Alan Emin Halac v. A.N.H., By Next Friend Angela Lumley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 5, 2023
Docket1491224
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alan Emin Halac v. A.N.H., By Next Friend Angela Lumley (Alan Emin Halac v. A.N.H., By Next Friend Angela Lumley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alan Emin Halac v. A.N.H., By Next Friend Angela Lumley, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Humphreys, Malveaux and Fulton Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia

ALAN EMIN HALAC MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1491-22-4 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX SEPTEMBER 5, 2023 A.N.H., BY NEXT FRIEND ANGELA LUMLEY

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LOUDOUN COUNTY Jeanette A. Irby, Judge

Melanie Hubbard (Malinowski Hubbard, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant.

Amanda M. Stone Swart (Elizabeth M. Ross, Guardian ad litem for the minor child; Livesay & Myers, P.C.; Beckman Schmalzle Georgelas & Ross, PLC, on brief), for appellee.

Alan Emin Halac (father) appeals a protective order the circuit court entered in favor of a

minor child (A.N.H.), an adult child (M.H.), and Angela Lumley (mother). On appeal, father

alleges that the circuit court erred in granting the protective order because the evidence was

insufficient to prove that the protective order was necessary to protect mother and the children’s

health and safety, or that mother and the children had a reasonable apprehension of death, sexual

assault, or bodily injury. Father also argues that the circuit court erred in granting A.N.H.

possession of a dog and in prohibiting him from contacting A.N.H.’s therapist. For the following

reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND

Mother and father divorced in 2014. Following mother and father’s divorce, A.N.H., who

was 15 years old at the time of the underlying circuit court trial, lived equally with each parent.

Mother and father’s adult child, M.H., had also lived with both parents, but moved out of father’s

house after turning 18 years old. A.N.H.’s dog, which father had purchased in September 2021,

also lived with father. A.N.H. and father had a difficult relationship, resulting in a number of

complaints to Child Protective Services (CPS). Some of these complaints resulted in family

assessments, where CPS made various recommendations, including that father refrain from physical

discipline.

On April 22, 2022, father drove A.N.H. to his residence after school. When they arrived

home, father followed A.N.H. upstairs. Father was “angry” and “pushed [A.N.H.] from behind,”

causing her to hit the bedroom door and fall to the ground. He then followed A.N.H. downstairs.

Father was “mad” and “came after” A.N.H., grabbing and restraining her near his office. Father

picked her up and “threw [her] to the ground.” While she sat on the ground, father sat down at his

desk and asked A.N.H. why she was on the ground “like nothing just happened.” A.N.H. was

“confused and scared” and told him that she was on the ground because he pushed her and threw her

to the ground. When she tried to leave, father became “angry” and tried to grab her again. Father

“went to touch [A.N.H.’s] butt,” but A.N.H. was able to push him off. Father, however, “grabbed”

her arms and again “threw [A.N.H.] back to the ground.” Although A.N.H. did not have “marks” as

a result of the fall, she was “hurt” and “really shaken up.”

During the incident, father began recording A.N.H. “in case there was a new claim against

[him] for any reason,” and this recording was admitted into evidence. On the recording, A.N.H. can

be heard yelling at father and telling him to stop “grabbing” her. The circuit court heard the

recording concerning the incident, including father’s recorded statements that he “grabbed” A.N.H.

-2- and that she “need[ed] to get [her] butt spanked.” Father also told A.N.H. on the recording that he

would not take care of the dog anymore if A.N.H. was “going to be like this” and that he would “get

rid of that damn Shepard.” According to father’s testimony at trial, A.N.H. “was . . . trying to create

a reaction.” Father also admitted at trial that he “spanked” A.N.H. but denied grabbing her and

instead testified that he “corralled her to the stairs.”

After father threw her to the ground the second time, A.N.H. went upstairs, retrieved her

school laptop, and locked herself in the bathroom. A.N.H. emailed mother and her school counselor

and told them that father was “attacking” and “touching” her and threatening to “kill” the dog.

A.N.H. asked both mother and the school counselor to help her because she was “scared.” Father

then began “banging” on the door and “threatening to break it down.” A.N.H. left the bathroom and

gave father the laptop, at which point father again “started threatening” her dog. A.N.H. remained

at father’s house through the weekend, but “mostly stayed in [the] bathroom or near the bathroom.”

A.N.H.’s emails triggered an alert through the Loudoun County Public School’s email

system, after which Deputy Alyssa Kallmayer of the Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office went to

father’s residence for a welfare check on the day of the incident. No one answered the door, despite

Deputy Kallmayer knocking three times and ringing the doorbell. Deputy Kallmayer later spoke to

father twice on the phone that evening during which father “was upset” and “angry.” When Deputy

Kallmayer asked to speak with A.N.H., father refused. Deputy Kallmayer also contacted mother,

who “described past abuse incidents” between father and A.N.H. and “expressed her concern” about

father’s behavior. Deputy Kallmayer also contacted the principal of A.N.H.’s school, who stated

that father had “been extremely uncooperative with the school in the past and . . . often display[ed]

anger towards the school when anyone trie[d] to contact him.” Deputy Kallmayer concluded that

the police needed to take no further action at that time, but noted that CPS and the school counselor

would follow-up and mother would call the police if any further incidents occurred.

-3- Following the incident, father emailed A.N.H. and stated that A.N.H.’s dog would have “no

one to sustain the care and attention she needs” and that he would “not likely be able to keep [the

dog] much longer” if A.N.H. failed to return to his residence. A.N.H. and mother were able to

retrieve the dog from father’s home on May 9, 2022. At that time, the dog did not appear to have

been “properly taken care of”; mother and A.N.H. could see her ribs and hip bones, and her sides

“were concave.”

On May 9, 2022, A.N.H., by mother as her next friend, petitioned for a protective order

under Code § 16.1-279.1 against father, citing the April 22, 2022 incident. In the protective order

affidavit, A.N.H. stated that the “abuse” caused “red hand prints” from father grabbing her and her

“shoulder hurt from hitting the door.” The JDR court granted a preliminary protective order.

Following a hearing, the JDR court granted A.N.H.’s petition and issued a two-year protective order

against father.

Father appealed to the circuit court, and the parties convened for hearing on August 31,

2022. At the conclusion of the trial, the circuit court ruled that it was not dissolving the protective

order. The circuit court was concerned for A.N.H.’s mental health and found that evidence of

“family abuse [was] consistent with the recording.” The circuit court also cited the CPS complaints

and A.N.H.’s emails to mother and the school counselor asking for help. The circuit court

concluded that father was “not doing anything to protect [A.N.H.] emotionally” and that when

A.N.H. was in father’s care, he created “the instability, the fear, the reasonable apprehension of

death, sexual assault, or bodily injury.”

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