
(B) An order for protection issued pursuant to section 586-3;
(C) A temporary restraining order issued pursuant to section 586-4;
(D) A protective order issued pursuant to section 586-5.5;
(E) A foreign protective order credited pursuant to section 586-21;
(F) A no contact order issued pursuant to section 709-906(4);
(G) A criminal conviction or a plea of no contendere, in this State or any other jurisdiction for any of the crimes identified in section 709-906, 711‑1106.4, or 711-1106.5; or a filing for any offense related to domestic violence;
(H) A pending criminal charge, in this State or any other jurisdiction, of domestic violence, as a result of which a court has imposed criminal conditions of release pertaining to the safety of the victim; or
(I) A signed affidavit from a domestic violence or sexual assault agency that assists victims of domestic violence and sexual assault;
(3) The litigation is being filed, initiated, advanced, or continued primarily for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact with the other party; and
(4) At least one of the following factors apply:
(A) Claims, allegations, and other legal contentions made in the litigation are not warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law;
(B) Allegations and other factual contentions made in the litigation are without the existence of evidentiary support; or
(C) An issue or issues that are the basis of the litigation have previously been filed in one or more other courts or jurisdictions and the actions have been litigated and disposed of unfavorably to the party filing, initiating, advancing, or continuing the litigation.
(b) Litigation is
harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact with the other party when the
litigation is filed with the intent or is primarily designed to, among other
actions:
(1) Exhaust, deplete, impair, or adversely impact the other party's financial resources;
(2) Prevent or interfere with the ability of the other party to raise a child or children for whom the other party has sole or joint legal custody;
(3) Force, coerce, or attempt to force or coerce the other party to agree to or make adverse concessions concerning financial, custodial, support, or other issues when the issues in question have been previously litigated and decided in favor of the other party;
(4) Force, coerce, or attempt to force or coerce the other party to alter, engage in, or refrain from engaging in conduct when the conduct is lawful;
(5) Impair, or attempt to impair, the health or well-being of the other party or the other party's dependent;
(6) Prevent, interfere, or adversely impact the ability of the other party to pursue or maintain a livelihood or lifestyle at the same or better standard as the other party enjoyed before the filing of the action;
(7) Force, coerce, or attempt to force or coerce the other party to maintain contact with the party who is filing, initiating, advancing, or continuing the litigation; or
(8) Impair,
diminish, or tarnish the other party's reputation in the community or alienate
the other party's friends, colleagues, attorneys, or professional associates by,
including but not limited to subjecting parties without knowledge of or not
reasonably relevant to the litigation to unreasonably or unnecessarily complex,
lengthy, or intrusive interrogatories or depositions.
§ -4 Procedure
to request order restricting abusive
litigation. (a) A
party to a case may request from the court an order restricting abusive
litigation if the parties are current or former intimate partners and one party
has been found by the court to have committed domestic violence against the
other party:
(1) In any answer or response to the litigation being filed, initiated, advanced, or continued;
(2) By motion made at any time during any open or ongoing case; or
(3) By separate motion made under this chapter; provided that for a temporary restraining order or order for protection, the motion shall be made within five years of the entry of the temporary restraining order or order for protection even if the order has since expired.
(b) Any court of
competent jurisdiction may, on its own motion, determine that a hearing
pursuant to this chapter is necessary to determine if a party is engaging in
abusive litigation.
(c) No filing fee shall
be charged to the party requesting an order restricting abusive litigation.
(d) This section shall not
preclude the party requesting an order restricting abusive litigation from pursuing
any other remedy under law or in equity.
§ -5
Hearing; procedure. (a) If
a party asserts that they are being subjected to abusive litigation, the court
shall attempt to verify that the parties have or previously had an intimate
partner relationship and that the party raising the claim of abusive litigation
has been found to be a victim of domestic violence by the other party. If the court verifies that both elements are
true or is unable to verify that they are not true, the court shall set a
hearing to determine whether the litigation meets the definition of abusive
litigation.
(b) At the time set for
the hearing on the alleged abusive litigation action, the court shall hear all
relevant testimony and may require any affidavits, documentary evidence, or
other records the court deems necessary.
The court shall allow the party raising the claim of abusive litigation to
attend the hearing remotely if requested by the party.
§ -6 Presumptions. At the hearing conducted
pursuant to this chapter, evidence of any of the following creates a rebuttable
presumption that litigation is being filed, initiated, advanced, or continued
primarily for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact
with the other party:
(1) Proffered legal claims are not based on existing law or by a reasonable argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law, or the establishment of new law;
(2) Allegations and other factual contentions are made without adequate evidentiary support or are unlikely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation;
(3) An issue or issues that are the basis of the litigation have previously been filed in one or more other courts or jurisdictions and the actions have been litigated and disposed of unfavorably to the party filing, initiating, advancing, or continuing the litigation;
(4) Within the last ten years, the party allegedly engaging in abusive litigation has been sanctioned by a court of law for filing one or more cases, petitions, motions, or other filings, that were found to have been frivolous, vexatious, intransigent, or brought in bad faith involving the same opposing party; or
(5) A court of record in another judicial circuit or jurisdiction has determined that the party allegedly engaging in abusive litigation has previously engaged in abusive litigation or similar conduct and has been subject to a court order imposing prefiling restrictions.
§ -7 Court
findings. (a) If
the court finds by a preponderance of the evidence that a party is engaging in
abusive litigation, and that any or all of the motions or actions pending
before the court are abusive litigation, the litigation shall be dismissed, denied,
stricken, or resolved by other disposition with prejudice.
(b) In addition to
dismissal or denial of any pending abusive litigation within the jurisdiction
of the court, the court shall enter an order restricting abusive litigation. The order restricting abusive litigation shall:
(1) Impose all costs of any abusive litigation action pending in the court at the time of the court's finding pursuant to subsection (a) against the party advancing the abusive litigation;
(2) Award the other party reasonable attorneys' fees and costs for responding to the abusive litigation action, including the cost of seeking the order restricting abusive litigation; and
(3) Identify the party protected by the order restricting abusive litigation and impose prefiling restrictions upon the party found to have engaged in abusive litigation for a period of no more than seventy-two months; provided that the prefiling restrictions may be extended if the party found to have engaged in abusive litigation, since the effective date of the order, has engaged in further abusive litigation or caused further abuse, including "coercive control", "domestic abuse", "extreme psychological abuse", and "malicious property damage" as those terms are defined in section 586‑1.
(c) If the court finds by
a preponderance of the evidence that the litigation does not constitute abusive
litigation, the court shall enter written findings and the litigation shall
proceed. Nothing in this chapter shall
be construed as limiting the court's inherent authority to control the
proceedings and litigants before the court.
(d) This section shall
not preclude the person who is protected by the order restricting abusive
litigation from pursuing any other remedy under law or in equity.
§ -8
Filing of new case or motion by person subject to an order restricting
abusive litigation. (a) A
person subject to an order restricting abusive litigation who wishes to initiate a new case or
file a motion in an existing case during the time the person is under filing restrictions
shall first file an application or motion before the court that imposed the order
restricting abusive litigation to make a request to file. The court may examine witnesses, court
records, and any other available evidence to determine if the proposed litigation
is abusive litigation or if there are reasonable and legitimate grounds upon
which the litigation is based.
(b) Based on reviewing
the records as well as any evidence submitted as sworn statements from the
person who is subject to the order restricting abusive litigation, if the court
determines the proposed litigation is abusive litigation, then it is not
necessary for the person protected by the order to appear or participate in any
way. If the court is unable to determine
whether the proposed litigation is abusive litigation without hearing from the person
protected by the order, then the court shall issue an order scheduling a hearing
and notifying the protected party of the party's right to appear and
participate in the hearing. The court order
shall specify whether the protected party is expected to submit a written
response. The court shall allow the
protected party to attend the hearing remotely at the protected party's
request.
(c) If the court believes
the requested filing by the party who is subject to the order restricting
abusive litigation will constitute abusive litigation, the request shall be
denied, dismissed, or otherwise disposed of with prejudice.
(d) If the court
reasonably believes that the requested filing by the party who is subject to
the order restricting abusive litigation will not be abusive litigation, the court
may grant the request and issue an order permitting the filing of the case,
motion, or pleading. The court order
shall be attached to the front of the pleading to be filed with the clerk. The party who is protected by the order restricting
abusive litigation shall be served with a copy of the court order at the same
time as the underlying pleading.
(e) The findings of the court
shall be reduced to writing and made a part of the record in the matter. If the party who is subject to the order
restricting abusive litigation disputes the finding of the judge, the party may
seek review of the decision as provided by the applicable court rules.
(f) If the request to
file is granted pursuant to this section, the period of time commencing with
the filing of the request to file and ending with the issuance of an order permitting
filing shall not be computed as a part of any applicable period of limitations
within which the matter must be instituted.
(g) After a party who is
subject to an order restricting abusive litigation has made a request to file
and been granted permission to file or advance a case pursuant to this section,
if any court hearing or presiding over the case, or any part thereof,
determines that the person is attempting to add parties, amend the complaint,
or is otherwise attempting to alter the parties and issues involved in the litigation
in a manner that the court reasonably believes would constitute abusive
litigation, the court shall stay the proceedings and refer the case back to the
court who granted the request to file for further disposition.
(h) If a party who is
protected by an order restricting abusive litigation is served with a pleading
filed by the person who is subject to the order and the pleading does not have
an attached order allowing the filing, the protected party may respond by
filing a copy of the order restricting abusive litigation.
(i) If it is brought to
the court's attention that a person who is subject to an order restricting
abusive litigation has filed a new case or is continuing an existing case without
having been granted a request to file pursuant to this section, the court shall
dismiss, deny, or otherwise dispose of the matter on the court's own motion or
initiative. The court may take whatever
action against the perpetrator of abusive litigation deemed necessary and
appropriate for a violation of the order.
(j) If a party who is
protected by an order restricting abusive litigation is served with a pleading
filed by the person who is subject to the order, and the pleading does not have
an attached order allowing the pleading, the protected party is under no obligation
or duty to respond to the summons, complaint, petition, or motion; answer
interrogatories; appear for depositions; or take any other responsive action
required by statute or rule in a civil action.
(k) If the court who issued
the order restricting abusive litigation is otherwise unavailable for any
reason, any other court may perform the review required and permitted by this
section.
(l) For the purposes of
this section, "perpetrator of abusive litigation" means a person who
files, initiates, advances, or continues litigation in violation of an order
restricting abusive litigation."
SECTION 3. By January 1, 2025, the courts shall create
new forms for the motion for order restricting abusive litigation and develop
relevant instructions. By July 1, 2025,
the judiciary shall provide training on abusive litigation and this Act to
applicable family, district, and circuit court judges.
SECTION 4. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
SECTION 5.
This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that
were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
SECTION 6. This Act shall take effect on January 1, 3000.
Report Title:
Abusive Litigation; Domestic Violence; Judicial Procedures
Description:
Establishes judicial procedures to prevent and remedy abusive litigation. Effective 1/1/3000. (HD1)
The summary description
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not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.