Garland and Garland

475 P.3d 105, 306 Or. App. 516
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 16, 2020
DocketA165677
StatusPublished

This text of 475 P.3d 105 (Garland and Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garland and Garland, 475 P.3d 105, 306 Or. App. 516 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Argued and submitted December 3, 2018, affirmed September 16, 2020

In the Matter of the Marriage of Thomas J. GARLAND, Petitioner-Respondent, and Katrina J. GARLAND, Respondent-Appellant. Josephine County Circuit Court 08DR0227; A165677 475 P3d 105

Mother appeals from a supplemental judgment awarding custody of her minor children to father, raising three assignments of error. In her second assignment of error, mother contends that the trial court erroneously excluded evidence of telephonic and in-person conversations between father and their children, which mother had surreptitiously recorded using her home telephone, an invisible appli- cation she had installed on a cell phone, and a handheld recording device she hid in her son’s backpack. Held: The trial court improperly excluded some, but not all, of the recordings, but mother has failed to establish that any evidentiary error was harmful. Affirmed.

Pat Wolke, Judge. Stefanie L. Burke argued the cause for appellant. Also on the briefs were Melisa A. Button and Hornecker Cowling LLP. Frank C. Rote, III, argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief was Law Office of Frank C. Rote, III. Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and DeVore, Judge, and James, Judge. JAMES, J. Affirmed. Cite as 306 Or App 516 (2020) 517

JAMES, J.

Mother appeals from a supplemental judgment awarding custody of her minor children to father, raising three assignments of error. We reject mother’s first and third assignments of error, writing here to address only her second assignment of error, in which mother contends that the court erroneously excluded audio recorded conversations between father and their children. Organizationally, those conversations can be divided into four categories: (1) tele- phonic conversations between father and the children on mother’s landline home phone; (2) telephonic conversations that occurred within mother’s home, between father and the children, that occurred on a cellphone that mother owned, but the daughter used; (3) telephonic conversations that occurred outside mother’s home, between father and the children, on a cellphone that mother owned, but the daugh- ter used; and (4) in-person conversations between father and the children that occurred outside mother’s home, cap- tured by listening software secretly installed by mother on the daughter’s cellphone, in conjunction with a recording device planted in the son’s backpack. The trial court con- cluded that all of those recordings were obtained in viola- tion of ORS 165.540, and therefore inadmissible pursuant to ORS 165.540(1)(e), which prohibits a person from “us[ing] or attempt[ing] to use, * * * any conversation, telecommu- nication or radio communication obtained by any means prohibited by this section.” We conclude that the trial court improperly excluded some, but not all, of the recordings, but that mother has failed to establish that any evidentiary error was harmful. Accordingly, we affirm.

Although mother requests de novo review, and despite father’s conflicting requests, initially for, and later against, de novo review in his brief, this is not an “excep- tional” case that warrants such review. See ORAP 5.40(8)(c) (providing that the court will exercise its discretion to review de novo “only in exceptional cases”). We describe the facts in a manner consistent with the trial court’s express findings and those implicit in its rulings, which the record supports. State v. Rosales, 291 Or App 762, 764, 423 P3d 112 (2018). A detailed recitation of the extensive record of substantive 518 Garland and Garland

facts would not benefit the bar or public. Rather, the proce- dural facts are set forth below. Mother brings this appeal after custody was awarded to father, the most recent ruling in an extended custody bat- tle with father, spanning more than a decade, beginning when their children were three and six years old. This dis- pute began with the parties’ stipulated dissolution of mar- riage in 2008, after which the parties were awarded joint physical and legal custody, including a 50/50 parenting plan. After some informal changes to the parenting plan between 2008 and 2011, both parties filed motions in 2012 seeking full custody, and, after a variety of delays, the court granted sole custody to mother in 2013, subject to father’s parenting-time arrangements. In 2014, father again filed a motion to modify the custody arrangement and parent- ing plan. A variety of additional delays postponed the trial for nearly two years, including motions from both parties requesting temporary emergency modifications to custody for immediate danger, which were both denied. The trial took place over a period of nearly one year. Mother presented evidence that father was engaged in alienating the children from her. Additionally, she sought to introduce evidence of audio recordings of telephone and in-person conversations between father and the children, which, although obtained by mother without the children’s or father’s knowledge or consent, mother asserted, would provide additional evidence of father’s persistent attempts to alienate the children. Mother recorded the telephone conversations using a device connected to her home phone and a hidden application mother installed on the daugh- ter’s cell phone, which mother owned. The in-person conver- sations were recorded using the hidden application on the daughter’s cell phone and a handheld audio recording device mother placed in the son’s backpack. The trial court ruled that all the in-person record- ings were inadmissible. The trial court also ruled that the telephone conversations recorded using the daughter’s cell phone were inadmissible, and that recordings using moth- er’s home phone were admissible if the vicarious consent doc- trine applied. To show that the vicarious consent doctrine Cite as 306 Or App 516 (2020) 519

applied, the court required mother to prove that her actions were motivated by a reasonable concern as to the well-being of the children. Despite the court’s specific ruling disallowing most of the recordings and requiring proof of mother’s state of mind in recording the home phone conversations, mother’s counsel discussed the contents of all of the recordings in her written memoranda and argument—a discussion that the trial court admonished counsel for including.1 The trial court was unpersuaded by mother’s proof of her state of mind, noting counsel’s “bad faith” disclosure of the contents of the recordings, and, in a supplemental judgment incorpo- rating its three letter opinions, the court awarded custody to father, subject to mother’s parenting time. The court also awarded attorney fees to father, explaining that the court “believe[d] that [mother] has acted in bad faith, therefore reasonable attorney fees are awarded to [father] pursuant to ORCP 68.” Mother now appeals from that supplemental judg- ment, asserting in her second assignment of error that the trial court erred as a matter of law when it ruled that all of the audio recordings were inadmissible. Specifically, she asserts that the recordings made on her home phone were permitted under the ORS 165.540(3) residence exception to ORS 165.540(1), which, contrary to the trial court’s ruling, did not require her to prove her reasons for recording them.

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Bluebook (online)
475 P.3d 105, 306 Or. App. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garland-and-garland-orctapp-2020.