Elizabeth Swett, Doug Earle, Gordon Stake v. Brian Gates

2023 VT 26, 297 A.3d 944
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 19, 2023
Docket22-AP-143
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2023 VT 26 (Elizabeth Swett, Doug Earle, Gordon Stake v. Brian Gates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elizabeth Swett, Doug Earle, Gordon Stake v. Brian Gates, 2023 VT 26, 297 A.3d 944 (Vt. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2023 VT 26

No. 22-AP-143

Elizabeth Swett, Doug Earle, Gordon Stake Supreme Court

On Appeal from v. Superior Court, Rutland Unit, Civil Division

Brian Gates October Term, 2022

Helen M. Toor, J.

Antonietta Girardi Dutil of Facey Goss & McPhee P.C., Rutland, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.

Nancy Corsones and Wendy Fitzsimons of Corsones and Fitzsimons, LLP, Rutland, for Defendant-Appellant.

PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Eaton, Carroll, Cohen and Waples, JJ.

¶ 1. WAPLES, J. Defendant appeals from the trial court’s extension and modification

of three stalking orders against him. He raises numerous arguments, many of which relate to the

requirements for the issuance of initial stalking orders rather than extensions of those orders. We

conclude that the court acted within its discretion in extending and modifying the orders and we

therefore affirm.

I. Factual Background

¶ 2. The parties are longtime neighbors who live on the same street in Mendon,

Vermont. Defendant owns a home on the street; he also owns a vacant lot next to the home of

plaintiffs Swett and Earle. In January 2021, plaintiffs sought stalking orders against defendant.

They alleged that defendant was engaging in aggressive and intimidating behavior, including yelling and swearing at them, firing his gun to intimidate them, and otherwise acting in ways that

made them fear for their physical safety. The court granted temporary relief to plaintiffs.

¶ 3. In February 2021, the parties waived findings and stipulated to three one-year

stalking orders—one order protecting each plaintiff. The orders prohibited defendant from

contacting plaintiffs and ordered him to stay 100 feet away from them and their residences with

exceptions for driving, plowing, and dog walking. The orders also prohibited defendant from

discharging a firearm on his vacant lot until June 1, 2021.

¶ 4. In February 2022, plaintiffs moved to extend and modify the orders, alleging that

defendant continued to engage in intimidating, hostile, and aggressive behavior. Following a

hearing, the court granted plaintiffs’ request. It made the following findings. Before plaintiffs

obtained stalking orders in February 2021, defendant repeatedly screamed profanities at plaintiffs

Swett and Earle from his vacant lot. He told them he had “nothing better to do than to torture the

fuck out of my neighbors!” On one occasion after an interaction with plaintiff Stake, defendant

shot off over 100 rounds of ammunition on the vacant lot. He shot into a log pile between the open

area of his lot and the Swett/Earle residence. Despite his denials, the court found that defendant

was shooting in the direction of the Swett/Earle home to scare them.

¶ 5. Turning to events after February 2021, the court found that defendant had been

clearing the vacant lot for over a year. He said he was preparing to build something. Plaintiffs

believed that defendant was purposefully using loud machinery on the lot for months on end to

harass them. The court found that defendant intentionally parked his truck on dark mornings to

shine his headlights into the Swett/Earle home to disturb them. It rejected defendant’s assertion

that he was simply sitting in his truck reading and checking email at 6 a.m. in that location.

Defendant also sat in his car in the road and stared at the Swett/Earle home.

¶ 6. In September 2021, defendant played an electronic game call of a rabbit in distress

on the vacant lot for two hours in the late evening until the police arrived. Defendant testified that

2 he did not consider the sound annoying and wanted to see what animals were around for hunting

purposes. The court rejected these propositions as not credible and absurd. It found defendant

clearly intended to annoy plaintiffs Swett and Earle.

¶ 7. A security camera captured another incident with plaintiff Stake. Defendant was

operating an excavator on the vacant lot and as soon as plaintiff Stake walked by with his dog,

defendant began screaming at the top of his lungs. Defendant got progressively louder and

unmistakably angrier. He used words like “you have a fat ugly wife” as well as cruder comments

about both Mr. Stake and Mr. Stake’s wife. According to defendant, he was not directing his

words at Mr. Stake but just singing along to music and making up songs. The court rejected

defendant’s testimony as entirely lacking in credibility. It found the anger in defendant’s voice

unmistakable and found that defendant’s words sounded nothing like singing. When asked if he

was singing in the recording submitted to the court, defendant acknowledged that he “was just

yelling.”

¶ 8. The court also rejected defendant’s assertion that he was singing when he

repeatedly told Mr. Stake that he “better get a gun, motherfucker” and told Mr. Stake and Ms.

Swett to “go back to New Jersey,” where both were from. Defendant also shouted at plaintiffs

with a megaphone, including in June 2021. He told Ms. Swett to “go back to New Jersey if you

don’t like Vermont, you fucking bitch.” He stood on his adjoining lot and called Ms. Swett a

“dirty bitch” and a “cunt.” Plaintiffs installed security cameras outside their homes because of

their concerns about defendant. They were clearly afraid that his excessively angry behavior

would escalate to violence. Mr. Stake, who resided primarily in New Jersey, came to Vermont

less often because of defendant’s harassment.

¶ 9. Based on these and other findings, the court granted plaintiffs’ request to extend

and modify the existing orders. It explained that under the statute, it had discretion to extend the

orders “for such additional time as it deems necessary to protect the plaintiff[s]” and it could

3 modify the order on “a showing of a substantial change in circumstance.” 12 V.S.A. § 5133(e).

The court emphasized that, under § 5133(e), it did not need “to find that the defendant

stalked . . . plaintiff[s] during the pendency of the order[s] to extend” them. The court concluded

that a five-year extension of the order was “necessary to protect” plaintiffs and that plaintiffs had

shown “a substantial change in circumstance” that warranted modification.

¶ 10. Because the parties stipulated to the initial stalking orders, the court began by

describing defendant’s pre-February 2021 behavior. See Forrett v. Stone, 2021 VT 17, ¶ 37, 214

Vt. 283, 256 A.3d 585 (per curiam) (recognizing that where parties stipulated to relief-from-abuse

order, court could consider “evidence of the abuse that supported the initial temporary order” in

deciding whether to extend order). As reflected above, the court found that defendant swore at

plaintiffs, shouted about torturing them, and intentionally tried to scare Ms. Swett and Mr. Earle

by shooting numerous rounds of ammunition in the direction of their home. The court considered

defendant’s use of a firearm as part of his threatening conduct to be a red flag of dangerousness.

¶ 11. After the stalking orders were issued, the court found it clear that, despite his

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Karen Norton
2025 VT 56 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025)
BARGE v. CITY OF ENGLEWOOD
D. New Jersey, 2025
Suzanne Colvin v. Rhonda Jepson
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Brittany Trayah v. Mercedes Sweetser
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Frank Venturella v. Sean Thompson
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Sean Thompson v. Frank Venturella
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Cheryl O'Donnell v. Hope Clough
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Violet Nichols v. Robert Lafayette
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Amy Spooner v. Jon Milizia
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2025
Jill Krowinski v. Kyle Wolfe
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2024
Gail Haupt v. John Langlois
2024 VT 3 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 VT 26, 297 A.3d 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizabeth-swett-doug-earle-gordon-stake-v-brian-gates-vt-2023.