STAND. COM. REP. NO. 2895
Honolulu, Hawaii
RE: S.B. No. 2685
S.D. 1
Honorable Ronald D. Kouchi
President of the Senate
Thirty-Second State Legislature
Regular Session of 2024
State of Hawaii
Sir:
Your Committee on Judiciary, to which was referred S.B. No. 2685 entitled:
"A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO ABUSIVE LITIGATION,"
begs leave to report as follows:
The purpose and intent of this measure is to establish judicial procedures to prevent and remedy abusive litigation.
Your Committee received testimony in support of this measure from the Hawaiʻi State Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Domestic Violence Action Center, Hawaii Women's Coalition, Democratic Party of Hawaiʻi Women's Caucus; and eight individuals.
Your Committee received comments on this measure from the Judiciary.
Your Committee 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. 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. Your Committee notes that two states, Tennessee and Washington, have already enacted laws to prevent and remedy abusive litigation. This measure will provide a critical new protective tool for intimate partner violence survivor safety, empowerment, financial independence, economic justice, and peace.
Your
Committee has amended this measure by:
(1) Deleting
language that would have excluded persons who have a child in common that was
conceived through sexual assault from the definition of "intimate
partners";
(2) Deleting
language that would have excluded persons who have or have had a dating
relationship from the definition of "intimate partners" if one or
more person is less than thirteen years of age;
(3) Inserting
language defining "dating relationship" the same as it is defined in
section 586-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(4) Inserting
language providing that "intimate" in regards to the term
"intimate partner" has no romantic connotations;
(5) Deleting
language that would have defined "litigation" as it is defined in
section 634J-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(6) Defining
the term "litigation" to mean any civil action or proceeding,
commenced, maintained, or pending in any state or federal court of record;
(7) Inserting
language clarifying that abusive litigation occurs where 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;
(8) Inserting
language clarifying that abusive litigation occurs where 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;
(9) Inserting
language clarifying that abusive litigation occurs where the parties had agreed
to an order for protection in a case of domestic violence pursuant to:
(A) A criminal conviction or a plea of nolo contendere, in the State or any other jurisdiction for the crimes identified in sections 709-906, 711-1106, or 711-1106.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes; or a filing for any offense related to a domestic violence offense;
(B) A pending criminal charge, in the 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;
(C) A temporary restraining order issued pursuant to section 586-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(D) An order for protection issued pursuant to section 586-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(E) A protective order issued pursuant to section 586-5.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(F) A no contact order pursuant to section 709-906(4), Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(G) A foreign protective order credited pursuant to section 586-21, Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(H) An order or decree issued pursuant to section 571-46 or section 580-74, Hawaii Revised Statutes; or
(I) A signed affidavit from a domestic violence or sexual assault agency that assists victims of domestic violence and sexual assault;
(10) Deleting language that would have specified
that litigation is harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact with the
other party when the litigation is filed with the intent or is primarily
designed to exhaust, deplete, impair, or adversely impact the other party's
financial resources unless punitive damages were requested and appropriate or a
change in the circumstances of the parties provides a good faith basis to seek
a change to a financial award, support, or distribution of resources;
(11) Inserting language clarifying that 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, 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;
(12) Deleting language that would have specified
that litigation is harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact with the other
party when the litigation is filed with the intent or primarily designed to prevent or interfere with the
ability of the other party to raise a child or children for whom the other
party has legal custody in the manner the other party deems appropriate unless
the party filing the litigation has a lawful right to interfere and a good
faith basis for doing so;
(13) Deleting language that would have specified
that litigation is harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact with the
other party when the litigation is filed with the intent or primarily designed
to force, coerce, or attempt to force or coerce the other party to alter,
engage in, or refrain from engaging in lawful conduct which the other party has
the right to engage in;
(14) Deleting language that would have specified
that litigation is harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact with the
other party when the litigation is filed with the intent or primarily designed
to 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 prior to the filing of the action, primarily for the
purpose of harassing or maliciously injuring the civil action defendant;
(15) Inserting language clarifying that litigation that is filed with the
intent or primarily designed to 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 is litigation that is harassing, intimidating, or
maintaining contact with the other party;
(16) Deleting language that would have allowed
evidence of the same or substantially similar issues between the same or
substantially similar parties that were litigated within the past five years in
the same court or any other court of competent jurisdiction to create a
rebuttable presumption that litigation is being initiated, advanced, or
continued primarily for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, or maintaining
contact with the other party;
(17) Inserting language to allow evidence of
proffered legal claims 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 to create a rebuttable presumption that litigation is
being initiated, advanced, or continued primarily for the purpose of harassing,
intimidating, or maintaining contact with the other party;
(18) Deleting language that would have allowed
evidence of the same or substantially similar issues between the same or
substantially similar parties that have been raised, pled, or alleged in the
past five years and were dismissed on the merits or with prejudice to create a
rebuttable presumption that litigation is being initiated, advanced, or
continued primarily for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, or maintaining
contact with the other party;
(19) Inserting language to allow evidence of allegations
and other factual contentions made without adequate evidentiary support or that
are unlikely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for
further investigation to create a rebuttable presumption that litigation is
being initiated, advanced, or continued primarily for the purpose of harassing,
intimidating, or maintaining contact with the other party;
(20) Inserting language to allow evidence of an
issue or issues that are the basis of the litigation, that have previously been
filed in one or more other courts or jurisdictions and have prompted actions
which have been litigated and disposed of unfavorably to the party filing,
initiating, advancing, or continuing the litigation, to create a rebuttable
presumption that the litigation is being initiated, advanced, or continued
primarily for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, or maintaining contact
with the other party;
(21) Clarifying that evidence that a court of
record in another judicial circuit or jurisdiction has determined 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 creates a rebuttable presumption that litigation is
being initiated, advanced, or continued primarily for the purpose of harassing,
intimidating, or maintaining contact with the other party;
(22) Deleting language that would have
required an order restricting abusive litigation to impose prefiling
restrictions upon the party found to have engaged in abusive litigation for a
period of not less than forty-eight months;
(23) Inserting language allowing the time period of prefiling restrictions
imposed by an order restricting abusive litigation to be extended beyond the
maximum 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;
(24) Specifying that 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;
(25) Inserting language clarifying that, 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;
(26) Requiring the courts to create new forms for the
motion for order restricting abusive litigation and develop relevant
instructions by January 1, 2025, instead of September 1, 2024; and
(27) Making technical, nonsubstantive amendments
for the purposes of clarity and consistency.
As affirmed by the record of votes of the members of your Committee on Judiciary that is attached to this report, your Committee is in accord with the intent and purpose of S.B. No. 2685, as amended herein, and recommends that it pass Second Reading in the form attached hereto as S.B. No. 2685, S.D. 1, and be placed on the calendar for Third Reading.
Respectfully submitted on behalf of the members of the Committee on Judiciary,
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________________________________ KARL RHOADS, Chair |
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