M. D. O., Petitioner-Respondent, v. Jeff A. DESANTIS, Respondent-Appellant.
17SK02472; A166829
Court of Appeals of Oregon
March 11, 2020
302 Or App 751 | 461 P3d 1066
Argued and submitted January 16, 2019, affirmed March 11, 2020. Marion County Circuit Court.
Respondent appeals a permanent stalking protective order (SPO), contending that the trial court erred in determining that petitioner‘s alarm when petitioner was being followed by respondent was objectively reasonable. He also contends that the trial court erred in determining that his statement to petitioner, “If I don‘t get you now, I‘ll get you later,” was a qualifying predicate contact for issuance of an SPO, because the statement (1) was not a threat of imminent serious harm and (2) did not cause petitioner to fear imminent and serious personal violence. Held: The trial court did not err. Given the acrimonious relationship between petitioner and respondent, petitioner‘s alarm when he was being followed by respondent was objectively reasonable. Further, in light of contextual factors, including petitioner and respondent‘s acrimonious relationship and their historical conduct toward each other, respondent‘s statement was a threat of imminent serious harm. Finally, from petitioner‘s testimony, the trial court could infer that respondent‘s statement caused petitioner to fear imminent and serious personal violence.
Affirmed.
Janet A. Klapstein, Judge pro tempore.
Andy Simrin argued the cause for appellant. Also on the brief was Andy Simrin PC.
No appearance for respondent.
Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge, and Shorr, Judge.
TOOKEY, J.
Affirmed.
This is a civil stalking case involving what the trial court aptly described as “bad blood” between two individuals who, after two of petitioner‘s children assaulted respondent, simply could not, as the trial court viewed it, “leave well enough alone.”1 During the year following the assault of respondent by petitioner‘s children, the parties’ anger with each other grew and ultimately culminated in respondent following petitioner, stating that he would “get” petitioner, and petitioner seeking a stalking protective order (SPO) against respondent under
On appeal, respondent raises two assignments of error, which, given his arguments, he acknowledges present “essentially the same legal question“: In his first assignment of error, he contends that the trial court “erred by finding that there were two qualifying contacts for the purposes of the stalking statutes.” In his second assignment of error, he contends that the trial court “erred by issuing a permanent stalking protective order.” For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
As an initial matter, we note neither party has requested that we review this matter de novo. Because this is not an exceptional case, we will not do so. See
BACKGROUND
Before turning to the “contacts” on which the trial court relied when issuing the SPO, we provide a brief summary of the historical “bad blood” between petitioner and respondent to provide appropriate context for those contacts.
Petitioner and respondent are both residents of a small community in Oregon. In January 2017, petitioner‘s two sons—who were juveniles at the time—assaulted respondent outside of a restaurant that respondent co-owned, causing what the trial court described as “pretty significant leg injuries” to respondent.2 Respondent viewed petitioner‘s sons’ assault on him as “life-changing“; as a result of the assault, he had to have steel plates embedded in his leg and ankle, and he
The day after the assault, petitioner went to respondent‘s restaurant. Petitioner felt that respondent, and not petitioner‘s two sons, was responsible for the assault. After entering the restaurant, petitioner spoke to a co-owner of the restaurant and asked to see respondent, whom petitioner accused of being a “child molester” or “child abuser.” Petitioner further stated that he wanted to “kick [respondent‘s] ass” and that he should “burn down” the restaurant. He explained to the co-owner that, in his view, had it been the co-owner‘s children involved in the assault, the co-owner would also want to burn down the restaurant to “get at the guys who did this to your kids.” During the hearing on the SPO, the co-owner described petitioner as having been “seething with palpable anger,” and explained that he was concerned petitioner was going to become violent. The co-owner reported the incident to the police and to respondent‘s wife. Petitioner‘s sons’ assault of respondent resulted in the state filing delinquency petitions to bring petitioner‘s sons within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court. At some point during the pendency of those proceedings, respondent obtained copies of petitioner‘s sons’ school records and contacted an individual employed by the Oregon Youth Authority (OYA) regarding those records. The OYA employee was concerned by respondent‘s possession of the records and, eventually, an attorney for one of petitioner‘s sons was informed that respondent had obtained the school records. The attorney informed petitioner.
In the summer of 2017, respondent was arrested for allegedly assaulting a private investigator who was involved in one of petitioner‘s sons’ juvenile court cases. Respondent was charged with assault.3 Petitioner believed that respondent‘s alleged assault on the private investigator was severe enough to cause the private investigator to be “put *** in the hospital.”
Following respondent‘s arrest and charges being brought against him related to the alleged assault of the private investigator, petitioner obtained and distributed copies of the arrest report and criminal complaint related to the alleged assault at locations around petitioner and respondent‘s community—for example, at a tire store, a grocery store, and the post office—as well as to individuals in petitioner‘s and respondent‘s community.4 Respondent was aware of petitioner‘s distribution efforts. Respondent asked local police to speak with petitioner about distributing the documents and request that petitioner stop doing that, but, nevertheless, petitioner persisted in distributing them. The trial court characterized petitioner‘s distribution campaign as “inappropriate.”
Additionally, in the summer of 2017, petitioner and respondent were driving in opposite directions in the downtown of their community. Though petitioner had the right of way, respondent, on seeing petitioner, snapped, and made a quick left turn in front of petitioner, which required petitioner to slam on his brakes to avoid T-boning respondent‘s pickup truck. Respondent then started laughing and slowed his truck down so that petitioner could see respondent‘s reaction—namely, laughter—to nearly causing a collision with petitioner. The force with which petitioner had to slam on his brakes to avoid hitting respondent caused petitioner physical pain due to preexisting spine and neck injuries.
The first contact on which the trial court based its decision to issue the SPO occurred on September 19, 2017. On that day, respondent observed petitioner driving in the local downtown area, near the local grocery store and tire store in which petitioner had previously distributed the documents related to respondent‘s alleged assault on the private investigator. Respondent had been informed
Petitioner observed respondent following closely behind him and believed that respondent wanted to follow petitioner to petitioner‘s house. Petitioner also saw that respondent did not take the turn that respondent usually takes when respondent is going to respondent‘s house. Petitioner kept driving, followed closely by respondent, out into “farm country.” Eventually petitioner, concerned that he was in farm country alone with respondent, turned his car around in a farmer‘s field and headed back into town and into the parking lot of the local police department to seek protection. Respondent also turned around and, after doing so, followed petitioner into the police department parking lot. The total distance respondent followed petitioner was approximately 15 miles. Petitioner perceived respondent to be “hunting [him] down.”
Petitioner entered the police department, and respondent followed petitioner inside. Once inside the police department, respondent snapped and proceeded to say to petitioner that petitioner‘s ex-wife is a “whore” and a “slut,” that petitioner‘s “fucking kids are bastards,” and that his ex-wife had petitioner‘s children “through another guy.” Petitioner testified that the experience left him “rattled.”
The second contact on which the trial court based its decision to issue the SPO occurred on November 19, 2017. On that day, petitioner was waiting in the parking lot of a local restaurant for a pizza to be ready when he heard someone‘s voice, turned his head, and saw respondent‘s truck “window to window” with his own. The trucks were close enough that petitioner was not sure if he could open his door without dinging respondent‘s door. Respondent again snapped and proceeded to call petitioner a “hillbilly” and petitioner‘s ex-wife “every nasty thing you can think of.” Petitioner responded with “every four-letter word [he] could think of.” Petitioner testified that he believed respondent engaged in that exchange because respondent wanted petitioner to instigate a physical fight so that respondent could “be the victim,” and that respondent could not “control himself.”
Respondent then told petitioner “let‘s go,” “I‘ll fight you right here,” and that he wanted to “beat the shit out of” petitioner. He also told petitioner, “If I don‘t get you now, I‘ll get you later.” Petitioner perceived this to be a direct “threat” to harm petitioner and was frightened. Petitioner testified that respondent‘s statements left him “rattled.” Petitioner also testified that he believed respondent would follow through on his stated intent to “get” petitioner, because respondent had previously been accused of engaging in a violent act—viz., assaulting the private investigator. Petitioner feared that he or his children would be the next target of respondent‘s violence, because respondent felt petitioner was responsible for respondent‘s estrangement from his wife and his business troubles, and blamed petitioner and petitioner‘s sons for the assault.
The next day, November 20, 2017, petitioner executed a uniform stalking complaint,
ANALYSIS
The SPO in this case was issued pursuant to
“(i) The person intentionally, knowingly or recklessly engages in repeated and unwanted contact with the other person or a member of that person‘s immediate family or household thereby alarming or coercing the other person;
“(ii) It is objectively reasonable for a person in the victim‘s situation to have been alarmed or coerced by the contact; and
“(iii) The repeated and unwanted contact causes the victim reasonable apprehension regarding the personal safety of the victim or a member of the victim‘s immediate family or household.”
Thus, the statute requires at least two unwanted contacts. See
Because “expressive contacts” implicate
We turn first to respondent‘s September 19, 2017, following of petitioner. As we understand respondent‘s argument, with regard to that nonexpressive contact, respondent contends that petitioner‘s alarm was not “objectively reasonable” and characterizes his conduct as mere “objectively innocuous following.” In respondent‘s view, that is so because “there was nothing about respondent‘s driving that would have made it objectively reasonable for petitioner to be reasonably apprehensive about his personal safety.”
We disagree with respondent that his following of petitioner was “objectively innocuous.” As we have emphasized in other cases, “unwanted contacts must be considered in the context of the parties’ entire history.” Pinkham v. Brubaker, 178 Or App 360, 372, 37 P3d 186 (2001). So viewed, contacts that “might appear innocuous *** in isolation often take on a different character.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, given the highly acrimonious relationship between petitioner and respondent, we conclude that petitioner‘s alarm when he was being closely followed by respondent for 15 miles, including in “farm country” with no one else around, was objectively reasonable. That is, against the backdrop of the parties’ history—viz., (1) petitioner‘s children causing significant “life-changing” injuries to respondent for which respondent, in part, blamed petitioner, (2) petitioner having previously accused respondent of being a “child molester” or “child abuser,” and stating that he would burn down respondent‘s business, (3) respondent previously obtaining petitioner‘s children‘s school records, (4) petitioner‘s belief that respondent had previously assaulted a private investigator who was involved in one of petitioner‘s sons’ juvenile court cases,6 (5) petitioner‘s campaign to publicize that alleged assault, (6) respondent previously nearly causing a collision with petitioner while they were driving and then laughing about it, and (7) respondent‘s “hot temper“—respondent‘s conduct of closely following behind petitioner into “farm country,” turning around when petitioner did so, and continuing to follow petitioner for a total of 15 miles, would cause a reasonable person in petitioner‘s situation to experience “apprehension or fear resulting from the perception of danger.”7
We turn to respondent‘s November 19, 2017, expressive contact with petitioner. Respondent contends that, what he characterizes as his “challenge to petitioner to get out of his vehicle and fight,” cannot constitute a qualifying contact for two reasons. First, any threat of violence was not “imminent.” That is so, respondent urges, because petitioner‘s and respondent‘s trucks were parked so close to each other that the doors could not have been opened without dinging each other, and accordingly, for respondent to have caused any injury to petitioner, “either one of them would have had to move their vehicle or respondent would have had to exit his passenger side door, gone around both cars and open petitioner‘s passenger side door to get at petitioner.” Second, that respondent‘s comments did not actually instill a subjective “fear in petitioner that respondent would engage in a violent act,” but instead, “instilled a belief that [respondent] was trying to bait petitioner into engaging in violence.”
Our analysis in Layne v. MacDonald, 267 Or App 628, 340 P3d 773 (2014), is
We first determined that the respondent‘s statement—that he would “fuck [the petitioner] up“—was an “unequivocal” threat, noting that it was “a colloquial term that, in context, has but one meaning.” Id. at 632.
Next, we addressed whether the threat was of “imminent serious physical harm,” acknowledging that that was a “somewhat closer” question. Id. We explained that “a threat is [not] imminent only if the threatened harm is ‘immediate.‘” Id. at 633. Rather, the “plain and ordinary” meaning of “imminent” is “‘ready to take place’ or ‘near at hand.‘” Id. (quoting Webster‘s Third New Int‘l Dictionary 1130 (unabridged ed 2002)). With that understanding, we looked to “contextual factors,” and determined that the respondent‘s statement was a “threat of imminent serious harm.” Id. The “contextual factors” in Layne included that the respondent had assaulted the petitioner during their marriage, he bragged that he killed people while serving in the military and warned that he could do the same to her, he repeatedly showed a willingness to break the law by allegedly violating his no-contact order multiple times, he threatened to send his “skinhead” friends to harm her if she reported those violations, and he actually had “skinhead” acquaintances. Id. at 629, 633.
Here, as was the respondent‘s statement to the petitioner in Layne, respondent‘s statement to petitioner in this case was “unequivocal.” That is, the statement, “If I don‘t get you now, I‘ll get you later,” when viewed in the context of respondent‘s surrounding statements to petitioner—viz., that he wanted to “beat the shit out of” petitioner and would “fight [him] right here“—has but one meaning. Cf. Outlaw, 301 Or App at 38 (statement “I‘m coming for you,” when analyzed in “the context of [the respondent‘s] surrounding statements,” was reasonably understood as a promise to hold the media accountable through respondent‘s own “reporting,” not a threat of violence). Respondent‘s statement was not a mere “vague invitation to fight.” Cf. Christensen, 261 Or App at 142 (statement, “Come down here, motherfucker, and I‘ll show you,” was not a threat under Rangel, as it was only “a vague invitation to fight“); State v. Jackson, 259 Or App 248, 249-50, 313 P3d 383 (2013) (accepting state‘s concession that defendant‘s statement that he “wanted to fight” victim and called victim a “pussy” was not a threat under Rangel, where there was no evidence that defendant approached victim).
Although the “contextual factors” are not as extreme as they were in Layne, the “contextual factors” in this case lead us to conclude that respondent‘s statement, “If I don‘t get you now, I‘ll get you later,” was a “threat of imminent serious harm,” Layne, 267 Or App at 633. As described above, petitioner and respondent had a highly acrimonious relationship that had persisted for almost a full year. During that time, as the trial court found, rather than settle down, their anger with each other had continued to grow and grow. Respondent continued to be angry with petitioner, had a “hot temper,” and had snapped on multiple occasions upon seeing petitioner. Respondent blamed petitioner for respondent‘s estrangement from his wife, his business troubles, and the assault by petitioner‘s children, which was “life-changing” for respondent. Respondent had previously engaged in conduct that posed a direct risk to petitioner‘s physical safety—viz., nearly causing a collision with petitioner‘s truck. Given where respondent had parked his truck, petitioner was prevented from getting out of petitioner‘s truck in the usual manner—i.e., through the front driver‘s-side door. And, respondent‘s presence next to petitioner‘s truck was unexpected.
Against that backdrop, respondent‘s statement—“If I don‘t get you now, I‘ll get you
We also disagree with respondent‘s second contention—that the trial court erred in issuing an SPO because respondent‘s comments did not actually instill a subjective “fear in petitioner that respondent would engage in a violent act,” but instead “instilled a belief that [respondent] was trying to bait petitioner into engaging in violence.” To be sure, respondent is correct that petitioner testified during the SPO hearing that he believed respondent engaged in name calling because respondent wanted petitioner to instigate a physical fight so that respondent could “be the victim.” But that was not petitioner‘s only testimony: Petitioner also testified that he believed respondent would follow through on his threat to harm petitioner, that respondent could not “control himself,” that respondent‘s threat had left him “rattled,” and that he had previously felt like respondent was “hunting him down.” Further, petitioner had previously sought police protection from respondent. Although petitioner may not have used the words “fear of imminent and serious personal violence,” Rangel, 328 Or at 303, when testifying, from petitioner‘s testimony the trial court could infer that he did, in fact, subjectively have such a fear. Boyd v. Essin, 170 Or App 509, 517-18, 12 P3d 1003 (2000), rev den, 331 Or 674 (2001) (concluding that, although “petitioner did not repeat the words of the statute and say that she had been subjectively alarmed” the court could “infer from her testimony, in light of the nature of respondent‘s contacts *** that she was in fact alarmed,” and that “it was objectively reasonable for petitioner to be alarmed“).
In sum, as described above, the parties to this case had a year-long relationship marred by a growing enmity, in which one of them had already suffered a significant injury. Their conduct vis-à-vis each other was seemingly untethered from social mores. Against the backdrop of that historical “bad blood,” we conclude that the trial court did not err in determining that petitioner had made the requisite showing for issuance of an SPO.
Affirmed.
