BIROL OZYESILPINAR v. HASSAN JALALI

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 18, 2021
Docket19-2427
StatusPublished

This text of BIROL OZYESILPINAR v. HASSAN JALALI (BIROL OZYESILPINAR v. HASSAN JALALI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BIROL OZYESILPINAR v. HASSAN JALALI, (Fla. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed August 18, 2021. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

No. 3D19-2427 Lower Tribunal No. 19-21027 ________________

Birol Ozyesilpinar, Appellant,

vs.

Hassan Jalali, Appellee.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Christine Bandin, Judge.

Bartlett Legal, PLLC, and Philip Bartlett, for appellant.

BickmanLaw, PLLC, and Joshua Bickman, for appellee.

Before LINDSEY, MILLER, and LOBREE, JJ.

LINDSEY, J. Appellant Birol Ozyesilpinar appeals from a Final Judgment of

Injunction for Protection against Stalking Violence entered in favor of

Appellee Hassan Jalali. Because the record is insufficient to establish a

minimum of two incidents of stalking, we reverse the permanent injunction.

I. BACKGROUND

Ozyesilpinar is the owner of a condominium unit in the Ocean Five

Condominiums. Jalali is the president of the condominium association. In

June 2019, the association filed an action against Ozyesilpinar seeking, inter

alia, to enjoin her from engaging in short-term rentals of her unit. 1 According

to Jalali, this caused Ozyesilpinar to retaliate, giving rise to Jalali’s underlying

Petition for Injunction for Protection Against Stalking.

In support of his Petition, Jalali listed six incidents comprised of emails,

phone calls, and personal contact—mostly with third parties—that he alleged

amounted to stalking, cyberstalking, and harassment. 2 These

1 Prior to the June 2019 action, a dispute between Ozyesilpinar and a prospective short-term rental tenant from England went viral. The prospective tenant sued Ozyesilpinar in November 2019, alleging racist and discriminatory conduct. This action remains pending. Although Jalali attempts to inject the unsavory allegations of this incident into this case, Ozyesilpinar’s behavior towards the prospective tenant has nothing to do with whether the statutory elements of stalking are satisfied as to Jalali. 2 Specifically, Jalali alleged the below listed instances of stalking, cyberstalking, and harassment, though there was less than complete

2 testimony during the evidentiary hearing as to these allegations; some were not mentioned at all.

• “First, on or about August 11th, 2019, [Ozyesilpinar] emailed three (3) of [Jalali’s] business associates, writing [Jalali] had been ‘arrested for gold smuggling.’”

• “Also on August 11th, 2019, [Ozyesilpinar] telephoned two (2) of [Jalali’s] employees and left voicemails telling the employees [Jalali] had been ‘arrested and jailed for gold smuggling’ and how this is ‘great news’ and how [Jalali] should bring ‘souvenirs’ and wondering ‘how did he eat while he was in Jail.’”

• “On or about August 12th, 2019 [Ozyesilpinar] approached two (2) business contacts of [Jalali] to tell them [Jalali] had been arrested and jailed for smuggling gold and funding terrorist organizations.”

• “On or about August 12th, 2019, [Ozyesilpinar] emailed ten (10) of [Jalali’s] business associates again [that Jalali] was a gold smuggler and insinuating [Jalali] has been the victim of prison rape in Colombia.”

• “On or about August 16th, 2019 [Ozyesilpinar] emailed seven (7) City of Miami Beach officials and employees again alleging [Jalali] was under investigation by the FBI for money laundering, gold smuggling and funding terrorists and that certain employees of the City of Miami Beach were part of [Jalali’s] criminal enterprise.”

• “On or about September 10th, 2019 [Ozyesilpinar] contacted three (3) of [Jalali’s] business associates telling the business associates [Jalali] ‘served prison time but did not bring us a souvenir’ and

3 communications were largely related to allegations of Jalali being involved in

gold smuggling in Colombia.

In September 2019, the lower court granted Jalali a temporary

injunction. In November 2019, the court conducted a final hearing to

determine whether to issue a permanent injunction. At the injunction

hearing, the court heard testimony regarding the following incidents: 3

• An employee of a gelato shop inside Ocean Five testified that Ozyesilpinar unexpectedly approached her one day and told her Jalali had been arrested for gold smuggling and to “take a look online. It is all over the internet.”

• Jalali testified that Ozyesilpinar sent him and several others an email on August 12, 2019, referencing Jalali’s alleged gold smuggling in Colombia and the short-term rental dispute between Ozyesilpinar and a prospective tenant from England. Jalali also testified about two incidents not alleged in his petition, a Tripadvisor review 4 of Ocean Five allegedly written by Ozyesilpinar and a Facebook post, both of which state that Jalali had been arrested in Colombia for gold smuggling.

threatening the business associates with the gold smuggling ‘profits being transferred to Libya to terrorist organizations’ …. and that the contacted business associates ‘knew about this and are bad actors as well.’” 3 Jalali called several witnesses, each of whom was asked if they feared Ozyesilpinar. The trial court correctly disregarded this evidence: “I am not considering who else was in fear of her because that is not something that I can consider.” 4 Ozyesilpinar denied writing the Tripadvisor review.

4 • The office manager of Ocean Five testified about an August 11, 2019 voicemail from Ozyesilpinar asking him why he never told her that Jalali was arrested in Colombia for smuggling gold.

• The front desk clerk at Ocean Five testified that he received a phone call from Ozyesilpinar on August 11, 2019, informing him that Jalali had been arrested for smuggling gold in Colombia and asking if Jalali had sent him any gold as a souvenir.

• The secretary of the Ocean Five Condominium Association testified that he receives a lot of emails from Ozyesilpinar, including emails that Jalali should not serve on the board.

Ozyesilpinar’s position was that she had a legitimate concern that the

president of her condominium association was engaged in illegal activities.

On cross-examination, Jalali testified that although he was not arrested in

Colombia, he was under investigation by the Colombian government for

investments he made in a company that had licenses to mine gold. Other

witnesses, such as the office manager and the secretary, agreed on cross-

examination that Ozyesilpinar could have legitimate reasons for asking

whether Jalali was under criminal investigation.

The court found that Jalali and Ozyesilpinar “had a very tumultuous

relationship” from day one and that there were no innocent parties. The court

also partially agreed with Ozyesilpinar, finding that “in the very beginning

there [were] a lot of legitimate reasons why you were sending e-mails about

the building and about the safety of the building and everything else[.]”

5 However, the court also found that despite Ozyesilpinar’s legitimate

concerns, “it took a turn at some point.”

The court ultimately entered a permanent injunction based on two

incidents. The first was the August 12, 2019 email to Jalali (and others) that

referenced Jalali’s alleged gold smuggling in Colombia and the short-term

rental dispute between Ozyesilpinar and a prospective tenant from England.

The court found that this email was “inflammatory” and not sent for a

legitimate purpose. Ozyesilpinar agreed.

The trial judge also mentioned Ozyesilpinar’s conversation with the

gelato shop employee. But when Ozyesilpinar insisted the conversation

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BIROL OZYESILPINAR v. HASSAN JALALI, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birol-ozyesilpinar-v-hassan-jalali-fladistctapp-2021.