Brandon v. Brandon

513 S.E.2d 589, 132 N.C. App. 646, 1999 N.C. App. LEXIS 272
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 6, 1999
DocketCOA98-329
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 513 S.E.2d 589 (Brandon v. Brandon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandon v. Brandon, 513 S.E.2d 589, 132 N.C. App. 646, 1999 N.C. App. LEXIS 272 (N.C. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

GREENE, Judge.

Michael Brandon (Defendant) appeals from the trial court’s entry of a Domestic Violence Protective Order (DVPO).

Deborah J. Brandon (Plaintiff) and Defendant were married in December of 1992. Plaintiff, her two children from a previous relationship, and Defendant all resided in the parties’ marital residence through mid-September of 1997. During August 1 and early September of 1997, Defendant worked out of town during the week, and only resided in the marital residence on weekends. Plaintiff testified that she generally stayed at her mother-in-law’s home on the weekends while Defendant was at the marital residence. Plaintiff had changed the locks on the marital residence as a result of prior problems, but testified that, on 1 August 1997, she was instructed by her attorney to allow Defendant access to the marital residence and ■ immediately “had keys made available to [Defendant].” That evening while Plaintiff was away from the marital residence, Defendant “smashed in the door to the garage.” Defendant later told Plaintiff he had not been aware that she had made keys available to him.

Plaintiff and Defendant owned a rental house, and on 18 September 1997, Plaintiff and her children moved out of the marital residence and into the parties’ rental house because “I was afraid of [Defendant]; ... I knew somebody was going to get hurt if we didn’t get out of the [marital residence] soon.” On 20 September 1997, Plaintiff’s parents telephoned her at work to inform her that Defendant was “sitting outside the [rental] house in the dark in the car with the lights on drinking coffee, reading the paper.” Plaintiff telephoned the sheriff and returned to the rental house. Shortly after she returned, two deputies arrived. While Plaintiff spoke with the deputies,

*648 [Defendant] went over to the garage door and was going to open that. And I put my hand and my foot on the handle so that [it] would not open. [Defendant] started carrying on, “Oh, she’s attacking me; look, she’s attacking me; I’m being abused.” And the police stepped in at that point and said, no, I was not attacking him. And at that point that’s when they asked him that he better leave.

Plaintiff continued:

At that point I was so upset and so afraid of what was going to happen because the police indicated to me that he had a right to break in, he had a right to bust anything he wanted because we jointly own this piece of [rental] property. They could not prevent him from going in. I was scared to death.

Plaintiff testified that the deputies “finally had to tell [Defendant] to leave.... At that point, he finally did walk out, laughing. He mumbled to me he would see me later, and he left.” Plaintiff testified that she immediately “removed [her children] from the [rental] house. I had them go stay with their grandmother.” Within the next two days, Plaintiff was informed by a neighbor that, on the afternoon of 20 September 1997, Defendant had stated “he would put a bullet between [Plaintiff’s] eyes if [she] came near his property.” On 22 September 1997, Plaintiff filed a complaint and motion for a DVPO.

Deputy Sheriff Shawn Patrick Bowen (Deputy Bowen) testified that, on 20 September 1997, when he and another deputy arrived at the rental house Plaintiff had moved into with her children, Defendant was sitting in his car across the street. The deputies spoke with Defendant, then “went to the [rental] house. And [Defendant] followed us up to the house. And we asked him to please step back and let us go talk to [Plaintiff] first to get her side of the story.” While the deputies were inside speaking with Plaintiff, Deputy Bowen “heard the garage door — I heard like a banging.”

And that’s when [Plaintiff] ran outside of the [rental] house and said he’s breaking into my garage. So, we followed right behind. . . . And I did observe his hand on the handle and he was trying to open the door. And then [Plaintiff] put her hand on the handle and her foot down on the door and told him to stop. And he backed up and said she — if I can recall correctly, he said, “She *649 assaulted me. Did you see that?” And we said, “She did not assault you; let’s end this now.”

Deputy Bowen also testified that Plaintiff “was asking us is there anything we can do. Finally we had to stop him and we had to ask him to leave before there was [sic] any other problems.” Deputy Bowen noted that as Defendant was leaving, “he did say, 1 will get you’ [to Plaintiff]. And we did tell him we don’t want to hear no threats here. And he said, ‘in court.’ ” Deputy Bowen further testified that although Plaintiff did not call for further assistance that day, “we did keep checking back on the place.”

Defendant also testified at the hearing, stating that he had telephoned the sheriff’s department early on the morning of 20 September 1997 to ask them to meet him at the parties’ rental house so he could retrieve his personal property. Defendant testified that when the deputies asked him to leave the premises, he “turned around to [Plaintiff] and I said I will get back or something there to that effect. And then the officer said don’t make threats. And I said, ‘Sir, I’m not making threats; I’ll get her in court.’ And I turned around and left.” Defendant further testified that, after returning to the marital residence, he went to a neighbor’s home and began discussing the parties’ separation. A neighbor asked Defendant what he would do if Plaintiff came onto his property, and Defendant responded that he would call the police. The neighbor then asked what he would do if the police did not come, and Defendant replied: “I’m going to run in the house.” Finally, the neighbor asked what Defendant would do if Plaintiff “comes at you with a gun?” Defendant responded: “I’m going to shoot her right between the damn eyes.” It was Defendant’s understanding that the neighbor later told Plaintiff that Defendant had threatened to shoot her between the eyes. Defendant testified that he “never ha[d] hurt her, never would hurt her, [and had] no desire to hurt anybody on this earth.”

On cross-examination, Plaintiff’s attorney asked Defendant if, after speaking to the deputies on the morning of 20 September 1997, he thought it was okay to attempt to break into the garage of the parties’ rental house. Defendant responded:

The conversation I had at length with the sheriff, the deputy sheriff, was as to what rights I would have. And yes, I had the right to touch my own [rental] house. Yes, I had the right to do a lot of things. Just as [Plaintiff] testified earlier, I had the right to break i[n] if I had to.

*650 After hearing all the testimony, the trial court marked the following finding 2 on the Administrative Office of the Courts Form AOC-CV-306, a preprinted form DVPO:

The defendant has attempted to cause or has intentionally caused bodily injury to the plaintiff or has threatened the plaintiff or a member of plaintiffs family or household with immediate serious bodily injury; or has committed a sexual offense against the plaintiff; the last act of violence occurred on or about

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
513 S.E.2d 589, 132 N.C. App. 646, 1999 N.C. App. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandon-v-brandon-ncctapp-1999.