MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0
At an ex parte hearing held on July 26, 2023, a Probate and Family Court judge issued a temporary abuse prevention order against the defendant (husband) at the request of the plaintiff (wife). The docket reflects that the order was not extended and that it expired by operation of law. Representing himself, the husband nevertheless appealed the issuance of the order. We affirm.
1
There was an ample basis in the wifes affidavit and testimony to support the judges finding that the wife held an objectively reasonable fear of imminent serious physical harm by the husband. Nothing more was required. See Ginsberg v. Blacker, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 139, 142-143 (2006). The husband is left to argue that the judge did not sufficiently probe the wifes allegations,
2
and that, if she had done so, the judge would not have credited those allegations. We discern no abuse of discretion or other error in the degree of scrutiny that the judge applied.
3
Abuse prevention order entered July 26, 2023, affirmed.
FOOTNOTES
1
. The expiration of the ex parte temporary order does not appear to have mooted this appeal. See Wooldrige v. Hickey, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 637, 638 (1998).
2
. For example, the husband argues that closer scrutiny of the wifes allegations would have revealed internal inconsistencies in them.
3
. To ensure that our ruling is not misinterpreted, we note that the husband filed a timely motion to terminate the ex parte order and the docket appears to reflect that that motion remains open. Any recourse the husband has with respect to the relief he is seeking would be to pursue that motion. We express no view of the merits of that motion or even whether it is moot, except to add the following observations. Had the husbands motion to vacate been allowed, the husband would have been entitled to have copies of the abuse prevention order possessed by certain law enforcement officials ordered destroyed. See Quinn v. Gjoni, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 408, 414 (2016). See also Vaccaro v. Vaccaro, 425 Mass. 153, 156-157 (1997) (destruction of records in statewide domestic violence recordkeeping system not required). Full expungement of all records is not relief to which the husband would have been entitled absent proof, “through clear and convincing evidence that the order was obtained through fraud on the court.” Quinn, supra at 414 n.14. Nothing in the record suggests that the wife committed a fraud on the court.