Heather Brooke Almeida n/k/a Heather Bertroche v. David John Wilcox Almeida

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 7, 2019
Docket18-1155
StatusPublished

This text of Heather Brooke Almeida n/k/a Heather Bertroche v. David John Wilcox Almeida (Heather Brooke Almeida n/k/a Heather Bertroche v. David John Wilcox Almeida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Heather Brooke Almeida n/k/a Heather Bertroche v. David John Wilcox Almeida, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 18-1155 Filed August 7, 2019

HEATHER BROOKE ALMEIDA n/k/a HEATHER BERTROCHE, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DAVID JOHN WILCOX ALMEIDA, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Stuart P. Werling,

Judge.

David Almeida appeals the entry of a domestic-abuse protective order.

AFFIRMED.

JohnPatrick Brown III of Winstein, Kavensky & Cunningham, LLC, Rock

Island, Illinois, for appellant.

Jennifer Olsen of Olsen Law Firm, Davenport, for appellee.

Considered by Mullins, P.J., Bower, J., and Vogel, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2019). 2

MULLINS, Presiding Judge.

David Almeida appeals the entry of a domestic-abuse protective order

under Iowa Code chapter 236 (2016) in favor of Heather Almeida.1 He complains:

(1) the final protective order was improperly entered without any findings of fact or

conclusions of law, (2) a hearing was not held within the timeframe provided in

section 236.4(1) of the code, (3) there was an alleged agreement between the

parties to dismiss their competing petitions for a protective order and said

agreement should be specifically performed, and (4) the order is not supported by

sufficient evidence.2

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Upon our de novo review of the record and based upon the evidence we

find credible, we make the following factual findings, which are established by a

preponderance of the evidence. The parties met in 2012, married in 2014, and

had no children together. The relationship had its fair share of ups and downs. As

time passed, David became more controlling and began limiting the time Heather

was allowed to spend with her friends and family. In late July 2016, there was an

incident in which David became angry with Heather and choked her. The next

morning, still angry, David choked Heather again.

In early December, David advised Heather he wanted the marriage

dissolved. The next day, December 3, David was fired from his job, in which he

worked for Heather’s father. David filed a petition for dissolution of marriage on

1 Now known as Heather Bertroche. 2 Heather filed a statement waiving her appellate brief in this appeal. See Iowa Rs. App. P. 6.901(1)(b), .903(3). 3

December 5. On December 7, David moved to Florida. The same day, Heather

filed a petition for relief from domestic abuse, in which she alleged David physically

abused and threatened her.3 Specifically, the petition alleged David choked her in

late July. Heather testified at trial she was scared of David and nervous when he

petitioned for dissolution, so she felt it was the right time to pursue a domestic-

abuse protective order.

The court entered a temporary protective order and scheduled a hearing on

the petition for December 14. As a result of lack of service on David, the court

subsequently entered an order continuing the hearing to January 31, 2017. On

January 27, David’s counsel moved for a continuance. On January 31, the court

entered a comment into the case file noting Heather agreed to the continuance

and indicating the parties were discussing settlement. The court noted the parties

would “send [it] a proposed order resetting these hearings, if needed.”

Nothing occurred in the matter until October, when the State applied for an

order to show cause alleging David violated the protective order. An attached

affidavit by Heather alleged David violated the order on September 28 and 29 by

“stalking” her. In a second affidavit, Heather generally alleged David enlisted

others to watch her. The court entered an order directing David to appear and

show cause why he should not be held in contempt of court. The court scheduled

3 At some point thereafter, around January 25, David filed a petition for relief from domestic abuse of his own. At trial, David testified the facts underlying his petition occurred in August 2015. He also testified Heather punched him in the genitals in November 2016. David generally testified he fears Heather. In any event, the ultimate disposition on David’s petition is not an issue in this appeal. 4

a contempt hearing for October 25 but continued it to January 17, 2018 upon a

stipulated motion to continue.

In November 2017, Heather filed a motion to extend the protective order.

The court set the matter for hearing on December 6. The court subsequently

granted David’s motion to continue the hearing to December 13. On December 5,

Heather moved to continue the hearing to January 17, 2018. The court granted

the request. The same day, David filed a motion to amend the temporary

protective order to reflect Heather’s change in residences.

On December 18, 2017, David filed a motion to dismiss. Among other

things, David argued Heather’s petition and the temporary order should be

dismissed under Iowa Code section 236.4(1) because no hearing was held within

fifteen days of him receiving notice. Heather resisted, contending David stipulated

to continuing the competing protective orders. The court directed the motion to

dismiss be heard at the January 17, 2018 hearing. As David recognizes in his brief

on appeal, “The court never ruled on the motion” to dismiss. While a hearing was

held on January 17, the only order resulting from that hearing in the record on

appeal is one finding David not guilty of contempt. Another hearing was held on

February 20. The record reflects this hearing amounted to a trial on David’s

dissolution petition and both parties’ petitions for a chapter 236 protective order. 4

4 The record on appeal is filled with several procedural voids. Before us is the district court record for the proceedings concerning Heather’s petition for relief from domestic abuse. The record for that petition was, however, intertwined with the records concerning David’s petition for relief from domestic abuse and the petition for dissolution of marriage. We discern that procedural orders were entered in one or both of the other cases that did not make their way into the record for the case now under our consideration. The trial transcript shows all three matters were set for trial on February 20. Likewise, several exhibits admitted at trial do not appear in the record on appeal. We assume the parties filed those missing exhibits in one or both of the other matters, 5

Throughout the pendency of these proceedings, David monitored Heather’s

activities, either on his own accord or through others. On one occasion, David

broke into the marital home and took marital property. The temporary protective

order, which prohibited David from entering the marital home, was in place at this

time. David also removed items from and tampered with Heather’s vehicle. He

also damaged the home and took more personal property from the home when he

did a “walkthrough” in January 2018.

After trial, the court entered a final domestic-abuse protective order against

David. In its written order, the court found “by a preponderance of the evidence”

that David “committed a domestic abuse assault against” Heather and David

“represents a credible threat” to Heather’s physical safety. David filed a motion to

reconsider, enlarge, or amend pursuant to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2).

The court denied the motion and this appeal followed.

II.

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