K.M. v. V.S.

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 30, 2024
DocketA-0543-23
StatusUnpublished

This text of K.M. v. V.S. (K.M. v. V.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K.M. v. V.S., (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

RECORD IMPOUNDED

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-0543-23

K.M.,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

V.S.,

Defendant-Appellant. _______________________

Submitted October 8, 2024 – Decided December 30, 2024

Before Judges Sumners and Susswein.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Bergen County, Docket No. FV-02-0559-24.

Shin & Jung LLP, attorney for appellant (Seung Han Shin, on the brief).

Laterra & Hodge LLC, attorneys for respondent (Scott Adam Laterra, of counsel and on the brief).

PER CURIAM Defendant V.S. 1 appeals from an October 4, 2023 final restraining order

(FRO) entered against him pursuant to the Prevention of Domestic Violence Act

(PDVA), N.J.S.A. 2C:25-17 to -35. Defendant contends the record does not

support the Family Part judge's factual findings and the judge erred by

considering allegations of prior domestic violence that were previously

dismissed on the merits after adjudication. Defendant also claims the judge did

not provide him the opportunity to cross-examine plaintiff K.M.V. about the

past allegations. Finally, defendant contends the judge's determination that an

FRO is needed was conclusory, not anchored in specific findings of fact, and

not supported by the factors enumerated in N.J.S.A. 2C:25-29(a)(1)-(6). After

carefully reviewing the record in light of the governing legal principles, we

affirm.

I.

We discern the following procedural history and facts from the record. In

April 2023, plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce. On September 2, 2023,

plaintiff filed a domestic violence complaint and temporary restraining order

(TRO) alleging the predicate acts of assault and harassment committed that

1 We use initials to protect the privacy and confidentiality of these proceedings. R. 1:38-39(d)(10). A-0543-23 2 morning at the parties' marital residence. A trial was convened on October 4,

2023. Both parties were self-represented.

This was the fourth TRO plaintiff filed against defendant. Of the prior

three domestic violence complaints, the first was voluntarily dismissed . (FV-

02-001671). Defendant contends the other two were dismissed after trial . (FV-

02-000223-24; FV-02-002467-23).

At the October 4, 2023 trial before us on appeal, plaintiff testified that on

September 2, 2023, she woke up in the morning, came down the stairs, and

defendant "approached . . . [her] aggressively asking where are my car keys?"

She told defendant, "I don't have any of your car keys . . . [a]nd when he kept

insisting, [she] thought maybe [her] younger son might have taken [them] or had

something to do with it. [She] wasn't too sure. [She] just told him that. And he

ran upstairs to [the son]'s bedroom."

Plaintiff testified she "ran behind [defendant] thinking that he might beat

[the son] or something so [she] tried to go right behind him but he locked the

door so [she] couldn't enter the [son's] bedroom." Defendant eventually exited

the son's bedroom and went into the bathroom, which is connected to a second

child's bedroom. Plaintiff stated that defendant "tried to push me out of the

bathroom away from them because I kept knocking at the door . . . I wouldn't

A-0543-23 3 leave the room and he pushed me, holding my neck, . . . and then he hit me in

the back and pushed me out of that room." Plaintiff testified defendant hit her

with an open hand on her upper back. He would not let plaintiff take her phone

out of her pocket, twisted her fingers, and grabbed the phone away from her.

Plaintiff ran outside, went to a neighbor's house, and called the police.

Defendant cross-examined plaintiff and testified on his own behalf. He

claimed that after plaintiff suggested their son might have the keys, "I ran up the

stairs. I was easily going to run for exercise so I ran up the stairs. I was getting

late. [Plaintiff] perceived it as rushing and then I went upstairs." Defendant

further testified:

I went upstairs for two reasons: one, I could get the key—I wanted to take the Volvo and go. [T]wo, my son was doing something morally wrong, taking the keys away without speaking or resolving with me. So, I wanted to have a father/son polite conversation with him, so I was standing at the door which is ten feet away, maybe [twelve], and I closed the door because he always wants it closed for allergy reasons. So he was standing . . . inside the bedroom, and then [plaintiff] started panicking. She thought I'm going to hurt my son.

Defendant described plaintiff as "paranoid," explaining he held the door

handle because she "was on the other side so she was pulling, I was holding it

A-0543-23 4 back . . . I didn't want the situation between me and my son [to] become anxious

so I stop with that. I open the door handle and she was on the other side."

Defendant further testified that he wanted to go into the other room to

speak to the second child, who threatened to call 911. Defendant added that he

then "moved rapidly through the middle room. [Plaintiff] was already off

balance because of the situation and we ended up pulling on the doors . . . so we

had some skirmish." Defendant denied anything physical happened, describing

the "skirmish" as "meaning I was way faster than her to that room between [the

son's] room and [the other child's] room."

The Family Part judge found plaintiff was "reasonable," "calm," and

"credible," describing her testimony as "consistent and believable." The judge

determined that her "testimony accurately reflected the allegations that were in

the complaint."

After noting the discrepancies in the parties' versions of the events leading

up to the physical altercation, the judge made the following specific findings:

So, the testimony is, [plaintiff] attempted to get into the room, couldn't, tried to go through another door and couldn't. And at some point, as the parties passed going, I guess, into their other son's room, I think [defendant] called it a skirmish. But . . . I mean the clear testimony from [plaintiff] was that she was grabbed in the back of the neck and pushed and hit in the back and her hair was pulled . . . .

A-0543-23 5 Right, so as the testimony was that she was that she was grabbed by the neck, pushed, hit over body, hit a wall in the, I guess, somewhere in the bathroom. She stumbled, she said she had red marks on the back of her neck and her back. I couldn't tell from the photographs. I mean, she said that . . . her fingers were twisted because he tried to get the phone away. I do see from one of the pictures there might be a red mark on the middle finger. It's not too pronounced. I certainly don't see anything on the back, so I don't . . . put too much weight on the photographs of the fact that I guess a police officer took photographs.

Next, the judge assessed defendant's testimony:

But I didn't hear [sic] a lot of testimony from [defendant] other than the fact that there was a skirmish.

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