Hollon v. Wood

129 P.3d 709, 204 Or. App. 344, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 15, 2006
DocketCV04-0366; A126960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 P.3d 709 (Hollon v. Wood) 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
Hollon v. Wood, 129 P.3d 709, 204 Or. App. 344, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 196 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*346 LINDER, J.

Respondent appeals from a judgment granting petitioner’s request for a permanent stalking protective order (SPO), challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support the order. 1 On de novo review of the facts, ORS 19.415(3); Castro v. Heinzman, 194 Or App 7, 9, 92 P3d 758 (2004), we reverse. 2

The controlling legal standards are not disputed. Briefly summarized, and as applicable to this case, the civil stalking statute authorizes a court to issue an SPO against someone who intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly makes “repeated and unwanted” contact with another person, thereby causing that person to be alarmed or coerced. 3 The contact may consist of, among other things, coming into the person’s visual or physical presence, following the person, waiting outside the person’s home, property, place of work or school, or sending or making written communication of any kind. See ORS 163.730(3) (defining “contact” for both criminal and civil stalking statutes). Additionally, it must be objectively reasonable for the contacted person to have been alarmed or coerced by the contact. ORS 30.866(l)(b); see also Weatherly v. Wilkie, 169 Or App 257, 259, 8 P3d 251 (2000) (discussing subjective and objective components). Finally, the contact must also cause the contacted person reasonable apprehension regarding his or her personal safety. ORS 30.866(l)(c).

*347 Thus, the statute has both subjective and objective components. The contacted person must in fact be alarmed by the contacts, and those specific contacts must cause the person apprehension regarding his or her personal safety. In other words, there must be “a causal relationship between the contact and the alarm or coercion felt by the other per son — the alarm or coercion must arise from the contact.” Schiffner v. Banks, 177 Or App 86, 92, 33 P3d 701 (2001) (emphasis added). Moreover, the contacted person’s alarm must be objectively reasonable. ORS 30.866(l)(b).

In brief, the pertinent facts are these. Respondent began dating Mike Jones in 1997. Although the two were not married or in a committed relationship, they shared expenses and jointly owned certain property. Additionally, their houses were located on adjoining property and, at one point in time, Jones’s mother lived with respondent. In October 2003, Jones began “dabbling in internet affairs.” Through the Internet, he met petitioner, and the two began dating. Jones continued his relationship with respondent. Although respondent was aware of petitioner’s relationship with Jones, it is not clear that petitioner was aware that Jones and respondent remained intimately, as well as financially, involved. 4

According to petitioner, once she began dating Jones, she experienced a number of unwanted contacts by respondent. Those contacts fell into two categories: those that involved expressive verbal communications, either on the phone or in person, and those that involved forms of nonex-pressive contact. Petitioner described the expressive verbal contacts as generally involving communications about the tangled nature (financial and otherwise) of respondent’s and petitioner’s relationships with Jones. The nonexpressive contacts typically involved respondent’s conduct as petitioner drove to or from Jones’s home, passing close to respondent’s adjacent home along the way.

On appeal, respondent argues that the contacts involving expression fail to meet the more exacting standard required of such contacts to avoid constitutional problems. *348 See Castro, 194 Or App at 13. The fact that expressive contacts, to support an SPO, must meet a more exacting standard is well-settled: “[T]o avoid constitutional overbreadth problems, [expressive] contacts must meet a more stringent standard than the one set out in the statute.” Id. (citing State v. Rangel, 328 Or 294, 300, 977 P2d 379 (1999)). That more stringent standard requires that the contacted person prove that the expressive contacts involved threats that “ ‘instill] ] in the addressee a fear of imminent and serious personal violence from the speaker, [are] unequivocal, and [are] objectively likely to be followed by unlawful acts.’ ” Id. (brackets in original) (quotingRangel, 328 Or at 303).

On de novo review, we agree that the expressive contacts on which petitioner relies fail to satisfy that standard. By our count, there were three such contacts. The first two involved telephone calls that respondent made to petitioner that petitioner claims caused her to feel threatened. The first occurred when respondent left a “cryptic” voicemail message on petitioner’s cell phone sometime in January 2004. Petitioner returned that phone call. At the hearing, she testified that her recollection of the ensuing phone conversation was that respondent had told her “to leave [Jones] alone, blah blah blah blah blah.” Petitioner provided no additional details about that call. Nor did petitioner connect that specific conversation to any specific reaction on her part except to assert that she wrote a letter asking respondent not to contact her again. The fact that petitioner wrote the “no contact” letter is the only basis in the record to infer that the cryptic message and ensuing phone conversation caused petitioner fear of imminent and serious personal violence. But that inference is defeated by petitioner’s own testimony about what happened after she wrote that letter. In particular, she acknowledged that she was not “prepared to follow through on [that] letter” — i.e., by filing the SPO to preclude any contact between petitioner and respondent — until about eight months later, at which point there had been additional contacts between petitioner and respondent. Under the circumstances, we cannot find on this record that the first expressive contact on which petitioner relies satisfies the requisite heightened standard for expressive contacts that will support the issuance of an SPO.

*349 The second telephone contact on which petitioner relies occurred sometime in March 2004. Thus, by petitioner’s own account, that contact also occurred well before petitioner was “prepared to follow through on [her] letter.” That fact, under these circumstances, strongly suggests that petitioner was not placed in fear of imminent and serious personal violence by that telephone contact.

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Related

State v. Sierzega
237 P.3d 234 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2010)
Middleton v. Tully
154 P.3d 170 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P.3d 709, 204 Or. App. 344, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollon-v-wood-orctapp-2006.