Hannemann v. Anderson

283 P.3d 386, 251 Or. App. 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 11, 2012
Docket09AB0515AB; A147165
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 283 P.3d 386 (Hannemann v. Anderson) 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
Hannemann v. Anderson, 283 P.3d 386, 251 Or. App. 207 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

Respondent appeals the trial court’s continuation of a restraining order that petitioner obtained against him under the Family Abuse Prevention Act (FAPA), ORS 107.700 to 107.735. Respondent asserts that petitioner failed to present sufficient evidence to support continuation of the order. For the reasons set out below, we reverse.

Although we have discretion to review this case de novo, ORS 19.415(3)(b), we decline to do so, as we do not view this as an exceptional case. See ORAP 5.40(8)(c) (“The Court of Appeals will exercise its discretion to try the cause anew on the record or to make one or more factual findings anew on the record only in exceptional cases.”). Accordingly, we presume that the trial court found facts consistent with its judgment in petitioner’s favor (the court made no express findings), see Lefebvre v. Lefebvre, 165 Or App 297, 302 n 2, 996 P2d 518 (2000), and we are bound by those implicit factual findings if any evidence in the record supports them. Maffey v. Muchka, 244 Or App 308, 313, 261 P3d 26 (2011). We review the trial court’s legal conclusions for errors of law. Id.

Viewed consistently with that standard of review, the record discloses the following: The parties met in the early 1990s, when petitioner began working for respondent in Bend. In 1995, petitioner and her two children moved to a home that respondent owned in Arizona, which petitioner planned to renovate in exchange for receiving some of the proceeds from an intended sale of the house. Respondent moved into the Arizona home with petitioner and her children a few months later.1

Shortly after arriving in Arizona, respondent began behaving in a “very possessive, obsessive, angry” manner toward petitioner. Petitioner’s daughter testified that, although the children never directly witnessed any violence, they “heard arguments all the time, yelling, screaming, [209]*209things being thrown, bruises all over [their] mother.” Petitioner recounted one particularly violent incident that occurred at some point between 1996 and 1998:

“[H]e began to tell me how worthless my children were and I said — I retaliated is what I did.
“And he walked out the door and he came back in and instantly he was strangling me and I my head was — I was standing in the kitchen, I’d been drying the dishes and my head was up underneath the cupboards * * * [a]nd he was strangling me until I was blacking out and I couldn’t remember anything. And in just a few minutes he let go of me and — and somehow or another I had had a plate in my hand that I’d been drying or something and I — and I hit him in the head and it cut him and he let go of me * * * [a]nd for days afterward the roof of my mouth, my tongue were really black.”

Less than two weeks after that incident, respondent was arrested on unassociated charges and incarcerated in Utah. During the little over two years that respondent was in prison, petitioner continued to live in the Arizona home and stayed in contact with respondent. Respondent often wrote petitioner about his wish to continue their relationship, and he twice sent petitioner letters purporting to grant her power of attorney so that she could “sell his things [and do] anything that [she] needed to get his business affairs, his finances in order.”

In October or November of either 1999 or 2000, “very close to the time for [respondent] to get out of prison,” petitioner moved back to Oregon, where she has remained. Petitioner brought many of respondent’s possessions to Oregon with her, including many family heirlooms and collectables, two vehicles, and other household items— presumably to sell some items and to store others in accordance with respondent’s wishes. By August of 2001, at the latest, petitioner had “ended any contact” with respondent. Respondent, for his part, has lived in Arizona since his release from prison.

Petitioner and respondent had no further contact until 2005, when respondent wrote petitioner a letter. In that letter, respondent inquired about petitioner’s parents’ health, and stated that he could finally afford to come to [210]*210Oregon to get the possessions that petitioner had been “keeping safe” for him. He also wrote, “I may need your assistance with the theft, that we had while in Utah. I have an attorney. Please provide me with a phone number and address for you.” Petitioner responded by informing respondent in writing that she saw his letter as a threat, given his awareness that she had sold all of his belongings to pay his bills. Petitioner also wrote:

“Don’t call me. [Don’t] write me. Don’t try to contact me in any manner. *** I want nothing to do with the false insurance claim that you filed on the house *** [d]o not threaten me with your lawyer as we all know that you claim at all times to have a lawyer on retainer and you never do. * * * Do not show up at my home or any of my families homes. You will be arrested on site for trespassing.”

Respondent has not contacted petitioner since the exchange of those letters. However, in September 2009, approximately a week before petitioner filed the FAPA petition, respondent called petitioner’s elderly friend, Doreen Gahimer, who had become acquainted with respondent through petitioner long ago. Over the years, Gahimer sometimes sent respondent “encouraging letters” when she heard that he “got in trouble again.” Gahimer sent respondent one such letter on August 31, 2009, encouraging him to stay “spiritually active” and stating, “I think of you often, I’d like to hear from you.” Respondent called Gahimer soon after that letter was sent. Gahimer did not find respondent’s phone call “threatening,” but she was surprised to receive the call and found it “rather odd” and “a little unusual” that, for the majority of the conversation, respondent asked “a lot of questions about [petitioner] and her circumstances what — what she was doing and about the property she lived on and if her parents had died and so on.” Gahimer answered most of respondent’s questions except those “pertaining to finances, money,” and told petitioner about the phone call immediately afterward.

Petitioner filed for and obtained an ex parte FAPA restraining order against respondent in September 2009, promptly after she learned of respondent’s call to Gahimer. Respondent requested a hearing, which was held in October [211]*2112010.2 At the hearing, petitioner testified that she was frightened by respondent’s phone call to Gahimer “because it sounds — sounded to [her] like he intended to come here and take his things.” Petitioner also testified that she was terrified that respondent would kill her if he did not “get his way.” When asked what she believed would happen if respondent came to Oregon, petitioner stated:

“[0]n numerous occasions [respondent] told me what he would do to anyone who didn’t do what he wanted. Like he would tell me that one of his ex-wives that he would — he intended to find her one day and cut the tendons in her hands and in her face so that she couldn’t use her hands at all, that she couldn’t open her eyes. He even said she was very [vain] about her hair and so he would scalp her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P.3d 386, 251 Or. App. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannemann-v-anderson-orctapp-2012.