In the Interest of D.S., Minor Child. D.S., Minor Child

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 21, 2014
Docket13–0888
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of D.S., Minor Child. D.S., Minor Child (In the Interest of D.S., Minor Child. D.S., Minor Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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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In the Interest of D.S., Minor Child. D.S., Minor Child, (iowa 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 13–0888

Filed November 21, 2014

IN THE INTEREST OF D.S., Minor Child.

D.S., Minor Child, Appellant,

STATE OF IOWA, Appellee.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Allamakee County, Alan D.

Allbee, Associate Juvenile Judge.

The State seeks further review of a court of appeals decision

reversing a juvenile court order adjudicating a child delinquent based on

a finding that she committed harassment, in violation of Iowa Code

section 708.7(1)(b). DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED;

JUVENILE COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.

Thais A. Folta, Elwood, O’Donohoe, Braun & White, L.L.P., Cresco

and John Slavik, Elwood, O’Donohoe, Braun & White, L.L.P., Charles

City, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Bruce L. Kempkes, Assistant

Attorney General, and Jill M. Kistler, County Attorney, for appellee. 2

ZAGER, Justice.

A juvenile accused of harassing a peer during an after-school

confrontation appeals from her delinquency adjudication. She contends

that there was insufficient evidence to support the finding that she

committed harassment under Iowa Code section 708.7(1)(b). She also

contends that her delinquency adjudication violated her First

Amendment rights under the United States Constitution. Upon our de

novo review, we conclude there was insufficient evidence to support the

finding that the juvenile committed harassment. Because we reach this

conclusion on different grounds than did the court of appeals, we vacate

the decision of the court of appeals and reverse the judgment of the

juvenile court.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On February 20, 2013, K.B. approached New Albin Police Chief,

Kent Orr, and told him that her fifteen-year-old daughter, T.B., had been

harassed at school by a fellow classmate, fifteen-year-old D.S.

Based on this report, Chief Orr went to the home of D.S., who lived

with her mother in New Albin. According to Chief Orr, D.S. answered the

door and immediately said, “Let me guess. This is about [T.B.]” Chief

Orr told D.S. he had received a complaint that she had been harassing

T.B. D.S. replied, “I hate that f*cking b*tch.” Orr then asked D.S. if she

talked to T.B. at school. D.S. answered, “I don’t ever talk to that nasty

b*tch because she stinks and she f*cked the bus driver. I don’t like her

and can’t stand being around her.” Before leaving the house, Chief Orr

instructed D.S. not to have any contact with T.B.

Chief Orr then met with T.B. and her mother at the police station.

At Chief Orr’s request, T.B. wrote a statement of the incident in question.

T.B. wrote: 3 I was walking home from the bus and [D.S.] yelled “T-bitch” so I turned around and I thought she was talking to me so [I] told her “What?” and then she said “I wasn’t talking to you you fat skanky b*tch! I’m way better than you [and] prettier than you and I’m not desperate like you to sleep with the bus driver.” I replied, “I don’t care about looks at least I have a heart.” [D.S. responded,] “Whatever you skanky b*tch!” [D.S.] bullied me about every day since kindergarten.

K.B. added, “Earlier last year we had our house for sale because the

harassment is so bad we don’t know what else to do.”

Later that day, Chief Orr spoke with the mother of D.S. Chief Orr

asked her whether she was aware of “what was going on.” She answered, “Yes, [T.B.] has issues. She has no friends and is just a spoiled little

brat.” Chief Orr informed her he had directed D.S. not to have contact

with T.B. and asked for her assistance in preventing future harassment.

She replied, “Yeah, well . . . I’ll do my best.”

On March 11, the State filed a “Petition Alleging Delinquency”

alleging D.S. had committed a delinquent act as defined in Iowa Code

section 232.2(12), specifically harassment in the third degree in violation

of Iowa Code sections 708.7(1)(b) and 708.7(4). According to the petition,

D.S. “did purposefully and without legitimate purpose, have personal

contact with another person, with the intent to threaten, intimidate, or

alarm that other person.”

An adjudicatory hearing was held in juvenile court on May 9. The

court heard testimony from Chief Orr, K.B., T.B., D.S., and one of T.B.’s

neighbors who witnessed part of the encounter. T.B. testified that on

February 20,

[D.S.] yelled b*tch, and I turned around and asked her if she needed to say anything to my face, and she said, “Yeah, well, you’re a fat skank, and I can get with any guy I want, and you can go die in a hole.” And I [said], “Well, I don’t care how I look or I don’t care about my weight, but at least I’ll get farther in life than you’ll get.” Then she said, “Whatever, skank,” and walked off. 4

T.B. further testified that she went home and cried after the incident.

According to T.B., D.S. has bullied her in the past. T.B. testified

that the two “used to get kind of along when [T.B.’s] mom was a Girl

Scout leader, but after that [D.S.] bullied [her] . . . nonstop . . . .” T.B.

further testified that she “couldn’t even walk home at night without being

scared,” and that she is intimidated by D.S.

On cross-examination, T.B. conceded “[D.S.] threatened [her] in the

past, not at this event, but . . . before,” and that D.S. made her feel

intimidated by “in the past . . . picking fights with [her].” She further

testified that D.S. made her “feel insecure,” as though “[she] . . . almost

want[ed] to commit suicide.” T.B. testified that she and D.S. were about

ten feet apart during the incident. T.B. acknowledged she did not

mention in her written statement to Chief Orr that D.S. yelled “you can

go die in a hole,” but that “it did occur.”

On redirect, T.B. testified that during the encounter with D.S. she

felt intimidated and thought D.S. was threatening to harm her. T.B.

testified that her feelings were based on D.S. “saying mean things to

[her], and with all the things she said in the past, just reoccurring.”

D.S.’s counsel then cross-examined T.B. again. T.B. was asked

what D.S. threatened to do to her. T.B. testified, “She says the exact

same things over and over again, and just—I don’t know.” T.B. then

testified that D.S. had “threatened to kill [her] family before.” Counsel

asked, “Did that happen on February 20?” T.B. answered, “No.”

T.B.’s neighbor testified that she heard D.S. yell at T.B. on

February 20. She stated that she was unsure whether D.S. “said the

C word, c*nt, or s*ut” because she “was shocked.” The neighbor testified

that she asked T.B., “[D]id she just say what I thought she said?” T.B.

responded, “Yes, she did . . . but I’m getting used to it.” 5

D.S. testified that before the incident on February 20, she had

gotten off the bus, as she does every day, and lost track of her friend,

T.F. In an effort to reunite with T.F., D.S. yelled “T bitch” because “that’s

what [she] always called her.” D.S. testified, T.B. “looked at me and said,

‘Thank you,’ all snotty.” D.S. responded to T.B., “I wasn’t talking to you.

You’re stupid.” According to D.S., T.B. “just started yelling a bunch more

stuff at [her], and [they] just kept yelling stuff at each other.” The

incident lasted about five minutes. D.S. testified she was not trying to

intimidate or alarm T.B., and that she did not make any threats to T.B.

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