Bryan Paul Hernandez v. Paul Roger Hernandez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 2, 2024
Docket39802-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bryan Paul Hernandez v. Paul Roger Hernandez (Bryan Paul Hernandez v. Paul Roger Hernandez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan Paul Hernandez v. Paul Roger Hernandez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED DECEMBER 2, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

BRYAN PAUL HERNANDEZ, ) ) No. 39802-1-III Appellant, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) PAUL ROGER HERNANDEZ, ) ) Respondent. ) )

FEARING, J. — Bryan Hernandez appeals the superior court’s denial of her petition

for a domestic violence protection order protecting her from her father, Roger Hernandez.

Hernandez complains that the superior court erred by failing to hold a hearing before

denying her petition. Hernandez argues that denial of the petition proves the superior

court was either biased against her or did not review the content of her petition. Because

Hernandez failed to comply with court rules in designating clerk’s papers and citing to

the record in her appeal brief and because insufficient evidence supported the issuance of

a domestic violence protection order, we affirm the superior court.

FACTS

As analyzed later, Bryan Hernandez cites to no facts in her appeal brief.

Therefore, this court cannot properly review her appeal. She attached to her notice of No. 39802-1-III, Hernandez v. Hernandez

appeal a purported petition for a domestic violence protection order, but the superior

court clerk never sent the petition to this court as a clerk’s paper.

The petition form attached to Bryan Hernandez’s notice of appeal prompted

Hernandez to respond to a variety of questions. We provide the relevant questions in

regular text and Hernandez’s answers in bold text.

11. I ask for a protection order with these restraints: .... Firearms and Other Dangerous Weapons O. . . . .... Even if the restrained person does not have firearms, has the restrained person ever used firearms, other weapons or objects to threaten or harm you. [X] Yes [ ] No If Yes, describe what happened. Restrained person and his wife once threatened to shoot me with their 12-gauge if I ever came home to my house.

Notice of Appeal (NOA) at 12-14 (Petition for Protection Order (Order) at 4-6).

13. Length of Order .... I need this order to last for: . . . 10 years If you checked more or less than one year, briefly explain why. Restrained person and his wife have abused me for my whole life. .... 14. Immediate Protection: Do you need a Temporary Protection Order to start immediately, without prior notice to the restrained person? [X] Yes [ ] No 15. Immediate Weapons Surrender: Do you want a temporary order that requires the restrained person give up all firearms, other dangerous weapons, and concealed pistol licenses right away, and prohibits the restrained person from getting more?

2 No. 39802-1-III, Hernandez v. Hernandez

[X] Yes [ ] No If Yes to 14 or 15, explain why: What serious immediate harm or irreparable injury could occur if an order is not issued immediately without prior notice to the restrained person? .... Restrained person and his wife are narcissists and have threatened acts of violence against myself and others in order to deprive people of their God-given rights. Comments such as “Oh, we have a twelve-gauge,” and “We’ll never let you go home,” serve to support my position.

NOA at 16 (Order at 8).

16. Most Recent Incident. What happened most recently that made you want a protection order? . . . For three years restrained person paid County Officials to unlawfully imprison me in County Jail and now Eastern State Hospital, took all my belongings and placed them in storage and my house without my permission, threatened to stop paying for my storage unit in order to control me, paid officers in Benton County Jail to beat me up and charge me with it, blatantly abused the guardianship process, paid court officials to lie about my wife and I, slandered or outright lied to police about me right up to the present. 17. Past Incidents. What happened in the past that makes you want a protection order? . . . Restrained person bit me in the back in 2013 resulting in a CPS investigation where he lied and refused to read the material provided to him, slandered and blamed my mother for my behavior caused by his Satanic Ritual Abuse against me, relentlessly sued my mother then lied about it, kidnapped me from a foster home in 2012, would not allow me to have many friends, in 2018 would not allow me to watch certain TV shows or would confiscate my computer if I was having “too much fun,” or I had to ask to use the bathroom. 18. Medical Treatment. Describe any medical treatment you received for issues related to your request for protection. None—it was (and still is) witheld [sic] from me.

NOA at 17-18 (Order at 9-10).

3 No. 39802-1-III, Hernandez v. Hernandez

Roger Hernandez, in his appeal brief, denies all allegations of abuse alleged in

Bryan Hernandez’s petition. Br. of Resp’t 1-2.

PROCEDURE

On February 1, 2023, Bryan Hernandez filed a petition for a domestic violence

protection order, from which petition we previously quoted. She identified herself as the

primary protected person and her father, Roger Hernandez, as the respondent. Hernandez

also identified “Sydney Stevens-Hernandez” and “Kathryn Lee Bray” as additional

persons to be protected by the order. According to Roger, Sydney’s last name is not

“Stevens-Hernandez.” The surname is only “Stevens.” Br. of Resp’t at 1. Roger claims

Sydney is someone Bryan Hernandez met during her youth. Although Sydney and Bryan

Hernandez have not communicated for years, Hernandez believes she and Sydney are

married. Br. of Resp’t 1.

The superior court entered an order denying Bryan Hernandez’s petition on

February 2, 2023. The court did not hold a hearing on the petition. In the order denying

the petition, the superior court indicated it found insufficient evidence supported the

issuance of a protection order. According to the court, the petition did not identify a

specific incident and approximate date of behavior that would have supported such an

order. The court also wrote in the order that Hernandez had fourteen days to amend her

petition and, if she did not do so, the court would dismiss the case. Hernandez did not

amend the petition.

4 No. 39802-1-III, Hernandez v. Hernandez

LAW AND ANALYSIS

Violation of Court Rules

RAP 9.6(a) requires an appellant to file with the superior court clerk a designation

of clerk’s papers to transmit to this court for review. Bryan Hernandez designated clerk’s

papers, but declined to pay for the cost of copying and transmittal to this court.

RAP 10.3(a)(5) demands that an appeal brief contain citations to the clerk’s papers for all

facts alleged in the brief. Because Hernandez failed to pay for transmittal of clerk’s

papers, she fails to cite to page numbers of facts alleged in her brief.

Bryan Hernandez attached a petition she purportedly filed with the superior court

and the denial order purportedly signed by the superior court to her notice of appeal. In

her brief, she cites to clerk’s papers for the denial of her motion. Nevertheless, her brief

fails to outline any facts she alleges and seeks for this court to review. Because of the

failure to follow RAP 9.6(a) and 10.3(a)(5), this court affirms the decision of the superior

court.

Insufficiency of Evidence

In arguing the superior court erred in denying her petition for a domestic violence

protection order, Bryan Hernandez first asserts that the order entered by the trial court

contradicts this court’s decision in Ugolini v. Ugolini, 11 Wn. App. 2d 443, 453 P.3d

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Bryan Paul Hernandez v. Paul Roger Hernandez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-paul-hernandez-v-paul-roger-hernandez-washctapp-2024.