K.R. v. C.N. CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 2023
DocketC094525
StatusUnpublished

This text of K.R. v. C.N. CA3 (K.R. v. C.N. CA3) 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
K.R. v. C.N. CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 3/14/23 K.R. v. C.N. CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (El Dorado) ----

K.R., C094525

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. PC20210126)

v.

C.N.,

Defendant and Appellant.

Appellant C.N. challenges a civil harassment restraining order granted to his neighbor, respondent K.R. C.N. contends the order should be reversed because his lawyer was incompetent and the trial judge who heard the matter was biased. We conclude C.N.’s first contention is without merit and the second forfeited by C.N.’s failure to raise the issue below. C.N. further contends that K.R. was not entitled to equitable relief due to unclean hands, a defense that is similarly forfeited because it is raised for the first time on appeal. We will affirm the order.

1 I. BACKGROUND The trial court heard evidence on five requests for a civil harassment restraining order between neighbors in El Dorado County and granted only K.R.’s against C.N. On March 15, 2021, K.R. filed a request for a civil harassment restraining order. K.R. stated: “[C.N.] has constantly and persistently harassed me and my family by screaming insults (white trash, faggot, etc.) and taking advantage of the fact that I have been suffering from a possibly fatal illness by yelling things like ‘if you are so sick just hurry up and die.’ He also has repeatedly allowed his dogs to run free off of[] his property leading them to cause fatal injuries to our livestock. On one occassion [sic] he put a handgun in my face when I came to his front door to tell him that his dogs were running free again. Last Friday, he pulled out a handgun and discharged every round in the magazine while standing along our other neighbor’s fence line (while that neighbor was working on the fence).” On May 20 and 25, 2021, the trial court heard testimony from K.R., C.N., and other witnesses. From this testimony we draw the following facts: K.R., his wife, and two sons, and C.N. and his girlfriend are neighbors separated by a dirt road in a rural area of Placerville. K.R. moved there a little over 10 years ago. C.N. has lived at his residence for 21 years. Relations between K.R. and C.N. were relatively friendly for eight years. Things changed two years ago when C.N.’s dog crawled through a culvert and attacked K.R.’s goat, which sustained severe injuries. C.N. and his girlfriend tried to provide medical care for the goat but it died. C.N. offered compensation for the goat or to replace the goat, but K.R. declined. C.N. blocked the culvert so the dog could no longer get through. About three to six months after the incident, K.R. was shooting on his property to train a dog not to be gun-shy, and the dog got out and ran over to C.N.’s house. K.R. walked to C.N.’s front door to ask for a hand in capturing the dog. Before K.R. could knock, C.N. flung open the door and, according to K.R., held a .45-caliber pistol to

2 K.R.’s forehead. In C.N.’s version of the incident, K.R. was drinking and shooting on his property and came over to C.N.’s property, even though C.N. had told K.R. numerous times not to trespass. C.N. and his girlfriend saw K.R. walk past the front door. C.N. opened the door. C.N. had retrieved a .45-caliber handgun from his gun safe and was holding it at his side. K.R. was not armed, as far as C.N. knew. C.N. asked K.R. what he was doing, and K.R. replied he was looking for his dog. C.N. told K.R. to get his dog and get off the property, and K.R. did. K.R. called the Sheriff’s Department. Sheriff’s deputies interviewed C.N. and K.R. The deputies asked K.R. if he wanted to file felony charges against C.N. K.R. said that he did not want to ruin C.N.’s life; he just wanted a record of the incident. After that incident, friendly relations ended. C.N. would drive fast down the dirt road between their houses to scatter dust on K.R.’s house, make obscene gestures, and call K.R.’s family members names, including K.R.’s children (C.N. denied any name- calling). K.R. also observed an incident a few months before the trial where C.N., during a dispute with other neighbors about their dogs, walked to their fence line and fired his .45- caliber pistol multiple times into the ground. According to C.N., he was firing blanks. In ruling on K.R.’s request for a civil harassment restraining order against C.N., the trial court concluded that there was clear and convincing evidence that C.N. assaulted K.R. with a firearm. The court further noted that in a videotape played at the hearing C.N. could be heard cursing and yelling at his neighbors, yet C.N. testified he did not recognize his own voice. The court observed that this conduct alone would be insufficient for a restraining order, but C.N. had also assaulted K.R. The court found inexplicable and “just recalcitrant” that, with the “restraining orders going back and forth,” C.N. went to the fence line and fired his handgun multiple times. The court noted that C.N. said the rounds were blanks, but the court observed that C.N. “wasn’t credible.”

3 The trial court issued a civil harassment restraining order against C.N., directing him not to harass or contact K.R. or his family, and “not be on the property line” to harass K.R. or his family. The court ordered C.N. to stay at least 100 yards from K.R. and his family and from their home up to C.N.’s property line. C.N. filed a timely appeal.1 II. DISCUSSION A. C.N.’s Opening Brief As an initial matter, we address numerous deficiencies in C.N.’s opening brief. The opening brief fails to comply with California Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(2)(C), which requires “a summary of the significant facts limited to matters in the record.” C.N. has made no effort to fairly summarize the evidence presented. His version of the facts is entirely one-sided. He simply ignores evidence that does not support his position. (In re Marriage of Davenport (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th 1507, 1530- 1531 (Davenport) [appellant “proceeds to recite the evidence in a fashion favorable to her”].) Indeed, C.N.’s statement of facts makes no mention of his armed confrontation with K.R. or C.N. firing his handgun multiple times at the fence line of another neighbor, which the trial court indicated was determinative in its decision to issue the restraining order. An appellant’s attempt to “merely reargue the ‘facts’ as [he] would have them . . . manifests a treatment of the record that disregards the most fundamental rules of appellate review.” (Id. at p. 1531.) “[S]uch ‘factual presentation is but an attempt to reargue on appeal those factual issues decided adversely to [the appellant] at the trial level, contrary to established precepts of appellate review. As such, it is doomed to fail.’ ” (Ibid.)

1 K.R. failed to file a brief.

4 In addition, many of the facts are stated without citation to evidence in the record. “Statements of fact that are not supported by references to the record are disregarded by the reviewing court.” (McOwen v. Grossman (2007) 153 Cal.App.4th 937, 947; see Fierro v. Landry’s Restaurant Inc. (2019) 32 Cal.App.5th 276, 281, fn. 5.) This principle extends to any portion of an appellate brief, including argument. (Alki Partners, LP v. DB Fund Services (2016) 4 Cal.App.5th 574, 590, fn. 8.) Lastly, factual statements in the argument section of C.N.’s opening brief cite his memorandum in support of a petition for a writ of supersedeas, which this court denied. The memorandum is not in the trial court record and C.N. made no request to add it to the appellate record, nor did he ask us to judicially notice it.

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K.R. v. C.N. CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kr-v-cn-ca3-calctapp-2023.