High-Conflict Family Court
Litigation Abuse — When the Court System Becomes the Weapon
Litigation abuse is one of the most destructive and least discussed tactics in high-conflict divorce and custody cases. It is the deliberate use of the legal system itself — not to resolve disputes, but to exhaust, financially drain, and psychologically destroy the other party. Here is what it looks like, why it is so effective, and what you can do about it.
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What Is Litigation Abuse?
Litigation abuse — also called vexatious litigation or judicial harassment — is the pattern of using legal filings, motions, hearings, and procedural tools not to advance legitimate legal claims, but as instruments of harassment, control, and financial destruction.
In high-conflict divorce and custody, litigation abuse is almost always driven by a narcissistic or high-conflict personality who recognizes that the legal system provides an almost unlimited supply of tools that can be wielded against a co-parent — motions, hearings, discovery requests, contempt filings, emergency orders, modification requests — all of which cost money to respond to, create anxiety, and none of which require a legitimate claim to file.
The Critical Insight
As Carl writes in Family Court Solutions: HCPs use the legal system the way they used the relationship — as a vehicle for control and abuse. The abuse does not end at divorce. It relocates to the courthouse.
Why Litigation Abuse Is So Effective
The legal system has a structural vulnerability that litigation abusers exploit perfectly: it costs approximately the same amount of money to respond to a frivolous motion as it does to file one.
For a narcissist who views litigation as worthwhile regardless of outcome, every motion filed is a net gain — they forced you to spend money and energy responding, regardless of whether they won anything. Over months and years, this asymmetry can be financially devastating.
Additionally, the family court system is not well-equipped to identify and sanction litigation abuse in real time. Judges see each individual motion in isolation, not the pattern across years of proceedings. Without an attorney who actively documents the pattern and advocates for sanctions, the abuse continues largely unchecked.
The 10 Forms of Litigation Abuse in Family Court
| # | Form | How It Works |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Repeated modification motions | Filing custody or support modifications without qualifying changed circumstances — simply to force hearings and attorney’s fees |
| 2 | Frivolous contempt filings | Filing contempt motions for minor, technical, or fabricated violations of the court order to create hearings and pressure |
| 3 | Weaponized discovery | Demanding excessive, irrelevant, or previously-produced discovery to consume time and generate legal costs |
| 4 | Bad-faith emergency motions | Manufacturing or exaggerating crises to obtain ex parte TROs and emergency hearings that disrupt access to children |
| 5 | Strategic continuance requests | Repeatedly requesting delays to prolong proceedings, increase costs, and extend uncertainty |
| 6 | Multiple protective order petitions | Filing successive protective order petitions over minor or fabricated incidents to maintain access to emergency procedures |
| 7 | Frivolous appeals | Appealing decided issues without legitimate legal grounds to extend proceedings and prevent finality |
| 8 | Settlement sabotage | Agreeing to terms then reversing, requiring re-litigation of resolved issues |
| 9 | Excessive court communications | Inundating the court with letters and pro se filings to consume judicial attention and create a paper trail of false narratives |
| 10 | Post-decree harassment litigation | Using enforcement actions for minor or manufactured violations after the final order to maintain ongoing legal contact and control |
The Financial and Psychological Toll
The financial toll of sustained litigation abuse can be catastrophic. Attorney’s fees in high-conflict cases driven by litigation abuse commonly reach $50,000–$150,000 or more over the course of a case. In the most severe cases, victims are forced to represent themselves pro se because they simply cannot afford to keep responding — which is exactly what the litigation abuser is counting on.
The psychological toll compounds the financial damage: chronic anxiety before every court date, hypervigilance for the next filing, difficulty planning or building stability because the litigation never resolves. These are the same psychological effects as any other sustained abuse — because litigation abuse is sustained abuse.
How to Counter Litigation Abuse
Countering litigation abuse requires a documented pattern strategy — not just a case-by-case response to each individual filing.
- Document every filing — date filed, nature of the motion, outcome, attorney’s fees incurred responding
- Build the pattern affirmatively — your attorney should connect each new filing to the documented history in every response
- Seek sanctions proactively — do not wait for the judge to notice; your attorney should actively seek Chapter 10 sanctions, fee awards, and other available remedies
- Request case-wide attorney’s fee awards — when the overall pattern is documented, a comprehensive fee award deters future abuse
- Respond efficiently, not reactively — matching the HCP’s volume and aggression is expensive and exactly what they want; respond to substance only
The Trap to Avoid
The most common trap victims of litigation abuse fall into is responding to every filing with equal force. This is expensive, exhausting, and exactly what the HCP wants. Effective countering is strategic and measured — addressing substance efficiently while building the sanctions case over time.
Sanctions and Legal Remedies in Texas
| Remedy | Authority | What It Provides |
|---|---|---|
| Chapter 10 sanctions | Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ch. 10 | Monetary sanctions against parties and attorneys for pleadings without evidentiary support or filed for improper purpose |
| Attorney’s fees — Family Code | Tex. Fam. Code §§6.708, 9.014, 106.002 | Fee awards against a party whose conduct necessitated litigation |
| Rule 13 sanctions | Tex. R. Civ. P. 13 | Sanctions for pleadings filed in bad faith or for purposes of harassment |
| Custody modification | Tex. Fam. Code §156.101 | Pattern of litigation abuse as evidence of inability to co-parent, supporting custody change |
From Carl’s Books
Family Court Solutions
Covers litigation abuse in depth — the psychology behind it, how to document the pattern, the legal tools available to counter it, and how to maintain your financial resources and sanity through a sustained campaign of legal harassment.
Get the BookWhat Your Attorney Should Be Doing
Not every family law attorney is equipped to handle litigation abuse effectively. An attorney without high-conflict experience may respond to each filing in isolation, missing the opportunity to build the sanctions case. Look for an attorney who:
- Tracks the overall litigation pattern across all filings — not just the current motion
- Proactively seeks sanctions and fee awards rather than waiting for the judge to notice
- Responds efficiently to frivolous filings rather than matching their length and aggression
- Advises you on which filings require full responses and which can be addressed briefly
- Keeps you informed of costs so you can make strategic decisions about each response
Central Texas Family Law
The filing never stops — until you make it cost them something.
Carl Knickerbocker handles litigation abuse cases throughout Round Rock, Georgetown, and Williamson County. Strategic consulting available nationwide.
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