Coutant v. Durell

2021 IL App (3d) 210255, 193 N.E.3d 754, 456 Ill. Dec. 514
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 2021
Docket3-21-0255
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2021 IL App (3d) 210255 (Coutant v. Durell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coutant v. Durell, 2021 IL App (3d) 210255, 193 N.E.3d 754, 456 Ill. Dec. 514 (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

2021 IL App (3d) 210255

Opinion filed December 13, 2021 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

BROOK COUTANT, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 21st Judicial Circuit, Petitioner-Appellee, ) Kankakee County, Illinois. ) v. ) Appeal No. 3-21-0255 ) Circuit No. 21-OP-264 JEAN DURELL, ) ) The Honorable Respondent-Appellant. ) Scott N. Sliwinski, ) Judge, presiding. _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE DAUGHERITY delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice McDade concurred in the judgment and opinion. Justice Holdridge concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion. _____________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

¶1 Petitioner, Brook Coutant, filed a verified petition for a stalking no contact order to be

entered against respondent, Jean Durell, pursuant to the Stalking No Contact Order Act (Act)

(740 ILCS 21/1 et seq. (West 2020)), with Brook listing herself as the petitioner and her three

minor children as other protected parties. Initially, the trial court granted Brook’s petition on an

emergency basis for 21 days and, subsequently, after a hearing, entered a two-year plenary

stalking no contact order for Brook and her three minor children against Jean. Jean appealed,

arguing: (1) the trial court erred in entering the plenary stalking no contact order where the trial court failed to identify two or more acts necessary to establish a “course of conduct”; (2) the Act

did not intend for a single two-hour isolated incident to constitute two or more acts required to

establish a course of conduct; and (3) there was no evidence to support the inclusion of the

minors in the stalking no contact order. We affirm the trial court’s plenary stalking no contact

order against Jean in relation to Brook as the petitioner and vacate the order as to the minor

children as additional protected parties.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 The incident at issue took place on the evening May 1, 2021, and involved phone calls,

voicemail messages, and text messages from Jean to Brook. Brook and Reginald Coutant were

previously married and had divorced. Brook and Reginald had three children together (the

minors). As of May 1, 2021, Reginald and Jean were in a dating relationship and lived together

in Jean’s house. For more than a year, Brook and Reginald’s three minor children had been

staying with Reginald and Jean, in Jean’s home, during Reginald’s parenting time.

¶4 A. Brook’s Verified Petition for Stalking No Contact Order

¶5 On May 3, 2021, Brook filed a verified petition in the trial court for a stalking no contact

order against Jean. In filing the petition, Brook named herself as the petitioner and listed names

of her three children (the full names of J.C, A.C., and M.C.) as “other protected parties.”

¶6 In the petition, Brook alleged that on May 1, 2021, at 9 p.m., Jean started texting her

while Brook was at work, sending “many threatening texts threatening [Brook’s] job, to beat

[Brook] up, threatening to tell the children that their mom is a whore and that [Jean] was going to

tell them sexually explicit content to them [sic].” Brook further alleged that Jean left many

voicemails as well, and that the minors could be heard in the background of one message. Brook

2 stated that she previously had to have a restraining order entered against Jean “for stalking and

threatening.”

¶7 B. Emergency Stalking No Contact Order

¶8 On May 3, 2021, the trial court held a hearing. Brook appeared pro se, and Jean was not

present for the hearing. Brook was sworn, and she testified that on May 1, 2021, Jean called her

cellphone multiple times, left six voicemails, and sent Brook “a lot of threatening texts.” Brook

further testified that in the texts Jean was “threatening that she was going to beat me up;

threatening that she was going to tell everyone at my new job about who I am; threatening to tell

my children that I was a whore and tell them sexually explicit comments about the man that I am

seeing; threatening to tell [J.C., her oldest child] who they are.” Brook testified that she did not

respond to Jean’s texts. Brook stated that on May 1, 2021, the minors were with Reginald at

Jean’s home for the weekend and on the voicemails that Jean had left, Brook could hear the

minors in the background, which was concerning to Brook that “they’re listening to this”

because the content was “very explicit.” Brook presented her phone to the trial court, and the

voicemails were played in court but were not transcribed into the record. The trial court found

“the actions on the part of [Jean] constitute[d] stalking.” The trial court further found that it was

necessary to “grant the relief requested” on an emergency basis in order to prevent further harm

or abuse. The trial court entered a 21-day emergency stalking no contact order for Brook and the

minors against Jean, prohibiting Jean from: threatening to commit or committing stalking

personally or through a third party; contacting Brook and the minors in any way, directly,

indirectly, or through third parties, including with phone, written notes, mail, email, or fax; and

coming within 500 feet of Brook and the minors, their residence, school, and place of

3 employment. The trial court informed Brook that if she wanted to extend the order beyond 21

days, she would have to return for the next court date.

¶9 C. Hearing for a Plenary Stalking No Contact Order

¶ 10 On May 24, 2021, a hearing took place for an extension of the stalking no contact order.

Brook and Jean both appeared in court and were represented by their attorneys. The evidence

showed that the parties had known each other for about four years prior to May 1, 2021.

¶ 11 The evidence also indicated that on May 1, 2021, Brook had made multiple calls to

Reginald’s phone in an attempt to speak with the minors before she went to work. Pursuant to a

court order (presumably in Brook and Reginald’s divorce case), Brook was allowed to call to

speak with the children “[d]aily between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m.” Brook stated that she had called

Reginald’s phone because “[t]he children’s phones were blocked” and per the court order she

was to call Reginald’s phone if she was unable to get in touch with the children. Reginald

testified, “the kids phones get blocked all the time because it’s out of control,” but they were

allowed to call Brook every day. Reginald testified that he did not give the children his phone to

call Brook that day, but if they had asked for it, they could have used it to call Brook.

¶ 12 After not being able to reach the children on their phones, Brook called Reginald’s phone

twice, at 5:43 and 5:46 p.m., but there was no answer. Brook called Reginald’s phone again at

5:48 p.m. Jean answered Reginald’s phone, Jean informed Brook that the minors were busy and

would call her back, and Jean hung up. Brook testified that Jean said something like the kids are

fucking busy, stop fucking calling them, they’ll call you later, and then hung up. Brook did not

speak at all during that phone call. At the time of Brook’s first three phone calls, Reginald’s

phone was with Jean in the pole barn, which was “a distance” away from the house. At that time

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 IL App (3d) 210255, 193 N.E.3d 754, 456 Ill. Dec. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coutant-v-durell-illappct-2021.