After a bench trial, appellant Herschel Shirley was found guilty of three counts of criminal contempt for violation of a civil protection order (“CPO”) sought by complainant Tashi Brown and issued by the Superior Court on December 10, 2008. 1 On appeal, his argument is twofold: (1) the trial court erred in finding him in contempt of a civil protection order when Brown consented to his contacts (in light of their “ongoing romantic relationship”); and (2) the trial court did not have jurisdiction to find him in contempt because the government failed to show that “Brown reside[d], live[d], work[ed], or attended] school in the District of Columbia” at the time of the violations and that the violations occurred in this jurisdiction. Unpersuaded by the arguments, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
I. Factual Background
The record shows that in December 2008, Tashi Brown filed a petition and affidavit for a CPO against appellant Shirley, then her boyfriend of a year. On December 10, 2008, Shirley signed a Consent CPO Without Admissions, which by
Brown testified at a hearing on August 18, 2009, that (notwithstanding the CPO that was in place) she and Shirley had been “in a [romantic] relationship together for about a year and a half’ and that, although Brown had obtained two CPOs against Shirley (one in October 2008 and one in December 2008), 2 the couple had continued to attempt to “work things out.” On April 3, 2009 — while the December 2008 CPO remained in effect' — appellant and Brown attended “couples counseling” and then agreed to “go out to lunch” the next day, April 4. On April 4, Shirley picked-up Brown in his truck and the couple went to lunch at a restaurant in the District, where they stayed for three to four hours. According to Brown, as they were leaving the restaurant’s parking lot, the couple “got into an argument” and appellant told Brown to “get the F out of his truck.” Brown got out of the truck and “started walking away from the truck” when appellant said “he was sorry ... he didn’t want to argue, he just wanted to have a good day.” Brown got back into the truck, and the couple “ended up going to Anacostia Park ... [to] talk[ ] about what just happened.” While they were there, according to Brown, “[t]hings just got heated all over again.”
Appellant then got a call from his sister who lives in Oxon Hill, Maryland, asking him to pick up his dog from the sister’s house. According to Brown, she asked appellant to take her home before picking up the dog, but he kept driving toward Oxon Hill. Brown “continuously asked and told [appellant] that she wanted to go home” (but acknowledged that, when they arrived at the sister’s apartment complex and appellant stopped the car, she (Brown) did not signal for help). Brown testified that as they left the apartment complex with the dog, she again insisted that appellant take her home, but instead appellant “pulled over ... on the shoulder,” “grabbed [Brown] by the neck and ... pushed [her] against the passenger side window,” started “banging [her] head on the passenger side window,” and “threaten[ed] to kill [her]” and to “burn [her] body so that no one would ever be able to find [her].” Then appellant “circled through 495 South like past Tyson’s and Dulles and loo[p]ed back around going to 495 North” and made “a lot of other threats ... during that time” and twice “choked [Brown] again.” Appellant denied these allegations.
Appellant eventually stopped at a park in Fairfax County, Virginia “to go walk the
While Brown and the officer waited for the taxi, appellant “continued to call [her] and he also had sent [her] text messages.” At trial, three text messages were admitted into evidence. The text messages stated, “[W]here do you need to be picked up at ... [C]an you ask the officer to call ... and ... [C]an I speak to the officer.” That evening when Brown was at home, appellant called her and left a voice mail message asking her “to pick up [the phone] because apparently there was some issue with him getting back in his house ... and his sister ... was not helping him.” Brown never responded to that message. Appellant also called the next day, April 5, and left a voice mail message asking Brown to answer because he did not have any place to live. Again, Brown did not respond to his message and instead called the police.
Appellant testified that Brown had obtained the December CPO against him to take “control of [his] life,” and that once they left court with the CPO, he was “back at her house ... living together.” Appellant admitted to sending Brown the text messages and leaving her voice mail messages in violation of the CPO, but stated that he was not “purposely trying to, and willfully trying to violate the civil protection order.”
The trial court found appellant guilty of three counts of contempt for having contacted Brown by text message at approximately 8:00 p.m. on April 4, 2009, telephoned Brown at 10:29 p.m. on April 4, 2009, and telephoned Brown at approximately 1:13 p.m. on April 5, 2009. Addressing appellant’s consent defense, the court stated that appellant “was fully aware of the civil protection order ... [and] there is no case law in the District that indicates that the Petitioner may ... consent to a violation of the civil protection order and I don’t find that she did, particularly at that point.” The trial court found appellant not guilty of the count of the government’s criminal contempt motion that related to the alleged threats to assault Brown and confine her in his car. The court did not credit Brown’s testimony on this charge, noting that she did not flee from appellant when she had ample opportunity to do so and volunteered to “go back into the truck to get a ride home.”
II. Discussion
A. The Availability of a Consent Defense
Appellant does not dispute that his contacts with Brown on April 4 and 5,
In
Ba,
petitioner Howard had obtained a CPO against respondent Ba in December 1999.
The government argues that we need not take up the issue left unresolved in
Ba
because the evidence “establishes beyond a reasonable doubt that Ms. Brown revoked any consent to Mr. Shirley’s violation of the CPO prior to the violations here in question.” We think the more straightforward issue on the facts of this case, and the controlling issue, is whether a petitioner’s “consent” can be a defense to a charge of contempt for violation of a CPO, and thus we proceed to analyze and resolve that issue. In so doing, we bear in mind appellant’s arguments that “courts should not grant [relief for CPO violations] when a party has engaged in conduct utterly inconsistent with the orderly admin
Courts have long recognized that “[t]he orderly and expeditious administration of justice ... requires that ‘an order issued by a court with jurisdiction over the subject matter and person must be obeyed by the parties until it is reversed by orderly and proper proceedings.’ ”
Maness v. Meyers,
Appellant contends, however, that because the legislature provided for a “private right to enforce” a CPO, Brown “had the ability to render [the CPO] unenforceable.” We reject this argument. As we clarified recently, criminal contempt actions for enforcement of CPOs, even when brought by the Office of the Attorney General on behalf of a petitioner, “ha[ve] to be brought in the name and pursuant to the sovereign power of the United States.”
In re Robertson,
Nos. 00-FM-925 & 04-FM-1269,
Violence among family members is a growing national problem as well as a local phenomenon. The public record ... is replete with testimony regarding the seriousness and widespread nature of domestic violence.... The direct harm inflicted through intrafamily violence is compounded by the fact thatchildren, observing violence at home, learn to use force as a means of resolving interpersonal problems. They often grow up to be violent or victimized adults. Domestic violence, learned in the home, is thus maintained through an intergenerational vicious circle.
Id.
at 1-2. Nothing in the language of the statute or its legislative history suggests a legislative intent to remove the protection of a CPO — which may be issued only upon a finding of “good cause to believe the respondent has committed or threatened to commit a criminal offense against the petitioner,” D.C.Code § 16-1005(c), or, as here, upon a respondent’s consent in lieu of such a finding, see D.C.Code § 16-1005(i) — -just because the victim later consents to contact in violation of the CPO. Indeed, the Judiciary Committee report cites, as a rationale for amendments made to the statute in 1982, that “criminal prosecutions should not be made impossible solely by the action of a private party.” Report on Bill 4-195 at 9. Further, our case law makes clear that, while the trial court may not extend or modify a CPO except upon motion of a party, the court may
sua sponte
hold an evidentiary hearing and find a defendant in contempt for violating a CPO, even where there has “not been any indication of interest in further proceedings by ... the beneficiary of the protection order.”
Adams v. Ferreira,
By declining to recognize consent as a defense to a charge of criminal contempt for violation of a CPO, we would not thereby render irrelevant evidence that it was a petitioner’s conduct that placed a respondent in technical violation of a stay-away order. To be punishable, contempt of a CPO must be willful.
See Hooks v. United States,
We hold that consent of the petitioner does not bar a conviction of criminal contempt for violation of a CPO. We might be inclined to hold otherwise if there were no procedure for seeking modification or termination of a CPO, or to recognize an exception if appellant had been misled into believing that he or Brown could not seek modification or rescission of the CPO. But neither of these circumstances exists: the statute specifically contemplates that any “party to the original proceeding” may move to “extend, rescind, or modify the order for good cause shown,” D.C.Code § 16 — 1005(d); and the record shows that appellant was present when the court agreed to rescind the October 2008 CPO, thus indicating that appellant was aware that such action was possible. It is also worth noting that the term of a CPO is limited to one year,
see
D.C.Code § 16-1005(d) (unless, upon motion by a party, the CPO is extended). Thus, passage of time without additional threats of intra-family violence (that would furnish a basis for extending the CPO) can relieve a respondent of the limitations imposed by a CPO, removing any perceived necessity for willfully violating the terms of the CPO. We note in addition that the trial court “retains broad authority to appropriately sanction persons who violate CPOs,” and that broad authority includes the authority to “decline[ ] to use its contempt powers” and to “opt[] to use a more benevolent approach” “so as not to saddle [a respondent] with a criminal record.”
Adams,
B. Jurisdiction
Relying on D.C.Code § 16-1006, appellant contends that the government failed to present evidence “that the court maintained jurisdiction to enforce the CPO because ... [t]here is no evidence that, as of April 2009, Ms. Brown was residing, working, or attending school in the District, or was under the legal custody of a District government ... [or that] the alleged violations occurred in the District.” Whether a trial court has subject matter jurisdiction is a matter of law, which we review
de novo. Grayson v. AT & T Corp.,
D.C.Code § 16-1006 provides:
A petitioner may file a petition for protection under this subchapter if:
(1) The petitioner resides, lives, works, or attends school in the District of Columbia!;]
(2) The petitioner is under the legal custody of a District government agency; or
(3) The underlying offense occurred in the District of Columbia.
By the terms of the statute, the foregoing requirements apply only to the “fil[ing]” of a petition for a CPO, not to the “enforcement of it,” as appellant’s jurisdictional argument implies. In addition, the statute places no geographical limitations on where an alleged violation of a CPO issued by the Superior Court “under this sub-chapter” [D.C.Code §§ 16-1001 to -1006] must have occurred for the court to have the power to punish contempt of the order.
See
D.C.Code § 16 — 1005(f) (providing in pertinent part that “[violation of any temporary or final order issued under this subchapter, or violation in the District of Columbia of any valid foreign protection
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Shirley was tried on a criminal contempt count relating to threats that he allegedly made to Brown, but he was acquitted on that count.
. In "early November 2008,” Brown "got [the October 2008 CPO] vacated," during a proceeding at which appellant was in attendance, because (according to Brown) the CPO was "hurting [appellant's] position at his job” and appellant agreed to write an apology letter to Brown and to continue attending counseling sessions with her. In December 2008, because appellant "didn't give [Brown] the letter,” she "immediately came back in [to court] and ... asked for the order to be reinstated.”
. As they waited for the taxi, Brown told the officer that appellant had tried to "choke her and put his hands on her neck” but the officer could not see any “abrasions or scars or marks or reddening” on Brown’s neck.
.
See also Young v. United States ex. rel. Vuitton et Fils S.A.,
.The principle recognized in
Adams
is consistent with other courts' recognition that Battered Woman Syndrome, or a similar phenomenon, may explain the fact that "[r]e-straining orders are frequently withdrawn after the restrained party promises to change inappropriate conduct.” C.O. v.
J.O.,
.
In re Sobin,
. Even then, however, the respondent presumably would have an obligation to terminate the contact, if that is possible.
. In this regard, our Intrafamily Offenses statute is similar to those of other jurisdictions.
See, e.g., Matter of Richardson v. Richardson,
.
See also
D.C.Code § 16-1005(h) (providing that "[f]or purposes of establishing a violation under subsections (f) and (g) of this section, an oral or written statement made by a person located outside the District of Columbia to a person located in the District of Columbia by means of telecommunication, mail, or any other method of communication shall be deemed to be made in the District of Columbia.”). Moreover, "[tjhere is a presumption that ‘an offense charged was committed within the jurisdiction of the court in which the charge is filed unless the evidence affirmatively shows otherwise.’ ”
Joiner-Die v. United States,
