Haines, E. v. Suchevits, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 8, 2021
Docket369 WDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Haines, E. v. Suchevits, M. (Haines, E. v. Suchevits, M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haines, E. v. Suchevits, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

J-A20042-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

ELIZABETH HAINES : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : MARK SUCHEVITS : : Appellant : No. 369 WDA 2021

Appeal from the Order Entered February 17, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Family Court at No(s): FD-21-00191

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., and McCAFFERY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McCAFFERY, J.: FILED: NOVEMBER 8, 2021

Mark Suchevits (Appellant) appeals from the protection from abuse

(PFA) order entered in the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas,

prohibiting him from harassing, threatening or contacting his ex-girlfriend,

Elizabeth Haines (Appellee) for a period of two years. On appeal, Appellant

contends the evidence was insufficient to support the entry of the PFA since

he committed no acts which placed Appellee in reasonable fear of bodily injury

or in present danger of further abuse. For the reasons below, we affirm.

Appellee obtained a temporary PFA order against Appellant on February

4, 2021.1 The next day, police officers filed an indirect criminal contempt

complaint against Appellant for his violation of the PFA order, just hours after

____________________________________________

1 The order was not docketed until the following day, February 5, 2021. J-A20042-21

being served with the petition. See Indirect Criminal Contempt Complaint,

2/5/21.2 On February 11, 2021, the trial court conducted a hearing on the

PFA petition.3 The facts underlying the entry of the PFA, as presented during

the PFA hearing, are as follows.

The parties were in a romantic relationship and lived together in

Appellant’s home, with his children, for approximately a year. See N.T. PFA

H’rg, 2/11/21, at 4-5, 56. Although Appellee moved out in August of 2020,4

the relationship continued until late November or early December, when it

finally ended. Id. at 5. In January of 2021, Appellee began receiving

voicemails from Appellant, who would call after she went to bed. Id. at 7.

She did not respond, and blocked Appellant’s phone number. Id. at 6.

Appellant then, however, began “reaching out” to her through friends and

family, and texted her using his 10-year-old son’s phone number. Id. at 8.

In one such text, Appellant called Appellee degrading names and threatened

to send intimate videos to her then-boyfriend. See id. at 10. He ended the

text by stating, “Stay tuned.” Id. Appellee then blocked the phone numbers

2 We note the complaint was not docketed until February 26, 2021.

3 23 Pa.C.S. § 6107(a) (court must hold hearing within 10 days of filing of PFA

petition).

4 The reasons for Appellee’s departure from the home are disputed. Appellant testified that, although he did not “kick her out[,]” Appellee moved out of his home because she was “drinking” and getting “snippy” with his kids to the point where “it was getting unhealthy.” N.T., PFA H’rg, at 56.

-2- J-A20042-21

of Appellant’s son and friends. Id. at 12. She testified the texts made her

“fearful” for her safety because she “knew it wouldn’t stop.” Id.

Subsequently, Appellee began receiving calls and texts from 25 to 30

random, unknown phone numbers. N.T., PFA H’rg, at 13-14. She testified

that Appellant told her he downloaded an app which “generat[ed] different

numbers [so he could] get ahold of [her].” Id. at 9. Appellee explained the

messages also had the same verbiage and punctuation as those Appellant sent

previously. Id. at 14-16.

Appellee described her relationship with Appellant as “very toxic,” and

explained that he would often yell and scream at her and call her debasing

names. N.T., PFA H’rg, at 21-22. Because she was 20 years younger than

Appellant, Appellee stated she “felt very helpless in certain situations” and

“very scared at certain times.” Id. Appellee testified her sister and her sister’s

boyfriend helped her move out when Appellant was not there because she was

“scared.” Id. at 22. Although she acknowledged Appellant never “laid a finger

on her” or “threatened to physically beat” her, Appellee knew his former wife

filed a PFA against him — which, according to Appellant’s counsel was later

withdrawn5 — and that Appellant “beat up [his former wife’s] boyfriend.” Id.

at 29-30

5 Appellee stated she did not know the prior PFA had been withdrawn. N.T., PFA H’rg, at 29.

-3- J-A20042-21

Despite her fears, Appellee agreed to meet with Appellant on February

1, 2021, at a gas station parking lot. See N.T., PFA H’rg, at 17-18. She

hoped that “this was the way it would truly be over” and she could “make him

stop contacting” her. Id. at 30. Appellee testified they “both said [their]

goodbyes” and that was the last time she “was supposed to ever hear from

him.” Id. at 18. However, it was not. In fact, Appellant called her the next

day, February 2nd, and told her “he was on the floor [and] couldn’t get up,”

and that he “was praying that he would go to sleep and not wake up.” Id. at

19. Appellee reached out to Appellant’s friend to check on him. Id. The

following day, February 3rd, she received another text from Appellant, using

an unknown number, in which he accused her of lying “to [his] face” and

manipulating him. See id. at 19-20.

Appellant decided to file a PFA petition on February 4, 2021, the same

day her father passed away. N.T., PFA H’rg, at 20. As she was waiting in line

to file the petition, she began receiving text messages from Appellant. Id.

After offering condolences about the death of Appellee’s father, Appellant

stated:

I won’t send anything to [your boyfriend] today, and I’ll respect your grief today. If I don’t hear from you by tomorrow morning to tell me you are coming out to seriously and genuinely apologize to my face with the real truth about what you did to me when I have already prepared everything, this is the last time you’ll hear from me about anything. What you do from here is more about all that you owe me.

-4- J-A20042-21

Id. at 20-21. Appellee construed this text to mean that Appellant intended to

send intimate photos or videos to her then-boyfriend.6 Id. at 21.

Two hours after the PFA was served on Appellant, he sent another text

message — again from a random number — to Appellee, in which he stated

he hated her and hoped she would “never find love or happiness.” N.T., PFA

H’rg, at 24. He also promised to “make sure every guy [learns] the truth

[about her, even if he had to] die doing it.” Id. Appellant ended the text by

calling her “an ugly evil woman inside and out.” Id.

Appellant testified in his own defense. He denied that their relationship

was toxic and stated they “actually talked about engagement and marriage in

the future.” N.T., PFA H’rg, at 47. Appellant claimed, however, that he

learned she was seeing her then-boyfriend while she was still dating him, and

he “just wanted the truth.” Id. at 49, 56-57. Appellant stated he never

intended to send a sexually explicit photo or video, but instead, was going to

send “simply a picture from Thanksgiving . . . to prove that [they] were still

spending . . . intimate time and time with [his] children . . . through

December.” See id. at 49-50. Appellant did not deny that he sent numerous

texts to Appellee, or that he used an app to bypass the block on her phone.

See id. at 56-60.

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Bluebook (online)
Haines, E. v. Suchevits, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-e-v-suchevits-m-pasuperct-2021.