C.M.-o. v. T.O.

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedApril 23, 2025
DocketA-2510-23
StatusUnpublished

This text of C.M.-o. v. T.O. (C.M.-o. v. T.O.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.M.-o. v. T.O., (N.J. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

RECORD IMPOUNDED

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2510-23

C.M.-O.,1

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

T.O.,

Defendant-Appellant. __________________________

Submitted March 18, 2025 – Decided April 23, 2025

Before Judges Gooden Brown and Smith.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Bergen County, Docket No. FV-02-1385-24.

Einhorn, Barbarito, Frost, Botwinick, Nunn & Musmanno, PC, attorneys for appellant (Matheu D. Nunn, Bonnie C. Frost, and Jessie M. Mills, on the briefs).

C.M.-O., respondent pro se.

1 We refer to the parties using their initials to protect their privacy and the confidentiality of these proceedings. R. 1:38-3(d)(9). PER CURIAM

Defendant appeals from a final restraining order (FRO) entered against

him pursuant to the Prevention of Domestic Violence Act of 1991 (PDVA) .2

Defendant contends the trial court erred by making unsupported Silver3 prong

one and two findings. Defendant also argues that the trial court was biased

against him. Our review of the record leads us to affirm for the reasons which

follow.

I.

The parties were married for twenty years and had two children together,

C.O. and B.O. We recount a series of incidents testified to by the parties at the

FRO hearing.

A.

In 2021, plaintiff served defendant with a divorce proposal. On October

22, 2021, defendant requested more time from plaintiff to consider and address

the proposal. When plaintiff declined to permit defendant additional time, he

struck a wall several times in front of plaintiff. Later that day, plaintiff obtained

2 N.J.S.A. 2C:25-17 to -35. 3 Silver v. Silver, 387 N.J. Super. 112 (App. Div. 2006).

A-2510-23 2 a temporary restraining order (TRO) against defendant. Police then arrived at

the parties' residence and instructed defendant to leave. After negotiating civil

restraints with defendant, plaintiff dismissed the TRO. The civil restraints terms

required that defendant leave the home, find new housing within thirty days, and

pay plaintiff $100,000.

In August 2022, plaintiff dropped off B.O. for a therapy appointment ,

which defendant was also attending. As plaintiff left the therapist's office,

defendant confronted her and told plaintiff he would "bury her." Next, in

December 2022, defendant approached plaintiff and B.O. when he saw them at

a gym. Again, he stated that he would "bury her."

B.

Between July and December 2023, defendant sent plaintiff numerous

emails. While plaintiff had routed defendant's emails to her spam folder, she

still reviewed the emails in order to comply with the parties' Marital Settlement

Agreement requirement that she remain in communication with defendant. The

contents of nine of those emails became evidence at the FRO hearing. As they

make up a substantial part of the FRO record, we need not recite them verbatim

here. The emails contained an incessant and vindictive series of epithets which

defendant directed at plaintiff. Defendant belittled plaintiff's intelligence, her

A-2510-23 3 "financial aptitude", and her capacity for achieving success. Defendant

described plaintiff as: "stupid"; "ignorant"; a "charlatan"; a "buffoon"; lacking

integrity; a "liar and POS"; and a "pathetic, whining character." Among other

accusations, defendant accused plaintiff of having "deep deficiencies" as a

mother. In one email, he described plaintiff's attorney as a "bitch."

C.

During the parties' separation, plaintiff learned that B.O. was no longer

eligible to attend school in Saddle River as plaintiff and the child had relocated

away from the community. She requested a residency hearing, which the Saddle

River Board scheduled for December 13, 2023, after its general meeting. On

December 13, the Board notified defendant of the residency hearing.

Defendant arrived at the hearing before plaintiff and entered the school

during the Board's general meeting. Plaintiff arrived with her boyfriend, L.S.,

but entered the school alone. After spotting defendant inside, plaintiff left the

school and asked L.S. to meet her outside. Defendant eventually exited the

school and approached plaintiff and L.S. He told plaintiff, "you['d] better run."

During the episode, defendant then told L.S., "don't worry . . . I'm not going to

kill her tonight." After plaintiff called the police, defendant told L.S., "don't

worry . . . I don't have a gun tonight." Police arrived, interviewed the parties,

A-2510-23 4 and left. The parties waited at the school for the residency hearing without

further incident.

D.

The next day, December 14, plaintiff filed a complaint seeking a

temporary restraining order (TRO), alleging harassment as the predicate act,

stemming from the Saddle River residency hearing incident. The complaint

included the past incidents between the parties detailed above. Plaintiff

amended the TRO on December 28 to include additional pre-December 13

history.

Starting on January 30, 2024, the FRO trial took place over three non-

consecutive days. Plaintiff, defendant, and L.S. all testified. The court also

reviewed defendant's emails to plaintiff as well as surveillance footage outside

the Saddle River residency hearing.

The trial court found plaintiff proved by a preponderance of the evidence

that defendant committed the predicate act of harassment under N.J.S.A. 2C:33-

4. The court initially made credibility findings. Although the court found that

plaintiff was "not totally a believable witness[,]" it found defendant was

"without credibility and without any real believability . . . ." The court stated:

[Defendant] was often evasive, did not listen to questions, [and] reworked those questions for . . . his

A-2510-23 5 own purposes for . . . this hearing. He often changed the questions asked of him by counsel and . . . twisted those questions so that his narrative with regard to these issues would be presented in a better light for his purposes.

The trial court rejected defendant's argument that his statements to L.S.

were meant to be sardonic and facetious.

The court analyzed prong one of Silver, assessing whether defendant acted

with the purpose to harass the plaintiff. It stated:

Great pains [were taken by defendant to show] that he had no intent to harass, that this [c]ourt finds that to be without real credibility and without any real believability[,] as I stated on the record regarding credibility. The testimony regarding [defendant] not going to kill her – ["]don't worry, [L.S.] I'm not going to kill her tonight,["] basically infers it may not be tonight but it may be some other time. ["]I don't have my gun with me tonight.["] When pieced together[,] it only leads this [c]ourt to the position that [defendant] did have the intent to harass, annoy and bother the plaintiff.

The court also addressed Silver prong two, finding defendant: struck and

damaged a wall while plaintiff was nearby; improperly engaged with plaintiff at

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