A. V. V. v. Sperla

339 Or. App. 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 9, 2025
DocketA183291
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 339 Or. App. 632 (A. V. V. v. Sperla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. V. V. v. Sperla, 339 Or. App. 632 (Or. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

632 April 9, 2025 No. 322

This is a nonprecedential memorandum opinion pursuant to ORAP 10.30 and may not be cited except as provided in ORAP 10.30(1).

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

A. V. V. Petitioner-Respondent, v. JEFFREY BRYON SPERLA, Respondent-Appellant. Lane County Circuit Court 23PO13600; A183291

Kamala H. Shugar, Judge. Submitted February 18, 2025. Jason E. Thompson and Thompson Law, LLC, filed the brief for appellant. A. V. V. filed the brief pro se. Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, Egan, Judge, and Joyce, Judge. AOYAGI, P. J. Reversed. Nonprecedential Memo Op: 339 Or App 632 (2025) 633

AOYAGI, P. J. Respondent appeals a restraining order issued against him under the Family Abuse Prevention Act (FAPA). See ORS 107.700 - 107.735. As described below, we conclude that the evidence at the contested hearing was legally insuf- ficient to establish that respondent represented a credible threat to petitioner’s physical safety and that it was there- fore error to continue the restraining order. That conclusion obviates the need to address respondent’s other assignments of error. Accordingly, we reverse. Facts. We are bound by the trial court’s express and implied factual findings if there is evidence in the record to support them. J. E. -S. v. Shields, 332 Or App 226, 227, 548 P3d 862 (2024). We state the facts accordingly. Because the trial court found petitioner generally credible and respon- dent generally not credible, we limit our description of the facts to petitioner’s testimony. The parties dated for five years—from September 2018 to November 2023—and have a baby. The three of them lived together in a house owned by respondent. Petitioner stayed at home and had no income. During the relation- ship, respondent was “not often” controlling but would be “every once in a while,” and “when he wanted to be heard, he made it known that [petitioner] needed to listen to him.” When asked how specifically he was controlling, petitioner stated that he was “financially controlling” in the sense that he “never wanted to give [her] money other than for [her] monthly expenses” and reviewed the charges on the credit cards that he gave her. He also controlled how many times a year she travelled to Bakersfield to visit her family; in the last year that they were together, she went six times, which cost about $800 per trip. The parties ended their relationship in November 2023. Respondent moved out of the house on November 25. The next day, respondent came to the house and said that they needed to talk. Petitioner had just returned from a trip and did not want to talk, but respondent followed her around the house and insisted that they talk. He stood in the way when she tried to go upstairs. He eventually let her 634 A. V. V. v. Sperla

pass but followed her upstairs. Petitioner went into the bed- room and started to close the door, but respondent “pushed it into [her].” Petitioner asked, “Did you just throw the door against me?” Respondent responded, “You need to calm the F down, I’m not touching you.” Petitioner tried again to close the door, “and he hit it back into [her] several times.” It did not hurt, but it scared her. Petitioner said, “You need to stop, you’re scaring me.” Respondent said, “You need to calm the F down.” Petitioner “asked him to just wait downstairs,” and respondent said he would give her “ten minutes to get [her] S together and then [she] would have to go sit on the effing couch and listen to what he had to say.” A week later, on December 2, respondent came to the house to pick up his Peloton bike. It started raining, so he backed his vehicle toward the garage to load the bike from there, but he accidentally left the hatch up, which crashed into the garage door, damaging his vehicle. Petitioner heard the crash, followed by respondent yelling and cussing, and it scared her that he was so “angry and aggressive.” She grabbed the baby to go upstairs. Respondent came inside and yelled the F word twice from two feet away, which made the baby cry. During the two weeks after they broke up, the par- ties did not have a clear plan for the future in terms of living arrangements, parenting arrangements, or financial mat- ters. Respondent had gone back and forth about whether petitioner could stay in the house or whether he was going to sell it. He told her multiple times during that two-week period, “I can make things so much worse for you, you could have it so much worse, I can make things so ugly[,] I can make things very hard for you.” Asked if respondent was alluding to finances, petitioner testified that she did not know what he was alluding to but felt threatened by those statements.1 Petitioner moved out of the house after two weeks. She had nowhere to go, so she went to a domestic violence shelter. 1 Petitioner also testified that, once, during an argument, respondent, who is a psychiatric nurse practitioner, told her that he knew “exactly what to say to have somebody put into a psychiatric hold.” It is unclear when that statement was made. At the time, petitioner did not perceive it to be directed toward her but, later, looking back, thought it was a veiled threat to have her committed. Nonprecedential Memo Op: 339 Or App 632 (2025) 635

On December 8, petitioner initiated a FAPA pro- ceeding. The trial court held an ex parte hearing and issued a FAPA restraining order. It was a few days before the sher- iff’s office served the order on respondent. Before it was served, respondent repeatedly called and texted petitioner, stating that they needed to talk and that he needed to know where she was. He also tried to locate her through friends and family. Petitioner responded by text that she and the baby were safe and that she would send photos and updates about the baby. After not hearing from petitioner for 24 hours, respondent filed a missing-person report with the police on December 10. On December 18, the court held a contested FAPA hearing. Petitioner testified as described above. She fur- ther testified that she was scared for her physical safety because respondent was “so unpredictable” and that he could “try to get some kind of revenge” absent a restrain- ing order. Petitioner confirmed on cross-examination that she had never before claimed threats or abuse by respon- dent and that the restraining order was based entirely on the events since their breakup. Petitioner described respon- dent’s behavior since the breakup as “so different, so erratic, and so violent.” An example of “erratic” behavior was that he told her she could stay in the house but then a realtor came to start the sales process, and the realtor thought she had already found an apartment. The trial court continued the FAPA restraining order. It found petitioner’s testimony credible and believable, including finding that petitioner was “visibly afraid and shaken” while testifying. The court discredited respondent’s testimony, including finding that respondent, who appeared pro se, “was emotionally reactive and even aggressive during court proceedings, including erratic and, in his own words, unhinged.”2 The court found that respondent had abused petitioner in the preceding 180 days by “recklessly” placing 2 Based on the transcript, the finding that respondent was “emotionally reac- tive and even aggressive during court proceedings, including erratic,” must refer to his tone while representing himself and/or testifying, as it is not apparent from his words. As for the “unhinged” reference, respondent testified that the breakup was “a very stressful and emotionally draining process” and, early in his closing argument, apologized to the court if he “seem[ed] a little unhinged today” and referred to his emotions. 636 A. V. V. v. Sperla

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

A. V. V. v. Sperla
339 Or. App. 632 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
339 Or. App. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-v-v-v-sperla-orctapp-2025.