MELISSA TOWNSEND DURASTANTI, Plаintiff-Appellee, vs. RONALD JOSEPH DURASTANTI, Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL NO. C-190655
TRIAL NO. DV-190584
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
September 30, 2020
[Cite as Durastanti v. Durastanti, 2020-Ohio-4687.]
BERGERON, Judge.
Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Domestic Relations Court. Judgment Appealed From Is: Reversed and Cause Remanded.
Melissa Townsend Durastanti, pro se,
Brafford & Rivello, Suellen M. Brafford, for Defendant-Appellant.
BERGERON, Judge.
I.
{2} Melissa Townsend (formerly Durastanti) and Joe Durastanti married in March 2017. The couple initially lived together in Mississippi with Ms. Townsend‘s three children (unrelated to Mr. Durastanti), before relocating to Cincinnati, Ohio at different points in 2019. Beyond these basic details, the parties disagree on nearly all of the relevant facts in this case—particularly the backdrop leading to the request for the protection order. These divergent tales, chronicled below, place witness credibility as the centerpiece of this case.
{3} According to Ms. Townsend, Mr. Durastanti engaged in three acts of “erratic physical abuse” between 2017 and 2019. The first act of abuse, in April 2017, involved pushing and shoving in the couple‘s Mississippi home—but that did not result in any visible bruising or medical treatment. The second act of abuse relates to a trip the couple took to Columbia in the summer of 2018. In the aftermath of that trip, Ms. Townsend recalled an argument (in connection with disputes emanating from their international excursion) during which Mr. Durastanti allegedly shoved her against a door and into an adjacent room, whereupon she fell and bruised her
{4} The third event stems from Ms. Townsend‘s decision to leave her husband. In November 2018, she broke the news to Mr. Durastanti that she wanted a divorce and planned to move to Cincinnati, with the dual purposes of obtaining treatment for her son (who has a rare stomаch condition) and distancing herself from their tumultuous relationship. A few months later, Ms. Townsend embarked for Cincinnati, after agreeing with Mr. Durastanti that he would come periodically to visit her and the children in Cincinnati, ostensibly to see if they could maintain some type of on-going amicable relationship. Between January 2019 and Ms. Tоwnsend‘s filing for a protection order, Mr. Durastanti appeared (unannounced) to visit her and the children three times.
{5} These visits did not go well, bringing us to the third incident of alleged abuse in May 2019. At trial, Ms. Townsend explained that she informed Mr. Durastanti that she no longer wanted a relationship with him, agreeing to meet him at a grocery store in Cinсinnati to discuss the break-up in person. Ms. Townsend testified that at some point during the conversation, she left the store and entered Mr. Durastanti‘s car, and that he proceeded to drive extremely fast (upwards of 100 miles per hour) and erratically, before shoving her out of the car in her driveway. As she fell out of the cаr, her leg hit the door, resulting in bruising. Ms. Townsend submitted a picture of the bruise on her leg as evidence at trial. A few days after this argument, Mr. Durastanti texted Ms. Townsend: “I know what I‘m about to do! If you don‘t stop your taking my family again I‘ll take yours.” Ms. Townsend understood this and a related text to represent threats to her and her children.
{7} Mr. Durastanti also contested the circumstances of the couple‘s divorce and Ms. Townsend‘s January 2019 move to Cincinnati. According to Mr. Durastanti, Ms. Townsend informed him that they needed to get divorced because his income precluded her son from getting into the desired treatment program at Cincinnati Children‘s Hospital. Mr. Durastanti obliged, filing for divorce and purchasing a home for Ms. Townsend and her children in Cincinnati.
{8} By March 2019, with the divorce finalized, Mr. Durastanti claimed that Ms. Townsend had second thoughts and wanted to get remarried, prompting the couple to discuss buying another house in Cincinnati where they and the children could live together. To support this assertion at trial, Mr. Durastanti submitted a text message into evidence in which Ms. Townsend discussed a May date for their (encore) wedding. The couple looked at homes together, but Ms. Townsend then changed her mind, deciding to stay in her current home and not to remarry. Nevertheless, Mr. Durastanti purchased a home in Cincinnati just a few miles from Ms. Townsend, seemingly convinced that Cincinnati provided a better place to live
{9} After sorting through all of the evidence and testimony in this case, the magistrate dismissed Ms. Townsend‘s petition, deeming the evidence “insufficient to demonstrate an act of domestic violence.” The trial court initially adopted the magistrate‘s decision (see
{10} On appeal, Mr. Durastanti raises two assignments of error. First, he contends that the trial сourt erred by granting a protection order as against the manifest weight of the evidence. Next, he maintains that the trial court applied the incorrect legal standard and failed to accord the magistrate due deference in his decision. We address the second assignment of error first, as we find that dispositive.
II.
{11} Unlike other civil proceedings referred to a magistrate—which are generally governed by
A.
{12} Under
{13} In contrast,
{14}
{15} Finally—and in this case, most importantly—
[1] that an error of law or other defect is evident on the face of the order, or [2] that the credible evidence of record is insufficient to support the granting or denial of the рrotection order, or [3] that the magistrate abused the magistrate‘s discretion in including or failing to include specific terms in the protection order.
The magistrate in this case denied Ms. Townsend‘s request for a protection order, leaving no “specific terms in the protection order” to trigger an objection.
B.
{16} To obtain a protection order pursuant to
{18} Ms. Townsend‘s testimony before the magistrate, if credible, would be sufficient to show by a preponderance of the evidence that Mr. Durastanti engaged in an act of domestic violence. The magistrate, by denying the protection order, found that her testimony lacked credibility. And, as pointed out by the magistrate at trial and urged by Mr. Durastanti here, Ms. Townsend‘s testimony was riddled with inconsistencies. These inconsistencies convinced the magistrate that he simply could not believe Ms. Townsend.
{19} In its order overruling the magistrate‘s denial of a protection order, the trial court in this case explained that “the evidence supported a finding that [Mr. Durastanti] attempted to cause or recklessly caused bodily injury to [Ms. Townsend] * * * .” To support this conclusion, the court cited Ms. Townsend‘s testimony about the May 2019 instance of abuse, the photograph of a bruise on Ms. Townsend‘s lеg, her general fear of Mr. Durastanti, and his recent move to Cincinnati. See Wise v. Wise, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23424, 2010-Ohio-1116, ¶ 9 (“In a civil manifest-weight analysis, ‘the court reviews the trial court‘s rationale and the evidence the trial court has cited in support of its decision.’ “) (quoting Gevedon v. Ivey, 172 Ohio App.3d 567, 876 N.E.2d 604, 2007-Ohio-2970, ¶ 60 (2d Dist.)).
{20} But whether supporting evidence existed for the grant of a protectiоn order was not the correct inquiry for the trial court under
{21} The trial court did not purport to make this finding, and on remand, it will have to make these assessments applying the appropriate standard under
{23} Of course, we do not mean to suggest that a trial court must reflexively follow the magistrate‘s disposition—but the court must apply the proper legal analysis under
{24} Accordingly, we reverse the trial сourt‘s grant of a domestic violence civil protection order and remand for application of the standard we have explained to the facts of this case. We thus sustain the second assignment of error and find the first assignment of error moot based on our disposition.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
MYERS, P.J., and CROUSE, J., concur.
Please note:
The court has recorded its own entry this date.
