J.H. v. G.H.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 2021
DocketA160303
StatusPublished

This text of J.H. v. G.H. (J.H. v. G.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.H. v. G.H., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/28/21 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

J.H., Respondent, A160303 v. G.H., (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. FDI18790640) Appellant.

Appellant G.H. appeals from an order granting her a two-year domestic violence restraining order (DVRO) against respondent J.H. In the published portion of our opinion, we conclude the trial court did not err in excluding the parties’ children as protected parties in the DVRO. In the unpublished portion, we conclude the court did not err in precluding their 12-year-old daughter from testifying at the contested hearing or in denying G.H.’s request for a five-year DVRO. The order is affirmed. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Background and DVRO Application G.H. and J.H. married in 2006 and had two children, L.H. and B.H. The couple separated in August 2018. Around that time, a dependency case was initiated for the children based on allegations that J.H. was abusing

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication, with the exception of parts B and C of the Discussion.

1 G.H. in their presence. During the dependency proceedings, G.H. retained custody of the children, and J.H. had supervised visits. In late January 2019, upon stipulation of the parties, the juvenile court issued a final judgment in the dependency matter granting joint legal custody of the children but awarding G.H. sole physical custody. The court granted J.H. supervised visitation, noting the expectation that the family would “move toward less restrictive visits after more time in either the therapeutic or supervised setting and continued services for the family . . . .” No restraining order was sought against J.H. as part of this judgment, and no such order was imposed. In the meantime, in October 2018, J.H. filed for divorce. In April 2019, J.H. filed a request for a custody evaluation and “family therapy” with the children, which the court granted in July 2019. In August 2019, G.H. filed a request for a DVRO in favor of herself and her children against J.H. G.H. sought an order that J.H. not harass or contact her and the children, that he stay at least 100 yards from them, and that they not engage in joint therapy pending a further court order following a custody evaluation. She also sought modified child custody and visitation orders to prohibit visitation before and after the hearing. In her supporting declaration, G.H. alleged J.H. unilaterally withdrew the children from school to intentionally leave them without time or resources to find a comparable school. She also detailed incidents of past abuse allegedly perpetrated by J.H. from 2013 to 2018. The trial court issued a temporary DVRO in August 2019. Among other things, the temporary order enjoined J.H. from harassing, attacking, or contacting G.H.1 But the court denied G.H.’s requests for a stay away order,

1 Notably, although both parties assert in their briefing that the temporary DVRO included L.H. and B.H. as protected parties in terms of the conduct orders, the trial court did not check the box in the temporary DVRO form that would have indicated the children were deemed protected persons.

2 for sole legal and physical custody, and for a ban on visitation. The court also denied—pending a hearing—G.H.’s request that no joint therapy with J.H. occur until after a custody evaluation. Both parties filed briefs in advance of the contested hearing on the matter. B. The Contested Hearing The trial court held a contested hearing over the course of two days in November 2019 and two days in January 2020. The following is a summary of the evidence presented. G.H. first testified about J.H.’s abuse of her in August 2018. In short, J.H. was drinking when he and G.H. got into a verbal argument while their daughter, L.H., stood between them. J.H. tackled G.H. to the ground, then crossed and pressed her arms into her throat as he put his weight on her such that she could not breathe. At some point, J.H. threw beer at G.H., and G.H. urinated on herself and lost consciousness. Their 12-year-old daughter, L.H., called 911. L.H. was scared and thought G.H. had died. Their younger son, B.H., hid in his bedroom, did not want to be apart from G.H., and wet his bed several times that week. G.H. also testified about an incident in November 2016. The children were playing when J.H. roughly grabbed their son off his sister, shook him, and threw him onto a bed. This caused bruising to their son’s ribs. When G.H. tried to tell J.H. he had been too rough, J.H. grabbed G.H. by the back of her neck, shoved her down into a mattress, then suffocated her with a mattress topper. J.H. also put his knee into G.H.’s back, scratched and hit the side of her face, and banged her head against a door and door frame. During this incident, the children yelled for J.H. to stop. G.H. testified that the first act of abuse she could remember occurred in 2013, when J.H. tried to force G.H. to engage in anal sex. He screamed at her

3 and threw plastic bottles and lubricant at her. J.H. forced her to engage in anal sex several times a year thereafter, despite her refusals. He also threatened her with sexual violence and once threatened to hire men to kidnap and rape her. J.H. called her names in front of the children, and he threatened to leave her penniless or homeless or to make her disappear. Once in August 2013, J.H. came home drunk and urinated on their shared bed with G.H. asleep in it. At some point, G.H. came home to find J.H. watching pornography on a large screen while their daughter was asleep on the sofa next to him and their son was in his room within hearing distance. G.H. testified this history of violence has left their daughter L.H. withdrawn, afraid, clingy, and overprotective towards G.H. and B.H. As for B.H., he developed a stutter, a nervous tic, and often wets the bed. G.H. testified neither child wants to visit J.H. The children’s former teacher testified that she observed G.H. in November 2016 with bruising on her face and neck. Two other witnesses testified, among other things, that G.H. was a very truthful person. J.H. took the stand and acknowledged his past acts of violence against G.H., but he indicated there had been no violence since August 2018. With regard to the August 2018 incident, J.H. testified G.H. scratched and slapped him four times in the face, breaking a blood vessel in his eye. He acknowledged restraining G.H. by her arms, but denied choking her. As to the November 2016 incident, he denied harming his son and denied slamming G.H.’s head into a door. He claimed he and J.H. consensually engaged in anal sex, denied ever forcing G.H. to do so, and denied throwing lubricant or plastic bottles at her. He denied watching pornography while his children were present. He denied threatening to have men kidnap and rape G.H., or intentionally urinating on their bed in 2013. He denied threatening

4 to harm or kill G.H. or to make her or the children homeless. He denied unilaterally withdrawing the children from school and testified he had emailed G.H. about putting the children in public school because he could not afford to fully pay for the private school they had been considering. J.H. testified he was ashamed and regretful that he committed acts of domestic violence, and he wanted to develop a healthy relationship with his children going forward. When asked what he had done to ensure he would never commit another act of domestic violence, he testified he completed a 52- hour batterer intervention course and a 12-hour parenting course. Also, he was attending individual therapy and changed his alcohol consumption habits, and he was living a healthier lifestyle generally (due in part to his having a heart attack in 2019).

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J.H. v. G.H., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jh-v-gh-calctapp-2021.