Griffin v. Reichard

775 S.E.2d 695, 241 N.C. App. 655, 2015 WL 3793605, 2015 N.C. App. LEXIS 493
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 16, 2015
DocketNo. COA14–687.
StatusPublished

This text of 775 S.E.2d 695 (Griffin v. Reichard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffin v. Reichard, 775 S.E.2d 695, 241 N.C. App. 655, 2015 WL 3793605, 2015 N.C. App. LEXIS 493 (N.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GEER, Judge.

Defendant Kenneth Eric Reichard appeals from a domestic violence protective order ("DVPO") entered 8 January 2014. On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court erred by ordering, in both an ex parte DVPO and the final DVPO, that he surrender his firearms without entering findings in accordance with N.C. Gen.Stat. § 50B-3.1(a) (2013). We agree and reverse that portion of the trial court's orders.

Facts

On 11 October 2013, plaintiff Tiffany Brooke Griffin filed a complaint and motion for a DVPO against defendant. Plaintiff's verified complaint alleged:

On Tuesday 10/8/2013 he gave me a drug that I did not know what it was. When I was passed out he tried to take my clothes off, pull up my bra, he pulled my pants and underwear off. He rubbed his body against mine unit [sic] he ejaculated on to [sic] my leg. He told me if I call the police he would get in trouble. I'm afraid he will hurt or kill me to make sure I don't call the police.

The complaint additionally alleged that defendant had numerous guns, and that "[i]n his prior work in the military and police he has used deadly force before, and has nightmares of killing people. And I feel he would have no problem doing it." It alleged that defendant had made threats to commit suicide in that "[h]e has emotional stability [sic] and in the past has talked about it. He sees a doctor about P.T.S.D. and problems."

The trial court entered an ex parte DVPO the same day that plaintiff filed her complaint. The order found that defendant had committed a sexual battery against plaintiff on 8 October 2013. Specifically, it found that defendant "gave [plaintiff] drugs that incapacitated her and then took [her] clothes off and ejaculated on her [by] rubbing on his body on her. [D]efendant is suffering from P .T.S.D." Based upon this finding, the court concluded that defendant committed acts of domestic violence against plaintiff, that there is a danger of acts of domestic violence against plaintiff, and that defendant's conduct required that he surrender all firearms, ammunition, and gun permits.

On 1 November 2013, defendant filed a motion to produce medical records pertaining to plaintiff's visit to the emergency room on 8 October 2013 after the alleged sexual battery. On 7 November 2013, defendant filed an answer and a motion to strike the ex parte order as it related to the possession of firearms on the grounds that the order failed to make findings on any of the factors set forth in N.C. Gen.Stat. § 50B-3.1.

On 15 November 2013, the trial court entered orders granting defendant's motion for the production of medical records, denying defendant's motion to strike the firearms provisions of the ex parte order, and continuing the hearing on the request for a DVPO to allow for the production of medical records. However, on 3 January 2014, defendant chose to proceed with the hearing even though New Hanover County Regional Medical Center had not provided defendant with the medical records specified in the 15 November 2013 order.

At the hearing, plaintiff's evidence showed the following facts. Defendant and plaintiff met in 2007 and began a romantic relationship that had faded into a friendship by 8 October 2013. On 8 October 2013, plaintiff went over to defendant's house unannounced at around 9:00 a.m. after her class at Cape Fear Community College and asked defendant if she could use his computer. She was doing homework in defendant's office when he asked her if she wanted to smoke marijuana. At first, plaintiff said "no," but then she "gave in" after defendant asked her a few times. After she smoked the marijuana, she lost track of time. Defendant tried to kiss her, and she said "no" and pushed him away. They went into the living room to watch television. Then, "everything hit [plaintiff] at once," and she put her head on the back of the couch.

Defendant came over behind plaintiff and began rubbing his hands up and down her back under her shirt and rubbing her legs and bottom over her jeans. Plaintiff wanted it to stop, but she couldn't do anything because she felt heavy and disoriented. She eventually lifted up her head and told defendant she had to lie down, and they went from the couch to the bedroom. Plaintiff laid down on the bed and closed her eyes. Plaintiff's body began a ticking motion and she felt as if she did not have control over anything. Defendant took off plaintiff's pants and then lifted up her shirt and bra. Plaintiff lay there with her eyes closed and could not move but was able to cross her left leg over her right leg. Defendant rubbed himself against plaintiff until she felt something wet on her leg where defendant's penis had been. She asked defendant if he had ejaculated on her leg and he said no. Defendant then got up and got dressed.

Plaintiff got dressed and asked defendant to drive her home. As they were driving, plaintiff began having a panic attack, and she asked defendant to take her to the hospital. When they arrived at the hospital, defendant told her that if she said anything about the marijuana, she would be questioned about where the drugs came from and who gave them to her. Because she did not want to get defendant in trouble, plaintiff had second thoughts about going to the hospital and asked defendant to call her sister. Defendant dialed plaintiff's sister and gave her the phone. At her sister's insistence, plaintiff decided to go to the emergency room. Defendant accompanied her, but when plaintiff's sister arrived, he was ordered to leave.

Plaintiff was diagnosed with an "adverse drug reaction." The emergency room report from her visit indicates that plaintiff had been prescribed several medications. Plaintiff was unable to identify all of the medications and testified that she only took two of the medications daily: Welbutrin and Citalopram. She took Welbutrin to "slow [her] down" because she "can't shut [her] mind down," and she took the Citalopram as an antidepressant.

With respect to defendant's weapons, plaintiff testified that defendant "talked about guns all the time" but that plaintiff "didn't like guns and [she] didn't like them around [her] kids." She and defendant got into a fight one time about defendant keeping a gun in his truck because plaintiff did not want her kids to find it and hurt themselves. Plaintiff had seen "boxes and boxes of ammo" in defendant's closet and had seen a pistol in defendant's night stand. Plaintiff also testified that she and defendant had conversations about dreams and that defendant was having a hard time with graphic nightmares about killing people and would discuss them with her. On cross-examination, however, plaintiff acknowledged that defendant had never threatened to hurt her and had never threatened her or used a deadly weapon against her.

Defendant testified at the hearing as follows. Defendant and plaintiff had been dating on and off for many years. On or about 1 October 2013, they started spending time with each other again, but they had not been sexually active together since July 2013. When plaintiff came to defendant's house on 8 October 2013, defendant asked plaintiff only once if she wanted to smoke marijuana, and she did not hesitate to smoke marijuana with him. She had smoked marijuana at his house on a prior occasion. When they were on the couch, plaintiff told defendant that the room was spinning and that she was twitching, but he could not see her twitching. Defendant began rubbing her back and then it escalated to more sexual touching.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
775 S.E.2d 695, 241 N.C. App. 655, 2015 WL 3793605, 2015 N.C. App. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-reichard-ncctapp-2015.