Goodness v. Beckham

198 P.3d 980, 224 Or. App. 565, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 24, 2008
Docket180701078; A135111
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 198 P.3d 980 (Goodness v. Beckham) 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
Goodness v. Beckham, 198 P.3d 980, 224 Or. App. 565, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1788 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*567 ARMSTRONG, J.

Respondent appeals from a judgment granting petitioner’s requested permanent stalking protective order (SPO). 1 On appeal, respondent challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the order and the award of attorney fees to petitioner. We review the facts de novo, Hanzo v. deParrie, 152 Or App 525, 537, 935 P2d 1130 (1998), and conclude that the record does not contain evidence of two or more contacts that meet the requirements for entry of an SPO. We therefore reverse.

Petitioner has known respondent for 15 years. They were formerly married to each other and have a son, “C.” During their marriage, respondent physically abused petitioner a number of times. He also damaged property in the home and had altercations with petitioner’s older children, who lived in the home. During that time, respondent threatened to kill petitioner and was arrested after grabbing her by the throat and punching her in the face. Petitioner obtained at least two restraining orders against respondent. The last instance of physical abuse took place in 1998 or 1999, after which respondent was removed from the couple’s home by the police.

The parties dissolved their marriage in 2002. Pursuant to the dissolution judgment, petitioner has sole custody of C and respondent has parenting rights. Among other rights, respondent has the right to receive C’s school records, to consult with any person who provides care or treatment for C, and to have supervised parenting visits. Additionally, the parenting plan provides that respondent shall have telephonic parenting time with C twice per month, that petitioner must provide respondent with a telephone number at which he can call C, and that respondent and petitioner shall *568 provide one another with their home addresses and phone numbers.

C, who is now 13 years old, is autistic and has behavioral and mental health problems. According to petitioner, C would “go into meltdown” whenever respondent called. Petitioner testified that, “[f]or the safety of my son, I chose not to allow phone contact [with respondent] and that is due to conversations with his counselors, his teachers, his doctors, his med doctor, his psychiatrist.” One of C’s therapists testified that,

“whenever there was contact between [C] and his [flather, [C] experienced these post[-]traumatic stress disorder symptoms and behaviors * * * as a result of repeatedly witnessing the domestic violence, which was significant, against his [m]other and that * * * by report, [C] was sexually abused by his two paternal uncles when he was visiting with his [f]ather[.]”

In May 2005, petitioner’s attorney sent a letter to respondent, explaining that petitioner was not willing to allow telephone contact between respondent and C or to provide respondent with contact information because it was not in C’s best interests.

In fall 2005, respondent came to petitioner’s home. According to petitioner, they had agreed to meet at a restaurant so respondent could bring a four-wheeler to one of her sons, but, instead, respondent showed up at her home, which alarmed her. Respondent describes the event differently:

“I did come up here and I did go to her house, * * * that’s true. I came up with a quad and a trailer and I brought it to a hotel and called them at that time. They met me there and they looked at the quad and the trailer because I was giving it to her for like a payment for back child support and stuff and she was accepting that. She said, okay, you get to spend some time with [C], She let me go with him to an animal store, go have some lunch with him. I went to — they brought me to her house, which I had no idea where it was until they brought me there. We talked, I talked to [petitioner] and I talked to [C] and checked out his stuff that he had, his lizard and all that.”

*569 Throughout 2006, respondent and petitioner exchanged e-mails. Petitioner testified that the e-mails said things like “ ‘you fucking whore, you fucking bitch, I’m going to get you back, I’m getting my [s]on, you’ll never see him again, you[’re] going to pay.[’] Mostly ‘you[’re] going to pay for this.’ ” Petitioner was frightened by the e-mails, “[b]ecause it’s a pattern!; e]very year he’s done this[,]” and that twice before, respondent “would come right up [from California] and end up showing up at my house.”

In January 2007, petitioner filed a petition for an SPO, and a temporary SPO was granted. Four weeks later, the court conducted a show cause hearing to determine whether to enter a permanent SPO. In her petition, petitioner listed three contacts as the basis for entering an SPO against respondent. The first two are

“1/15/07: [Respondent] called the Eugene Police saying I was molesting and harming our son. [Eugene Police] came to my home to do a safety check.
“1/11/07: CAHOOTS[ 2 ] came to my home at the request of [Eugene Police] to do a safety check saying that [respondent] feared for the safety of our child.”

Petitioner testified that respondent had previously told her he was going to call the police and tell them that she was abusing C.

There had been no calls between respondent and C for about two years before the filing of this petition. As a result, petitioner testified, C was “thriving,” and his behavioral problems had ceased. One of C’s therapists testified about the effect that the visits from CAHOOTS and the Eugene police had had on C: “[C] had regressed behavior. He exhibited significant post[-]traumatic stress disorder symptoms, paranoia, he was hallucinating and [experiencing] [flashbacks] at school and reportedly at home.”

*570 The third contact listed by petitioner in her SPO petition was “12/19/06: I blocked [respondent’s] [e-]mails[.]” In her petition, she also described additional circumstances that caused her to be alarmed by the contacts listed above:

“From 11/29/06 to [12/19/06,] [respondent] sent me 19 pages of e[-]mails of vocabulary that has been a pattern of several years indicating extreme [escalation], which places me in great fear of abuse and death by him to myself or my child. He starts with delusions that the doctors, counselors, and courts are in a conspiracy!.] He then den[ies] the court order, then claims it was T who committed the crimes in the past, not himself. By this time he uses name calling towards me that is very abusive and threatening. It is during this time in the past (>2 years ago) that he has shown up and hurt me, caused SEVERE Emotional Trauma PTSD to our son.
“* * * Last year around Christmas time [respondent] did the SAME thing, threatening me, placing me in [e]xtreme fear for my safety.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P.3d 980, 224 Or. App. 565, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodness-v-beckham-orctapp-2008.