We review the trial court's legal conclusions for legal error. Kargol v. Kargol ,
Petitioner and respondent were married in 2014. During his marriage to petitioner, respondent took medications for depression; he sometimes also drank alcohol to excess, despite warnings to the contrary associated with his medications. J was just under two years old at the time of the FAPA hearing. Petitioner worked part time and was J's primary caregiver; respondent was employed full time.
Thе physical incidents of abuse described by petitioner relate to involuntary sex. See ORS 107.700(1)(c) (defining "abuse" to include "[c]ausing another to engage in involuntary sexual relations by force or threat of force"). Sometime before March 2017, respondent joined petitioner while she was taking a shower. She told him that she did not want to have sex, but he pushed her against the shower wall and had intercourse with her, despite her telling him to stop. In May 2017, respondent subjected petitioner to involuntary sex again while forcibly holding her down on a bed, after having dragged her away from J, who was breast feeding. Petitioner suffered bruising on her arms as a result.
In June 2017, petitioner told respondent that she was very unhappy in their marriage. Respondent told petitioner that he would kill her and take J if she ever left or divorced him. Respondent seemed "very relaxed" and, had petitioner not looked at his face, she "would have thought maybe he was joking." However, after looking at respondent, petitioner "felt like he was complеtely serious."
The following month, petitioner and respondent were showering together with J, and respondent urinated on petitioner and laughed about it. After those events, petitioner and J began spending more nights at the home of petitioner's parents, which was located near her workplace. Petitioner and respondent went to a marriage counseling session, but respondent said that, if petitioner was unhаppy, it was her problem and that she needed to work on it.
On July 23, 2017, petitioner took J and went to live with her parents. Soon thereafter, she filed for divorce. Except during a subsequent mediation session and meetings associated with transitioning J to respondent for his parenting time, petitioner and respondent have not come face-to-face since petitioner moved to her parents' home. Respondent did not seek out petitioner at her place of employment or her school. He did once knock on the door and window of petitioner's parent's home and he left a note when nobody answered. At the FAPA hearing, petitioner's father did not recall what the note had said, although he agreed it could have referenced diapers or other supplies. Respondent testified that the note he left asked
In August, petitioner told J's pediatrician about what had happened between her and respondent. Respondent subsequently went to the pediatrician's office several times without an appointment, seeking to discuss J's well-being.
In late August, petitioner and respondent reached a temporary agreement about parenting time. Under that agreement, respondent saw J twice weekly and there was no requirement that visits be supervised. At meetings when J was transitioned from one parent to the other, respondent "made it a habit to drive аround the block" and find petitioner's car, driving slowly by with an "angry, rage-filled stare" at petitioner and whoever was with her. Respondent frequently called, emailed, and sent text messages to petitioner, some of which were admitted as exhibits at the FAPA hearing. Petitioner described respondent's messages as sometimes being "loving and asking [petitioner] to come home"; sometimes, however, "they were angry, demanding that [she] return home right away with [J]." Respondent also said untrue things about petitioner and her family, claiming that they were crazy. Those communications made petitioner feel "threatened, upset, scared, [and] frustrated" because she felt that the messages "exhibited some sort of instability in [respondent's] thought process."
Petitioner and respondent participated in a mediation session on October 5, 2017, about custody and рarenting-time issues. Toward the beginning of the mediation, respondent glared intensely at petitioner for a long period, which
Carr told respondent to stop and asked petitioner to leave the room; she then talked with respondent about how upset he was and whether he wоuld be able to calm down enough to continue the mediation. He said no, and indicated that he would like to leave. Carr characterized respondent as not being out of control, but "as being very upset and unable to participate in a problem-solving process." Respondent then left the building. Petitioner stayed behind and spoke with Carr, crying and shaking as she did so. Carr suggested that petitioner speak with somebody at a domestic violence resource center. When petitioner was ready to leave, Carr provided her with an escort, which is common in that kind of situation "so that * * * the parties are not having any * * * inadvertent or other contact in the parking lot."
Under FAPA, a petitioner seeking a restraining order has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the respondent "(1) 'abused' petitioner in the 180 days preceding the filing of the petition, (2) presents an 'imminent danger of further abuse' to petitioner, and (3) 'represents a credible threat to the physical safety of the petitioner.' " Kargol ,
We need not determine whether the record in this case could support a finding that respondent represented a credible threat to petitioner's safety. That is because, for the reasons set out below, we conclude that the evidence is legally insufficient to establish that respondent presents an imminent danger of further abuse to petitioner.
We have recently observed that it can be "significant," in the FAPA context, if the relationship between victim and abuser has "changed once they no longer live[ ] together." Kargol ,
The Kargol petitioner and respondent separated a few months later and the petitioner sought a FAPA rеstraining order based on her "fear of respondent's tendency to escalate arguments to 'frightening and unsafe levels.' " Id . at 531,
The trial court granted the FAPA order, but we reversed. We first observed that the Kargol respondent conceded that the record supported a finding that he had abused the petitioner within the pertinent 180-day period. Id . at 532,
Our opinion in Kargol relied on previous cases in which we similarly found significance in the parties' separation and the changed nature of their relationship since then. For example, in Valenti v. Ackley ,
The Valenti petitioner obtained an ex parte FAPA order the day after the respondent broke down the door to their residence. Id . at 494,
In Valenti , we contrasted our holdings in cases like Hubbell v. Sanders ,
This case is more like Kargol and Valenti than it is like cases such as Hubbell . The question here is not whether respondent abused petitioner in the 180 days preceding the FAPA petition-he did. Rather, the question is whether the evidence of that abuse, considered together with the evidence of the parties' interactions leading up to and following their separation, is legally sufficient to establish that petitioner is in imminent danger of further abuse.
We conclude that the evidence in this case is not sufficient to support such a finding of imminent danger.
Thus, this record does not establish a repetitive pattern of conduct that qualifies as abuse under FAPA that could support an inference that the abuse will occur again in the near future. And petitioner does not contend that her fear of respondent is based on that kind of pattern of abuse. Rather, petitioner's fear is based primarily on respondent's anger as it has manifested in the mediation session and following transitions of J to respondent during his parenting time, when respondent drives past petitioner and glares at her. It is understandable that petitioner and her family are distressed by respondent's persistently angry demeanor. But-in the absence of any evidence that respondent has caused or attempted to cause petitioner bodily injury, and in the absence of any evidence that respondent has sought out or pursued petitioner in any other contexts since they separated-respondent's conduct is insufficient to demonstrate that petitioner is in imminent danger of further abuse.
Nor does the evidence of respondent's verbal communications with petitioner establish that prerequisite for issuance of a FAPA order. The text messages and emails in evidence reflect respondent's emotional reaction to petitioner having left their marriage and his anger and frustration regarding restrictions on his time with J. However, those messages cannot reasonably be construed as threats of harm against either petitioner or J. See Vanik-Burns v. Burns ,
Reversed.
