Butters v. Herbert

2012 UT App 329, 291 P.3d 826, 722 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 336, 2012 WL 5883142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 23, 2012
Docket20110310-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2012 UT App 329 (Butters v. Herbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butters v. Herbert, 2012 UT App 329, 291 P.3d 826, 722 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 336, 2012 WL 5883142 (Utah Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

11 Alona Butters obtained a temporary civil stalking injunction against Nathan Gary Herbert following a series of incidents that took place over several years. After a two-day hearing, the district court granted Butters a three-year stalking injunction as well as her attorney fees and costs. Herbert now appeals the district court's decision. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

T2 The background we set out follows the district court's extensive factual findings. 1 Butters's history with Herbert stretches back to December 2004, shortly after Herbert went on a series of dates with Butters's sister. Butters was with her sister and other relatives in a store when one of her relatives spotted Herbert outside. Not wanting to be seen, the women hid in the back of the store. Herbert had already spotted them, however, and approached them immediately upon entering. He asked if the women were hiding from him, and Butters's sister confirmed that they were. This was the first time that Butters had ever seen Herbert, and she specifically remembered him staring directly at her.

T3 Not long after that initial incident, Butters encountered Herbert while exercising at a gym. During her workout, a woman informed her that a man behind her was staring at her and touching himself inappropriately. Butters turned around to find Herbert staring directly at her with his hand touching his genital area. After she made eye contact with him, Herbert quickly left the area without saying anything. Butters was uncertain whether Herbert had been fondling himself, as the other woman believed, and decided to give him the benefit of the doubt and try to forget the incident. She did, however, tell her sister about it.

4 In March 2005, only a brief time after the gym incident, Butters's sister obtained a civil stalking injunction against Herbert after he choked her. The stalking injunction prohibited Herbert from making contact with Butters's sister and with Butters herself, apparently because of the gym incident. That injunction was in place from March 2005 until March 2009, during which time Butters did not have any problems with Herbert.

45 Within one month after the expiration of that stalking injunction, however, Butters again encountered Herbert, this time at a grocery store. As she was walking into the store, Butters saw a vehicle speeding in her direction. The car came to a stop, and Butters saw that Herbert, whom she immediately recognized, was behind the wheel. She rushed into the store, then turned around to see Herbert's car repeatedly circling her vehicle. This went on for several minutes. Having remembered the "touching" incident *829 at the gym and that Herbert had choked her sister years earlier, Butters was "mortified," "seared," and "really upset" by Herbert's conduct in the parking lot. From inside the store, Butters called the police to report the incident.

T6 Only three months later, Herbert confronted Butters in the parking lot of a shopping mall. Butters was standing behind her vehicle preparing to enter the mall when Herbert approached her, came within a few feet of her, and silently stared at her. Butters, who at the time was on the phone with her husband, said, "Oh my gosh, [Herbert] is standing right here staring at me." Immediately after she said this, Herbert retreated behind a pillar just in front of the mall entrance. From that vantage point, Herbert continued to stare at Butters until she put her belongings back in her car and drove away. Butters was aware that a restraining order had previously been in place that directed Herbert to stay away from the mall, growing out of an incident in which he bothered a female employee of a department store at the mall, After Butters left, she notified mall security that Herbert was on the premises.

T7 In August 2010, just over one year after the mall incident, another confrontation occurred at the gym. 2 As Butters entered the gym from the parking lot, Herbert walked out and looked at her with a "glazed fixated look over his face." Butters specifically asked him to leave her alone and went into the gym. Onee inside, Butters turned around to look for Herbert and saw him outside, cireling her vehicle on foot. Afraid for her safety, Butters asked one of the gym employees if she could stand by him. Herbert then reentered the gym and moved through different exercise areas while constantly watching Butters, who refused to be alone anywhere in the gym. Butters eventually called the police from inside the gym and was advised to go to the police station to fill out the necessary forms for obtaining a stalking injunction. 3 After she filed the necessary paperwork with the court, a temporary stalking injunction was granted on August 10, 2010. Herbert requested a hearing, which was held three months later. After considering the testimony and evidence, the district court entered a three-year stalking injunetion against Herbert and awarded attorney fees to Butters. Herbert appeals.

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

18 Herbert challenges the district court's determination that his actions constituted "a course of conduct directed at" But-ters 4 See Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-106.5(2) *830 (LexisNexis Supp. 2012) 5 He also contends that the district court erred in concluding that a reasonable person in Butters's position would have suffered "emotional distress." See id. "'The proper interpretation and application of a statute is a question of law which we review for correctness, affording no deference to the district court's legal conclusion[s].'" Ellison v. Stam, 2006 UT App 150, ¶ 16, 136 P.3d 1242 (quoting Gutierrez v. Medley, 972 P.2d 913, 914-15 (Utah 1998)) (alteration in original).

19 Lastly, Herbert claims that he is entitled to an award of attorney fees incurred during both the district court proceedings and this appeal. "Whether attorney fees are recoverable in an action is a question of law, which we review for correctness." Valcarce v. Fitzgerald, 961 P.2d 305, 315 (Utah 1998).

ANALYSIS

10 For purposes of the statute governing civil stalking injunctions, " 'stalking' means the crime of stalking as defined in [the erimi-nal stalking statute]." Utah Code Ann. § T7-3a-101(1) (LexisNexis Supp. 2012). The criminal stalking statute provides, in relevant part, as follows:

A person is guilty of stalking who intentionally or knowingly engages in a course of conduct directed at a specific person and knows or should know that the course of conduct would cause a reasonable person:
(a) to fear for the person's own safety or the safety of a third person; or
(b) to suffer other emotional distress.

Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 UT App 329, 291 P.3d 826, 722 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 336, 2012 WL 5883142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butters-v-herbert-utahctapp-2012.