Holt v. Feron

2018 Ohio 3318
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 20, 2018
Docket9-17-43
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2018 Ohio 3318 (Holt v. Feron) 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
Holt v. Feron, 2018 Ohio 3318 (Ohio Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

[Cite as Holt v. Feron, 2018-Ohio-3318.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT MARION COUNTY

DANIELLE HOLT, CASE NO. 9-17-43 PETITIONER-APPELLEE,

v.

ERIC FERON, OPINION

RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.

Appeal from Marion County Common Pleas Court Trial Court No. 17-CV-0453

Judgment Affirmed

Date of Decision: August 20, 2018

APPEARANCES:

Rocky Ratliff for Appellant Case No. 9-17-43

WILLAMOWSKI, P.J.

{¶1} Respondent-appellant Eric Feron (“Feron”) brings this appeal from the

judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Marion County granting a Civil Stalking

Protection Order (“CSPO”) to petitioner-appellee Danielle Holt (“Holt”). Feron

claims that the trial court’s judgment was 1) not supported by sufficient evidence

and 2) against the manifest weight of the evidence. Feron also claims that the trial

court erred by asking the witnesses questions on behalf of Holt. For the reasons set

forth below, the judgment is affirmed.

{¶2} On September 15, 2017, Holt filed a petition for a CSPO on behalf of

herself and her child. Doc. 1. The petition alleged that Feron was continuously

contacting Holt after repeatedly being asked to stop, had acted violently against Holt

in the past, and had indicated to Holt that he would “never leave [her] alone.” Id.

Holt alleged that she had tried multiple times to block Feron and had even moved,

but Feron continued to find ways to have contact with her. Id. An ex parte CSPO

was granted on that same day with a full hearing scheduled for September 29, 2017.

Doc. 2. The hearing was continued twice at the request of Feron. Doc. 8 and 12.

{¶3} The hearing was held on October 19, 2017. Holt appeared pro se and

Feron was represented by counsel. Tr. 5. Holt testified at the hearing that she and

Feron had been in a relationship. Tr. 10. Near the end of June, he was drunk and

physically assaulted her. Tr. 16. Holt testified as follows.

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[Feron] choked me out, threw me in a corner, spit in my face, chest-butted me, start – wanted to actually fist fight me, at the size he is right now, he was almost probably a hundred pounds bigger. I’ve never seen him this small in my life. I would never fight him. Like I told you the first time, most inmates don’t even intimidate me as much as he’s intimidated me.

Tr. 16-17. Holt also indicated that he had locked her in her room all night while he

blocked the door and had her phone. Tr. 20. She ended the relationship soon

afterward. Feron then began calling and texting her repeatedly. Tr. 8, 10, Ex. 6.

He would also message her on eBay and Facebook. Tr. 11, Ex. 1. He began

messaging a man she was dating on Facebook and telling him that the man was not

good enough for Holt and was just being used. Tr. 12, Ex. 3. When her date and

Holt blocked Feron on Facebook, he found the man’s brother and started messaging

him about Holt as well. Tr. 13, Ex. 4. Holt indicated that after she blocked him

from calling her, he would continue to get through. Tr. 8, 10, 13. She then had to

get a new phone and number to keep him from contacting her. Tr. 8. That is when

he started messaging her through her eBay store. Tr. 11, Ex. 1. Holt also testified

that due to the excessive communication and her fear of him, Feron was banned

from her place of employment. Tr. 8. According to Holt, she would communicate

with Feron for limited time periods to try and resolve the situation, but he would

continuously ask to meet with her. Tr. 55-58, 67. She did not want to do so because

she was afraid of what could happen. Tr.19, 67. Holt also indicated that Feron was

contacting her friends and harassing them about her. Tr. 13, Ex. 1, Ex. 5. At one

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point, Feron even appeared at her new home with her ex-boyfriend, Jeffrey

Schertzer (“Schertzer”), who was dropping off her son. Tr. 14.

{¶4} Holt presented exhibits showing the messages sent to her by Feron,

including ones that indicated he knew where she was, what she was doing, and who

she was with when he should not have had that knowledge. Tr. 10, Ex. 1. Feron

had also told her that he would not leave her alone, and that they would be back

together. Tr. 17. In one message, Feron stated that he was the only one Holt would

marry. Tr. 17. Feron had even contacted her doctor and indicated to him that she

was a drug addict causing her to be required to undergo drug testing before her

doctor would renew her prescription medicine for depression and anxiety. Tr. 7-8.

As a result, Holt indicated that after trying for months to get Feron to leave her

alone, she applied for the restraining order because she was afraid of what he would

do. Tr. 7, 18. Holt testified that she believed that Feron would cause her physical

harm. Tr. 18. Holt testified that Feron had caused her extreme mental distress by

the “nonstop” harassment. Tr. 19. She testified that since being granted the

temporary CSPO, her life has been the best it had been in a while. Tr. 17. She

stated that she was once again “able to do things with my son outside, leave my door

open, my niece is able to come over now, because my sister’s terrified of him. She

will not let my niece around.” Tr. 17. Holt also indicated that she had brought a

box containing Feron’s possessions for him to take because she had not wanted to

meet with him in person previously. Tr. 18. “To me it’s just unpredictable. Will

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he cause physical harm? I don’t know. I never thought he would before, but then

he did.” Tr. 19.

{¶5} On cross-examination, Holt admitted that although she and Feron had

ended the relationship in January, they continued to be friends and socialize. Tr.

72-73. Holt also admitted that Feron had given her items and money, but claimed

they were gifts, not loans. Tr. 45-46. Holt denied asking Feron for money and

denied owing him money. Tr. 46, 60. In Holt’s opinion, Feron’s claim of money

owed was a pretext for calling her because he kept changing the amount he claimed

she owed him. Tr. 59. Holt indicated that she had offered to mail Feron the credit

card, but he wanted her to return it personally. Tr. 66-67. Holt also admitted going

places with Feron and her son in the month before she ended the relationship. Tr.

63-65. When questioned by the trial court, Holt admitted that Feron had never

harmed her son or threatened him and she had no reason to think Feron would either

physically harm the boy or cause the boy mental distress. Tr. 76.

{¶6} After Holt testified, Feron presented the testimony of Schertzer.

Schertzer testified that he did not believe Feron was a threat to his son. Tr. 80.

Schertzer indicated that he took Feron to Holt’s now home because Feron and

Schertzer had previously had plans to go to dinner and to a bar to watch a fight. Tr..

79. Schertzer testified that Holt never told him she was afraid of Feron, but had told

him she did not want Feron around the boy. Tr. 81. On cross-examination,

Schertzer admitted that even though he knew Holt had a restraining order, he did

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not keep Feron away from the boy because he did not feel he had to enforce it. Tr.

84.

{¶7} Feron then testified that he lives an hour and a half away and works in

Cleveland. Tr. 86. Feron indicated that he was challenging the CSPO because it

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 Ohio 3318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-feron-ohioctapp-2018.