Julina M. Winland v. Edwin Alan Winland, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 16, 2022
Docket2021 CA 001319
StatusUnknown

This text of Julina M. Winland v. Edwin Alan Winland, Jr. (Julina M. Winland v. Edwin Alan Winland, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julina M. Winland v. Edwin Alan Winland, Jr., (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: JUNE 17, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-1319-ME

JULINA MARIE WINLAND APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM HARLAN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE KENT HENDRICKSON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 21-D-00184-002

EDWIN ALAN WINLAND, JR. APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CETRULO, LAMBERT, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

LAMBERT, JUDGE: Julina Marie Winland (Julina) has appealed from the order

of the Harlan Circuit Court denying her petition for a domestic violence order

(DVO) against her husband, Edwin Alan Winland, Jr. (Alan). We affirm.

Julina filed a petition for an order of protection on September 27,

2021, seeking protection against Alan, with whom she was involved in a dissolution action and custody dispute. She stated that on September 21, 2021,1 in

Harlan County, Alan had engaged in an act of domestic violence and abuse based

upon the following allegations:

I went to court because my soon to be ex-husband is trying to give custody of our children to my father. At the lunch recess, Alan waited outside the courthouse and followed me and Kevin Lucas to our lawyer’s office, Howard Law. After we went inside, the secretary told me he was walking around my Yukon with an older man and asked who he was. I told him that was my soon to be ex-husband. Alan also tried to take Kevin and me to lunch. We declined. After court, I was given permission to see my kids for the first time. I went up to my dad’s house to visit with them. Alan came in but then said he had to go and left in his car. I got ready to go and one of my girls went to go get me Kevin’s hitch that Alan stole off the Yukon. My oldest son refused to give it to me and Alan came back so he gave it to him in his car after disobeying my dad to give it to me. I jumped in Alan’s car and he then took off. I told him to give me the hitch and let me out. He would not stop the car after I repeatedly told him to let me out. He would not stop the car but said I could jump out so I opened the door. He continued to drive down Ivy Hill and slid to a stop into the guardrail at the bottom. I got the hitch and my foot got caught when the door hit the rail. I pulled my foot in and he took off again. I told him to let me out and he slowed down enough and told me to get out so I jumped out of the car. I walked to my brother’s house and he drove me up the hill. Alan was parked behind my Yukon and tried to take the hitch back. I rolled up the windows and locked the doors. He said he would follow me. He followed me down the hill so I pulled into the police station because he wouldn’t leave me alone.

1 Julina testified at the DVO hearing that the incident took place on September 20, 2021, and that she listed the date as the 21st in her petition by accident.

-2- Julina also sought an emergency protective order (EPO) that would restrain Alan

from further acts of domestic violence and abuse. The circuit court issued an EPO

and summons for a DVO hearing the following day. A DVO hearing was

scheduled for November after Alan’s counsel accepted service on his behalf.

The circuit court held the DVO hearing on November 5, 2021. Harlan

Police Department Officer Jared Powell testified first. He came into contact with

Julina and Alan when he received a call from dispatch regarding two people at the

police department who had been arguing. Officer Powell returned to the police

department and separately spoke with both Julina and Alan. Alan told Officer

Powell that they had been arguing and that he was only there for his credit cards,

which Julina refused to give to him. Officer Powell then spoke with Julina, who

told him that Alan had taken her and would not stop his vehicle or let her out. She

then tried to get out of the vehicle and it wrecked. Julina recorded everything that

had happened in the car (Alan driving down the road and not letting her out), and

she provided this to Officer Powell. Officer Powell charged Alan with unlawful

imprisonment because Julina repeatedly asked to be let out of the car and he would

not let her out. Julina was injured when she opened the door while it was going

down the road. When Alan hit the guardrail, the car door came back and hit

Julina’s foot. He believed Alan told Julina she could jump out of the car.

-3- During Officer Powell’s direct examination, the Uniform Citation

charging Alan with second-degree unlawful imprisonment was introduced as an

exhibit. The citation, dated September 20, 2021, stated:

On 9/20/2021 I received a call from dispatch of two individuals at the police station in reference to a verbal argument taking place. Upon arrival I spoke with [Alan] Winland. I asked what was going on. [Alan] advised that he was only there to get credit cards. That his wife Julina Winland had them in their vehicle and would not give them back that they were going through a divorce and having custody issues. Upon speaking with Julina Winland she advised that she could not get a divorce and other problems going on. She advised that her foot was hurting because she had jumped in the vehicle with [Alan] her husband’s car and as they drove off she advised and has recording of yelling “let me out of the vehicle, stop the vehicle, let me out of the vehicle, let me out.” [Alan] advised her to jump out of the vehicle and had failed to slow down. Julina had opened the door and continuing to try to get [Alan] to stop the vehicle and he would not. While the car door was open [Alan] had advised that he lost control on the road and hit the guard rail. The door of the car hit the guard rail slamming back and hitting Julina’s foot.

On cross-examination, Officer Powell testified that Julina had gotten

into Alan’s vehicle due to a dispute over a trailer hitch. He also agreed that there

were discrepancies as to how Julina told him she injured her foot (when she got

into the car or when the door hit her foot after the vehicle ran into the guardrail).

Julina did not need any medical treatment for her foot injury. Officer Powell did

-4- not have any information about why Julina was at the house or what happened up

there.

Julina testified next. She was currently married to Alan. She

described the events that led up to the incident. Julina had been at her father’s

house visiting with her children when a dispute with Alan arose over a trailer hitch

that she believed Alan had stolen from her Yukon truck. The hitch belonged to her

friend, Kevin Lucas. Her oldest son gave the hitch to Alan while he was in his

vehicle. Julina got into the car to try to get the hitch from him. Alan started

driving and told Julina he was taking her to another location. He would not let her

out. Julina got the hitch away from his lap and told Alan to let her out of the

vehicle multiple times. He repeatedly refused to do so. Going down Ivy Hill, Alan

told her she could jump out so she opened the door and put her foot out. At the

bottom of the hill, Alan slid into the guardrail, causing the door to shut on her foot,

bruising it. She did not need any medical treatment for her foot. Julina then pulled

her foot back inside of the vehicle and shut the door. Alan started driving again

and would not let her out. He slowed down at a stop sign and told her she could

get out. She jumped out with the hitch. He told her he was going back up the

mountain to her father’s house to take her Yukon. She carried the 40-pound hitch

to her brother Jeremiah’s house, and he gave her a ride back up the mountain to her

father’s house.

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Julina M. Winland v. Edwin Alan Winland, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julina-m-winland-v-edwin-alan-winland-jr-kyctapp-2022.