Jennifer L. MOTA, Appellee, v. Lawrence MOTA II, Appellant.
No. 20150191-CA
Court of Appeals of Utah.
Filed September 22, 2016
2016 UT App 201
D. Grant Dickinson, Provo and Justin Caplin, Attorneys for Appellee.
Judge David N. Mortensen authored this Memorandum Decision, in which Judges J. Frederic Voros Jr. and Stephen L. Roth concurred.
Memorandum Decision
MORTENSEN, Judge:
¶1 Lawrence Mota II appeals the district court‘s denial of his request to dismiss a protective order that his ex-wife, Jennifer L. Mota, obtained against him. We affirm.
¶2 In April 2011, Jennifer1 was at home holding the parties’ youngest child when Lawrence threatened to commit suicide and picked up a handgun. Jennifer attempted to call 911. Lawrence then pointed the gun at Jennifer and the child and said, “If you dial that last number it will be the last thing you ever do.” Based in part on this event, in June 2012 Jennifer filed a request for, and the
¶3 On June 27, 2012, the district court held a hearing to determine whether the temporary protective order should be made permanent. Despite being properly served, Lawrence did not appear at the hearing. The district court therefore entered a permanent protective order. No appeal followed. Instead, over the next three months, Lawrence repeatedly but unsuccessfully attempted to obtain a dismissal of the protective order. Lawrence did not appeal any of the orders denying these attempts.
¶4 In August 2014, after the permanent protective order had been in effect for more than two years, Lawrence again filed a request to dismiss the protective order, this time under section 78B-7-115 of the Utah Code. See
[I]f and when someone pulls out a gun and points it at me I don‘t know that I can predict that at any time in the future I will not have a reasonable fear of that person if they pulled it out, pointed it at me and made a threat to kill me with it.
Thus, the protective order remained in place, with minor amendments agreed to by the parties. Lawrence did not object to the commissioner‘s recommendation, but he timely filed a notice of appeal after the district court judge signed the final version of the amended protective order in May 2015.
¶5 On appeal, we must decide whether the district court erred in denying Lawrence‘s request to dismiss the protective order. In deciding this issue, we consider three arguments advanced by Lawrence. First, Lawrence argues that the district court misinterpreted subsection (1)(f) of section 78B-7-115 of the Utah Code (subsection (f)), which allows taking into account “any other factors the court considers relevant” in “determining whether the petitioner no longer has a reasonable fear of future abuse.” See
¶6 “A district court‘s interpretation of a statute is a question of law, which we ... review for correctness.” Alliant Techsystems, Inc. v. Salt Lake County Board of Equalization, 2012 UT 4, ¶ 17, 270 P.3d 441. However, a statute‘s use of the word “may” indicates a court‘s discretionary power, the exercise of which we review for an abuse of discretion. State v. Draper-Roberts, 2016 UT App 151, ¶ 14 & n.5, 378 P.3d 1261. Therefore, because the statute is permissive, we review the court‘s ultimate decision—whether to grant or deny Lawrence‘s request to dismiss the protective order—for an abuse of discretion. See
¶8 Jennifer contends that Lawrence failed to preserve the issues raised because he failed to object to the commissioner‘s recommendation that the protective order remain in place. See
¶9 Rule 108 establishes that “[a] recommendation of a court commissioner is the order of the court until modified by the court.”
¶10 But the decision not to object to a commissioner‘s recommendation, while not precluding an appeal, has consequences. Lawrence‘s failure to object limits his ability to now challenge the factual basis of the commissioner‘s determinations. Where, as here, the hearing before the commissioner was conducted based on the pleadings, the proffered evidence, and the arguments of counsel, the only opportunity to more completely develop the factual record was through an evidentiary hearing on an objection to the district court, which Lawrence never sought. See
¶11 We therefore focus our attention on the claims that were preserved for our review. To begin, we consider whether the commissioner misinterpreted subsection (f), the catch-all provision of the relevant statute, which allows a court to take into account “any other factors the court considers relevant to the case before it” in deciding “whether the petitioner no longer has a reasonable fear of future abuse.”
¶12 Subsection (f) is the last in a list of factors that a court must consider when “determining whether the petitioner no longer has a reasonable fear of future abuse” for purposes of deciding whether to dismiss “a protective order that has been in effect for at least two years.”
(a) whether the respondent has complied with treatment recommendations related to domestic violence, entered at the time the protective order was entered;
(b) whether the protective order was violated during the time it was in force;
(c) claims of harassment, abuse, or violence by either party during the time the protective order was in force;
(d) counseling or therapy undertaken by either party;
(e) impact on the well-being of any minor children of the parties, if relevant; and
(f) any other factors the court considers relevant to the case before it.
¶13 Lawrence contends that subsection (f) “allows a court to consider other important factors” but should only be used “to allow a court to reach exceptional circumstances.” At oral argument Lawrence refined his position, claiming categorically that conduct that occurred before the protective order was entered, including the most serious precipitating events, could not be considered at all. Instead, Lawrence argues, the focus should be only on conduct that occurred after the protective order was issued.
¶14 We disagree. Our inquiry begins with the language of the statute, Marion Energy, Inc. v. KFJ Ranch P‘ship, 2011 UT 50, ¶ 14, 267 P.3d 863, and we see nothing in the statutory text that would limit the court‘s inquiry to only those facts that have arisen after entry of the protective order. On the contrary, subsection (f) invites the court to consider “any other factors the court considers relevant to the case before it.”
¶15 The commissioner‘s recommendation acknowledges this principle. At the hearing before the commissioner, Lawrence meticulously addressed the factors outlined in subsections (a) through (e). And, despite a brief suggestion that perhaps Lawrence should have been ordered to complete therapy—and noting that she herself had received therapy—Jennifer did not seriously disagree with
¶16 Specifically, it is apparent on the record that the commissioner focused on the prominent factor that Jennifer urged: the egregiousness of the underlying conduct. He discussed the egregiousness of the conduct, indicating that time—or at least the mere two years that had passed in this case—would not necessarily erase the fear associated with having a gun pointed at a person. The commissioner also concluded that such residual fear would be reasonable, given the accompanying “threat to kill [the person] with [the gun].”
¶17 The commissioner‘s explanation of his decision to leave the protective order in place, based on the incident with the gun, makes clear that he deemed the egregiousness of that incident to be “relevant to the case before it.” See
¶18 Concluding that the commissioner did not err in his interpretation of subsection (f), we are left to decide whether the court abused its discretion in leaving the protective order in place. It did not.
¶19 For Lawrence to demonstrate that the district court exceeded its discretion, he must show that it “exceeded the limits of reasonability when it denied the motion” to dismiss the protective order. See Gudmundson v. Del Ozone, 2010 UT 33, ¶ 23-24, 232 P.3d 1059 (deciding whether a district court abused its discretion in denying a motion under
¶20 The protective order here had been in effect more than two years before Lawrence filed his request to dismiss, putting his request within the confines of section 78B-7-115(1). Lawrence argues that “provisions (a)-(e) give guidance to subjects of protective orders as to what behavior is expected of them in order to have the protective order eventually dismissed.” In both his arguments before the commissioner and his arguments on appeal, Lawrence espouses the view that if a respondent complies with subsections (a) through (e), the protective order should be dismissed.7 We cannot agree with this interpretation of the statute. Of course, there might be times when satisfaction of subsections (a) through (e)—or even some of those subsections—would be sufficient to allow the district court to conclude that the petitioner no longer had a reasonable fear of future abuse and to dismiss a protective order. But that does not mean the statute must operate in the way Lawrence urges.
¶21 The factors outlined in subsections (a) through (e) are all mandatory considerations. See
¶22 Insofar as Lawrence preserved his arguments for appeal, those arguments are
¶23 Affirmed.
DAVID N. MORTENSEN
JUDGE
