MELISSA LEACH v. TARA MICHELLE KERSEY
Case No. 2D14-1812
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT
April 17, 2015
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
Opinion filed April 17, 2015.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lee County; R. Thomas Corbin, Judge.
SILBERMAN, Judge.
Melissa Leach appeals a final judgment of injunction for protection against stalking entered in favor of Tara Michelle Kersey. Because competent, substantial evidence does not support the required two incidents of stalking for injunctive relief, we reverse the final judgment.
Stalking occurs when a person “willfully, maliciously, and repeatedly follows, harasses, or cyberstalks another person.”
This case arose from the eighteen-month affair Kersey had with Leach‘s husband, Dr. Leach. After Leach learned of the affair, she contacted Kersey by phone and by messages and “friend” requests on Facebook. The evidence does not show that these contacts “serve[d] no legitimate purpose.”
In addition, the evidence does not show that these contacts would cause a reasonable person in Kersey‘s circumstances to suffer substantial emotional distress. See Jones, 67 So. 3d at 1204. A reasonable woman who had an eighteen-month affair with another woman‘s husband might well expect to hear the scorn of an angry wife. In fact, Kersey herself clearly did not suffer substantial emotional distress from these contacts. With respect to the phone call, Kersey said she allowed Leach to “vent” and “just let her get it off her chest.” Kersey also admitted that the affair could cause Leach to be upset with her. The evidence fails to show that a reasonable person in Kersey‘s situation would suffer substantial emotional distress from these contacts. The trial court appropriately found that it was “not stalking up to that point.”
It was after these contacts that Leach posted one time on the public blog
The trial court granted the injunction based on the blog posting. But even if the blog posting served no legitimate purpose and would cause substantial emotional distress to a reasonable person, this would only constitute one incident of stalking.
Therefore, because competent, substantial evidence does not support two incidents of stalking, we reverse the final judgment of injunction for protection against stalking.
Reversed.
KELLY and BLACK, JJ., Concur.
