L.S. v. P.T. CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 2025
DocketA171575
StatusUnpublished

This text of L.S. v. P.T. CA1/1 (L.S. v. P.T. CA1/1) 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
L.S. v. P.T. CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/3/25 L.S. v. P.T. CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

L.S., Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Respondent, A171575

v. (San Francisco City & County P.T., Super. Ct. No. FDV-23-816772) Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant.

The trial court granted L.S.’s request for a domestic violence restraining order (DVRO) against her husband P.T. and denied P.T.’s request for a DVRO against L.S.1 P.T. appeals both rulings, the first only as to the inclusion of the parties’ children as protected parties. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND L.S. and P.T. married in Nepal in 2018. In 2021, they moved to California, where their twin girls were born in September 2022.

1 Such orders are governed by the Domestic Violence Prevention Act

(DVPA), Family Code section 6200 et sequitur. All further undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code. We refer to the parties by their initials to protect L.S.’s privacy, in accordance with rule 8.90(b)(1) of the California Rules of Court.

1 A. Life with P.T.’s Family in Nepal In Nepal, L.S. “had to live with” P.T.’s “extended big family.” She had to “do a lot of work,” including “cleaning, cooking, [and] washing the dishes,” she “had to wear . . . certain clothes all the time,” and she was not allowed to express her opinions or “to eat eggs.” P.T.’s family would “get angry at” L.S. and “shame [her] family” in connection with her behavior. Such “controlling” treatment was common in Nepal. In 2019, P.T. went to work in Singapore for four months, leaving L.S. with his family. According to L.S., she and P.T. had agreed to talk daily or every other day, but P.T. was uncommunicative while he was away. They quarreled about this. From Singapore, P.T. messaged L.S., “ ‘You will be sorry when I’m fucking dead. If I die of a heart attack it is your fault.’ ” She feared he was suicidal. After P.T. returned to Nepal, “he got very isolated. He started shutting himself in [a] room for almost two years.” Late one night, P.T. “came out of the shower in his towel, and he got really angry, and . . . accus[ed] his uncle, who lived two floors down,” of intentionally “stopp[ing] the water flow.” “Suddenly, he got so enraged” that he went to his uncle’s home and “apparently shattered a glass door . . . with his hand.” “When his parents brought him upstairs,” he “was covered in blood and glass.” L.S. was “terrified,” but helped P.T.’s parents to “clean[] his wound” and remove “the glass from his body.” One day in December 2019, L.S. was “very sick” with a “102 fever,” but was cleaning the kitchen because she “had to.” She brought P.T. his lunch and “he was already very angry,” with “red and big” eyes. He said, “ ‘Start packing your things and leave,’ ” and L.S. “didn’t understand.” P.T. said, “ ‘I’m going to count to five, if you don’t start packing your things, I’m going to

2 throw the sofa off the third floor.’ ” After counting to five, P.T. “threw the sofa from the third floor into the family courtyard,” “locked [L.S.] out of the room,” and said she needed to leave. L.S. was “terrified.” According to L.S., P.T.’s parents sought medical treatment for P.T., which she supported. L.S. presented uncontradicted evidence that in Nepal, there is a legal process by which family members can consent to mental health treatment for a person with “mental illness or any impairment of mental soundness.” A psychiatrist prescribed P.T. medication through this process after meeting with his mother and L.S. Unbeknownst to P.T., his mother would mix the medication with food and administer it to him. L.S. testified that on two occasions, P.T.’s mother prepared the medication with food and told L.S. to give it to P.T., and she complied. After three months of this surreptitious medication, the psychiatrist instructed the family to inform P.T. of the treatment, and P.T.’s father told him. P.T. “just left and went to his room upstairs,” and he texted L.S. that he wanted to stop the medication. Over the next few months, the Nepalese psychiatrist continued to treat P.T. with P.T.’s knowledge and direct participation, until L.S. and P.T. moved away. The psychiatrist “very specifically said there [was] a danger of relapse if [P.T.] stop[ped] medication abruptly,” and P.T. needed to keep taking his medication “for at least a year.” B. The Parties Move to California, Have Twin Girls, and Separate In the spring of 2021, the parties moved to San Francisco. Several months later, P.T. flushed the medication they had brought from Nepal down the toilet, and L.S. told his parents because she was “really scared.” At his parents’ request, the Nepalese psychiatrist e-mailed P.T.’s doctor in San Francisco about his medical history.

3 P.T. stated in a declaration that L.S. “pressured [him] to impregnate her since [they] married, even though [he] told her that [he] wanted [them] to be financially more stable and needed a year or two to be ready.” He “eventually caved to [L.S.]” with respect to having children. L.S. denied pressuring P.T. to have children and explained they had agreed to do so before getting married, then agreed to “have babies in America not in Nepal because . . . it’s a better country.” In early January 2022, L.S. and P.T. returned “from a nice vacation in Joshua Tree,” and her parents called to wish them a happy new year. L.S.’s mother wished the couple “good health” and a “growing family.” L.S. testified that the day after her parents’ call, P.T. “woke up angry” and began to complain about the “kitchen not being tidy.” He threw “containers on the floor and in the trash, started shouting,” and said “like, how dare your mom say things like this.” L.S. “got scared that he would do something” and “went to [her] friend’s place in San Jose.” When she was on the train to San Jose, P.T. messaged her to “ ‘move[] out permanently’ ” because he did not “ ‘want to have kids with [her].’ ” L.S. replied that she would “ ‘come back when [P.T. was] ready to talk,’ ” and P.T. responded, “ ‘Come back when I’m dead . . . when I lived a happy life without you in it.’ ” P.T. tore up photographs of himself with L.S., removed photographs of L.S.’s family from their frames, “threw” her “religious items,” and then “took pictures of those torn things and sent them to [her].” L.S. was “very hurt and scared.” “Around [the] end of January” 2022, L.S. learned that she was pregnant. She had “a hard pregnancy,” and P.T. “would get angry if [she] said [she] was not feeling well.” He would “say things like, ‘Every woman gets pregnant, deal with it.’ ” During one text message exchange, L.S. said she was not feeling well enough to do housework and felt “ ‘a lot of anxiety

4 and stress’ ” because of P.T.’s “ ‘agitation.’ ” P.T. replied, “ ‘None of these things would be an issue if you were organized in the first place, maybe spend sometime [sic] reflecting on what you could do different instead putting all of the blame on me.’ ” He continued, “ ‘Please stop feeling sorry for yourself. Pick yourself up and get on with your day. You will soon have two more humans to take care of.’ ” P.T. would “get angry” and “shout verbal abuse” if L.S. invited friends or family to their home, once locking her out of the bedroom so that she “had to sleep on the sofa.” L.S. stopped sharing her feelings with P.T. and would go to her “friends and neighbors to hang out with them or even to nap.” L.S. and P.T.’s twin daughters were born prematurely and spent a few days in neonatal intensive care. P.T.

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L.S. v. P.T. CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ls-v-pt-ca11-calctapp-2025.