Hammond v. Sait

2023 Ohio 893
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 2023
Docket22 MA 0032
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 Ohio 893 (Hammond v. Sait) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond v. Sait, 2023 Ohio 893 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as Hammond v. Sait, 2023-Ohio-893.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT MAHONING COUNTY

TYLER HAMMOND,

Petitioner-Appellee,

v.

ROCCO SAIT,

Respondent-Appellant.

OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY Case No. 22 MA 0032

Civil Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, of Mahoning County, Ohio Case No. 21 DV 773

BEFORE: David A. D’Apolito, Cheryl L. Waite, Mark A. Hanni, Judges.

JUDGMENT: Reversed and Vacated.

Tyler Hammond, Pro Se, Petitioner-Appellee (No Brief Filed) and Atty. Jason M. Rebraca, 12 West Main Street, Canfield, Ohio 44406, for Respondent- Appellant.

Dated: March 15, 2023 –2–

D’Apolito, P.J.

{¶1} Respondent-Appellant, Rocco Sait, appeals the judgment of the Mahoning County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, granting a domestic violence civil protection order (“DVCPO”) to Petitioner-Appellee, Tyler Hammond, pursuant to R.C. 3113.31. No brief was filed by Appellee. For the following reasons, the judgment entry of the domestic relations court is reversed and vacated.

FACTS

{¶2} According to the DVCPO petition, which was filed on December 2, 2021, Appellant had been stalking Appellee since 2016. The DVCPO petition reads, in pertinent part:

My relations with [Appellant] began in December of 2015 – at the time I was 21 and he was 31. At the time I didn’t realize he was stalking me – I thought it was endearing and serendipitous that we kept encountering each other at the same places at the same time. Not until towards the end of our official relationship did it occur to me that his behavior was erratic and not normal and that he had been stalking me – showing up at my work, at my parent’s [sic] house, etc. uninvited and unwarranted. During the relationship and my time living with him (December 2017 – September 2018) and before our official relationship was established, he psychologically, emotionally, sexually, and mentally abused me. He was highly manipulative and towards the end of the relationship became aggressive, antagonizing, and intimidating. He has been stalking my current partner and I off and on for the last three years. Recently he has been showing up at my place of work. My employer and manager have both told him several times not to come in and to leave if I am working – he still shows up when I am working. Last week, he antagonized and started a physical altercation with my partner and I – and that was the last straw. I believe him to be a dangerous person and just want him to stay away from me and my partner.

Case No. 22 MA 0032 –3–

(12/2/21 Pet., p. 3-4.) An ex parte DVCPO was issued on the same day that the petition was filed. {¶3} The lion’s share of the testimony at the hearing on the DVCPO described events that occurred at the Draught House, a downtown bar, on November 24, 2021, the night before the Thanksgiving holiday. At the hearing, the magistrate accepted the testimony of Appellee, Appellee’s mother, Appellee’s then-boyfriend, Maverick Boyer, Appellant, Appellant’s then-girlfriend Alexis Gordulic, and Jeremy Petronelli, one of the bartenders working at the Draught House that evening. Appellee, acting pro se, Appellant’s attorney, and the magistrate each examined the various witnesses. {¶4} According to the testimony offered at the hearing on January 24, 2022 1, Appellant had been a regular patron of the Draught House for over ten years, prior to his romantic relationship with Appellee. Appellee had been employed at the Draught House for roughly one year. {¶5} Appellee testified that she provided to the magistrate screen shots of texts between Appellant and Appellee’s supervisor, in which Appellee’s supervisor told Appellant “multiple times not to come into the bar when [Appellee was] working.” (1/24/22 Hrg. Tr., p. 4.) Appellee’s supervisor did not testify at the hearing. {¶6} The only relevant text in the record is denoted as “Roxy” (presumably Appellee’s supervisor at the Draught House) and includes a conversation with Appellant after the events on Thanksgiving Eve of 2021. The relevant text reads, “[W]hy can’t you stop? I asked you not to go in the bar when [Appellee] worked. You didn’t. Jordan asked you not to go in the bar when [Appellee] worked. You didn’t.” However, Appellee conceded at the hearing that she was not working on the evening in question, she was a patron of the bar. {¶7} The confrontation that Appellee characterized as the “last straw” in the DVCPO petition is captured on a security camera at the bar. However, the black-and- white footage is blurred and does not clearly depict the events. Large portions of the testimony purport to clarify the events captured in the video, however, most of the

1 The hearing was originally scheduled to proceed on December 16, 2021, but was continued twice due to the parties’ efforts to access a security video depicting a physical altercation between the parties that gave rise to the DVCPO petition at issue in this case.

Case No. 22 MA 0032 –4–

testimony fails to inform our review due to the manner in which the testimony was offered. Adding to the difficulty in interpreting the witnesses’ narration, there are four separate videos and neither the witness nor the magistrate identifies the video that is being described. {¶8} There are four videos that capture the activity of the various bar patrons before and after the altercation between the parties. There is only one video that depicts the altercation itself. {¶9} In that video, Appellee and Boyer (her then-boyfriend) are standing at the center of the bar when Appellant walks up to the couple and reaches around Boyer’s head and places his hand there. Appellant draws Boyer’s face toward his own and kisses Boyer on the cheek. Boyer has no discernable reaction. Appellant then walks to the end of the bar where Gordulic (Appellant’s then-current girlfriend) is standing. Within a few seconds, Gordulic walks from where she was standing with Appellant over to Appellee and Boyer. A few words are exchanged then Gordulic walks a few feet from the bar, but she remains parallel to Appellee and Boyer. {¶10} Next, Appellant walks over and steps in the space between Appellee and Gordulic and begins conversing with Gordulic. The two couples are engaged in separate conversations. Initially, Appellee and Appellant are back-to-back, then Appellee turns toward Appellant and punches him. He reacts by turning and moving toward her, which causes a scuffle between several people standing at the bar. The scuffle is a blur and it is impossible to determine the actions of the respective parties, other than Appellee’s initial assault on Appellant. Petronelli (the bartender) sees the scuffle and jumps over the bar, but by the time he approaches the group, the altercation has ended. {¶11} According to Boyer, roughly five to ten minutes after he, Appellee, and a friend arrived at the bar, Appellant approached Boyer and tried “physically, to kiss [Boyer] or touch [Boyer].” Boyer “refused [Appellant] * * * told [Appellant] this is unnecessary and attempted to get [Appellant] off of [Boyer].” Gordulic (Appellant’s girlfriend) intervened, separated the two men, and apologized to Boyer, then Boyer “went on [his] separate way to get a drink, talk to [his] friend, you know kind of blow it off.” (Id. at p. 23.)

Case No. 22 MA 0032 –5–

{¶12} Appellant approached Boyer “three, four, several [additional] times.” Each time, Boyer told Appellant that they did not need to speak, but Appellant persisted. According to Boyer:

After, you know, probably the fourth or fifth interaction I guess he was behind me. A friend of mine was kind of shoeing [sic] me, continued to try to approach me. At which point some – me and her [sic] (inaudible) occurred. I was knocked down. You know, I’m not really sure after that point.

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

Related

K.H. v. P.M.
2025 Ohio 263 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
Kronk v. Getts
2024 Ohio 1516 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-sait-ohioctapp-2023.