Court Opinion

ID: 3038174
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Date Created: 2015-10-13 22:57:59.386729+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:41:37.928876
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Opinions of the United
2008 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
                                                                                                                              for the Third Circuit

5-20-2008

D.T.B. v. Dangler
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential

Docket No. 07-1176

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Recommended Citation
"D.T.B. v. Dangler" (2008). 2008 Decisions. Paper 1195.
http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2008/1195

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                                                                NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                           FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                                _____________

                                    No. 07-1176
                                   _____________

                     D.T.B., a minor child, by his next friend
                         DANIEL J. O'CALLAGHAN;
                   DANIEL J. O'CALLAGHAN, on his own behalf,
                                                   Appellants

                                           v.

                        JOHN B. DANGLER, in past or present
                    official capacity as Justice of the Superior Court
              of the State of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part;
              PETER C. HARVEY, in past or present official capacity as
                      Attorney General of the State of New Jersey;
                      ADAM SIFRE, ESQ.; EINHORN, HARRIS,
                 ASCHER, BARBARITO, FROST & IRONSON, P.C.;
                                SUSAN EDWARDS, PhD.

                     Appeal from the United States District Court
                             for the District of New Jersey
                             (D.C. Civil No. 05-cv-04309)
                     District Judge: Honorable Peter G. Sheridan

                      Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
                                  March 25, 2008

             Before: McKEE, RENDELL and TASHIMA*, Circuit Judges

__________________

   * Honorable A. Wallace Tashima, Senior Judge of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
                                    (Filed May 20, 2008)

                                OPINION OF THE COURT

RENDELL, Circuit Judge.

       As a result of his concern as to the progress of his continuing custody and

visitation battle regarding his son, D.T.B., in New Jersey state court, and as to a suit that

apparently has been filed against him in New York state court for “malicious

prosecution/punitive damages,” Daniel O’Callaghan, on behalf of himself and his son

D.T.B., has sued the following persons and entities: (1) former New Jersey Attorney

General Peter C. Harvey, in his official capacity; (2) the Hon. John B. Dangler of the New

Jersey Superior Court, in his official capacity; (3) Adam Sifre, the lawyer suing

O’Callaghan in New York state court; (4) the law firm of Einhorn, Harris, Ascher,

Barbaritio, Frost & Ironson, P.C. (“Einhorn Harris”), which has represented D.T.B.’s

mother in the custody hearings; and (5) Dr. Susan Edwards, a psychologist whom the

New Jersey court appointed as an expert in the custody proceedings. The District Court

granted the defendants’ joint motion to dismiss with prejudice. We will affirm.

       The difficult-to-follow facts, as related by O’Callaghan’s convoluted complaint,

are as follows:

•      June 2000: O’Callaghan sued D.T.B.’s mother in New Jersey Superior Court,

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    before the Hon. John J. Harper, for the right to increased visitation and

    communication with D.T.B.

•   August 2000: Based on a “fake New York psychologist’s letter,” Judge Harper

    ruled that O’Callaghan’s visitation and communication rights should remain very

    limited. (App. 46-47.)

•   August 2002: The Hon. David B. Rand, also of the New Jersey Superior Court,

    adopted the recommendation of a “Dr. L.,” who opined that O’Callaghan should

    have much more time with D.T.B., that D.T.B. should not attend the boarding

    school to which his mother was planning on sending him, and that D.T.B. should

    undergo intensive counseling. The New Jersey Appellate Division then stayed the

    proceedings before Judge Rand on an emergency application by D.T.B.’s mother

    and Einhorn Harris, and ordered that D.T.B. should go to the boarding school and

    that his counseling sessions should end.

•   October 2002: The New Jersey Appellate Division affirmed Judge Harper’s

    August 2000 ruling regarding limited visitation.

•   January 2003: Judge Rand held a conference at which he “encouraged and

    authorized Einhorn Harris to participate in a ‘sanctions’ and defamation per se

    proceeding” against O’Callaghan, made defamatory statements, and ordered a

    “Gulagesque mental health examination” of O’Callaghan. (App. 47.)

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•   July 2003: The New Jersey Appellate Division remanded the custody proceedings

    to the Superior Court for a plenary hearing regarding O’Callaghan’s visitation

    rights and the boarding school issue. Judge Rand then held another conference, at

    which he conceded that he had no jurisdiction to hold the January 2003

    conference. However, he did not conduct the plenary hearing required by the

    Appellate Division and instead instituted the same conditions as he did at the

    January 2003 conference, including the “Gulagesque medical exam.” (App. 49.)

•   August-September 2003: O’Callaghan presented the Superior Court with the

    results of the required medical exam. Judge Dangler, who had taken over the case

    from Judge Rand, then implemented Judge Rand’s conditions, denied

    O’Callaghan’s request for a hearing and refused to restart D.T.B.’s counseling.

•   October 2003: At Judge Dangler’s request and with the insistence and sponsorship

    of Sifre, Dr. Edwards intervened by submitting a report to the Superior Court that

    indicated, inter alia, that D.T.B. should continue to attend the boarding school.

    The report was sealed 10 days later.

•   November 2003: Edwards sent the report to the New York state court hearing the

    “malicious prosecution/punitive damages” suit brought by Sifre against

    O’Callaghan. (App. 50.)

•   April 2004: Judge Dangler ruled that D.T.B. could go on a school trip to Latvia,

    despite O’Callaghan’s opposition based on his fear that terrorists in Latvia would

                                           4
       target the American schoolchildren.

•      July 2004: Judge Dangler interviewed D.T.B. privately, awarded attorney’s fees

       against O’Callaghan, and imposed further visitation restrictions.

•      November 2004: The New Jersey Appellate Division denied motions filed by

       O’Callaghan for interlocutory appeal of Judge Dangler’s various orders.

       In August 2005, the District Court dismissed sua sponte, but without prejudice, a

36-page complaint filed by O’Callaghan, finding that it violated Federal Rule of Civil

Procedure 8(a) because the complaint was “confusing, unnecessarily verbose, and there is

no cognizable claim that can be gleaned from the pleadings.” (App. 21.)

       In September 2005, O’Callaghan filed the complaint in this case, which is

somewhat shorter but still very similar to the complaint dismissed the previous month.

His new complaint sought the following relief: (1) declaratory judgment against Judge

Dangler, declaring that Judge Dangler’s conduct of the Superior Court proceedings and

his promotion of the submissions of Sifre, Edwards, and Einhorn Harris to the New York

court violated O’Callaghan’s and D.T.B.’s constitutional rights;1 (2) declaratory judgment

against Sifre, Edwards, and Einhorn Harris, declaring that all three conspired to deny

O’Callaghan and D.T.B. their constitutional rights; (3) declaratory judgment against

       1
        The alleged constitutional violations appear to be the denial of due process,
discrimination against children of unmarried parents, and discrimination against
unmarried fathers.

                                             5
Edwards, declaring that she invaded O’Callaghan’s privacy; (4) compensatory damages

against Edwards for defamation; and (5) injunctive relief against Sifre, Edwards, and

Einhorn Harris, requiring them to cease any “wrongful, deceitful and injurious

submissions” to “any person, entity, government agency, court, or otherwise” and to issue

formal retractions to any who received Edwards’ submissions. (App. 61-62).

       The District Court dismissed all of these claims on a number of alternate grounds,

including the following:

       (1) As to Harvey, the Court found that the complaint necessarily failed to state a

claim because he was not mentioned anywhere in the complaint.

       (2) The damages claim against Edwards for defamation was held to be barred by

both states’ applicable statute of limitations because it was filed more than one year after

her report was submitted to either the New Jersey or New York court. See N.J. Stat. Ann.

§ 2A:14-3; N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 215.

       (3) Regarding all three declaratory judgment claims, the Court made the

discretionary decision not to exercise jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judgment Act

because “any ruling rendered by the District Court would not settle the controversy,

would not serve a useful purpose in clarifying legal relations, would be used in a race for

res judicata, would strip the Appellate Division and Supreme Court of New Jersey of

their authority to review and would encroach upon the state’s jurisdiction,” and “appellate

review at the state level afford the plaintiff an alternative and more effective remedy.”

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(App. 7). See 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a) (“In a case of actual controversy within its jurisdiction,

. . . any court of the United States . . . may declare the rights and other legal relations of

any interested party seeking such declaration, whether or not further relief is or could be

sought.” (emphasis added)).

       (4) Finally, regarding the claim for injunctive relief against Sifre, Edwards, and

Einhorn Harris, the Court found that abstention was appropriate under Younger v. Harris,

401 U.S. 37 (1971), because there is an ongoing proceeding in New York state court, the

state of New York “has an important interest in controlling and reviewing filings

submitted to its courts,” and the state court here “is better equipped to determine whether

any such filing is ‘wrongful, deceitful and injurious.’” (App. 10-11). See Yang v. Tsui,

416 F.3d 199, 202 (3d Cir. 2005) (“Three requirements must be met before Younger

abstention is appropriate: (1) there must be an ongoing state judicial proceeding to which

the federal plaintiff is a party and with which the federal proceeding will interfere, (2) the

state proceedings must implicate important state interests, and (3) the state proceedings

must afford an adequate opportunity to raise the claims.”)

       We find no error in the reasoning of the District Court in its thorough opinion, as

we have detailed it above. Accordingly, we will affirm.

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