M. A. B. v. Buell

438 P.3d 465, 296 Or. App. 380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 6, 2019
DocketA166273
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 438 P.3d 465 (M. A. B. v. Buell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. A. B. v. Buell, 438 P.3d 465, 296 Or. App. 380 (Or. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

HADLOCK, P. J.

*466*381Petitioner and respondent were married in 2014 and they have one young child, J. Petitioner separated from respondent in July 2017, and she and J moved in with petitioner's parents. In October of that year, petitioner sought and obtained a restraining order against respondent under the Family Abuse Prevention Act (FAPA), ORS 107.700 to 107.735. On respondent's appeal, we conclude that petitioner did not meet her burden of proving that she was in imminent danger of further abuse from respondent at the time of the FAPA hearing. Accordingly, we reverse.

We review the trial court's legal conclusions for legal error. Kargol v. Kargol , 295 Or. App. 529, 530, 435 P.3d 814 (2019). We are bound by the trial court's factual findings-both those that are explicit and those that are necessarily implied by its rulings-if any evidence in the record supports them. Hannemann v. Anderson , 251 Or. App. 207, 208, 283 P.3d 386 (2012). We therefore describe the facts in a manner that reflects the court's findings and its ultimate decision to grant the FAPA order.

Petitioner and respondent were married in 2014. During his marriage to petitioner, respondent took medications for depression; he sometimes also drank alcohol to excess, despite warnings to the contrary associated with his medications. J was just under two years old at the time of the FAPA hearing. Petitioner worked part time and was J's primary caregiver; respondent was employed full time.

The physical incidents of abuse described by petitioner relate to involuntary sex. See ORS 107.700(1)(c) (defining "abuse" to include "[c]ausing another to engage in involuntary sexual relations by force or threat of force"). Sometime before March 2017, respondent joined petitioner while she was taking a shower. She told him that she did not want to have sex, but he pushed her against the shower wall and had intercourse with her, despite her telling him to stop. In May 2017, respondent subjected petitioner to involuntary sex again while forcibly holding her down on a bed, after having dragged her away from J, who was breast feeding. Petitioner suffered bruising on her arms as a result.

*382Petitioner testified at the FAPA hearing that it had taken her a while to realize that respondent's actions toward her were wrong because respondent "was often sexually aggressive even if it was consensual and so the lines were very blurred for [her]."

In June 2017, petitioner told respondent that she was very unhappy in their marriage. Respondent told petitioner that he would kill her and take J if she ever left or divorced him. Respondent seemed "very relaxed" and, had petitioner not looked at his face, she "would have thought maybe he was joking." However, after looking at respondent, petitioner "felt like he was completely serious."

The following month, petitioner and respondent were showering together with J, and respondent urinated on petitioner and laughed about it. After those events, petitioner and J began spending more nights at the home of petitioner's parents, which was located near her workplace. Petitioner and respondent went to a marriage counseling session, but respondent said that, if petitioner was unhappy, it was her problem and that she needed to work on it.

On July 23, 2017, petitioner took J and went to live with her parents. Soon thereafter, she filed for divorce. Except during a subsequent mediation session and meetings associated with transitioning J to respondent for his parenting time, petitioner and respondent have not come face-to-face since petitioner moved to her parents' home. Respondent did not seek out petitioner at her place of employment or her school. He did once knock on the door and window of petitioner's parent's home and he left a note when nobody answered. At the FAPA hearing, petitioner's father did not recall what the note had said, although he agreed it could have referenced diapers or other supplies. Respondent testified that the note he left asked *467petitioner's family members to contact him if they needed "any money or anything" for support.

In August, petitioner told J's pediatrician about what had happened between her and respondent. Respondent subsequently went to the pediatrician's office several times without an appointment, seeking to discuss J's well-being.

*383The pediatrician was concerned that respondent had gone to the office "several times in-person with demands," and she directed respondent by letter to reach the office by telephone in the future unless he came in with J because of an emergency. The pediatrician found respondent's behavior, which she described as "repeatedly asking for information from my staff and sitting in the waiting room" very unusual; she had not seen that in her practice. Twice when father visited, it was to obtain medical records to which he was entitled, although the office would have preferred that he request the records in advance, instead of coming in and asking for them to be gathered while he waited. Father also requested that a chart note mentioning allegations of marital rape be amended to say that the allegations "are no more than allegations," and the pediatrician informed father that she would append that statement to the chart note that he was concerned about.

In late August, petitioner and respondent reached a temporary agreement about parenting time. Under that agreement, respondent saw J twice weekly and there was no requirement that visits be supervised. At meetings when J was transitioned from one parent to the other, respondent "made it a habit to drive around the block" and find petitioner's car, driving slowly by with an "angry, rage-filled stare" at petitioner and whoever was with her. Respondent frequently called, emailed, and sent text messages to petitioner, some of which were admitted as exhibits at the FAPA hearing. Petitioner described respondent's messages as sometimes being "loving and asking [petitioner] to come home"; sometimes, however, "they were angry, demanding that [she] return home right away with [J]." Respondent also said untrue things about petitioner and her family, claiming that they were crazy. Those communications made petitioner feel "threatened, upset, scared, [and] frustrated" because she felt that the messages "exhibited some sort of instability in [respondent's] thought process."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 P.3d 465, 296 Or. App. 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-a-b-v-buell-orctapp-2019.