Marriage of Godfrey CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
DocketD082526
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Godfrey CA4/1 (Marriage of Godfrey CA4/1) 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
Marriage of Godfrey CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/29/24 Marriage of Godfrey CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re the Marriage of DON GODFREY and AMAL BOUTROS GODFREY. D082526 DON GODFREY,

Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. D563821)

v.

AMAL BOUTROS GODFREY,

Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Leah Boucek, Commissioner. Affirmed. Amal Boutros Godfrey, in pro. per., for Appellant. No appearance for Respondent. A few years after Amal Boutros Godfrey (Amal) and Don R. Godfrey (Don) divorced, Don obtained a temporary restraining order (TRO) against Amal. After an evidentiary hearing, the family court granted Don a two-year domestic violence restraining order (DVRO). Amal contends on appeal that: (1) Don was not residing at the address he claimed to be living at when he sought the TRO in December 2022; (2) Don’s claims were “frivolous” and did not meet the legal standards for a DVRO; (3) the court should have considered video evidence that Amal did not commit “breaking and entering” as Don alleged; and (4) the court erred by not considering the undue burden a DVRO would place on Amal in the care of her adult son, A.G. We conclude that Don’s address at the time he sought the TRO is irrelevant to the validity of the DVRO. We further conclude that the family court had a sufficient basis for finding that Amal was harassing Don and disturbing his peace. To the extent Amal requested that the court compel Don to produce a video for admission into evidence, we conclude any purported error by the court in failing to compel discovery and admit the video would be harmless. Lastly, we conclude that the court properly considered the burden a DVRO would impose on Amal in caring for her son, and that the court did not abuse its discretion in granting a DVRO anyway. Accordingly, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Amal and Don were married for nearly 25 years when Don filed for divorce. After the divorce was finalized in 2019 and the court ordered their shared dwelling sold, Don moved into a rented home in Spring Valley, California, with their two adult sons. One of them, A.G., was 24 years old at the time of the DVRO hearing in April 2023. A.G. was born with a congenital heart disease, struggles with depression, and has been hospitalized in the past. Don testified that he had been living in the rented Spring Valley house for a few years by the time of the evidentiary hearing, and though he lived

2 elsewhere temporarily, he moved back in October 2022. Don also subleased a room in the house to a married couple he knew from work. Leading up to December 2022, Amal was a frequent visitor at the house. Because A.G. did not have a driver’s license, Amal often took him to doctor’s appointments and to run errands. According to Amal, when Don was at home, she generally stayed in her car and did not go inside. Don and his subtenants agreed that in the beginning, Amal would only park in the driveway and wait outside for A.G. to come out. At some point, however, Amal started going inside the house on a daily basis and often stayed all day. Amal said that Don was not living at the house when she was there because when she came to the house “several times,” she saw that his room was empty. She said she only entered the house “because nobody else” besides the subtenants and her sons were living there. During this time, Amal called or talked to A.G. “20, 30 times a day” to “make sure he takes his medication [and to] make sure he eats.” She worried about A.G. often, and sometimes called A.G.’s brother up to “50, 100 time[s]” to ask him to check on A.G. According to Amal, when A.G. sometimes did not come out of the house on his own, she would knock on A.G.’s window and door “several times” and enter the house after waiting half an hour to take him to his appointments. Don said that sometimes Amal would “bang on the door for half an hour [and] scream and holler at [A.G.]” until he let her inside. Don also said that at one point, Amal took A.G.’s keys and let herself in. Whenever Don saw her at the house he asked her to leave or at least move out of the driveway, but she refused. Don’s subtenants also had conflict with Amal because Amal believed they were taking A.G.’s money, food, and personal items. One day she went into the house and confronted them about taking A.G.’s items. The

3 subtenants denied using his belongings, but Amal said they continued to do so. She also accused the subtenants of locking A.G. out of the house and keeping the house “freezing” cold. According to one of the subtenants, when Amal was around she would slam doors, make a lot of noise, act “very aggressive,” and lock them out of the house. When the subtenants told Amal to leave and she refused, they called Don and the police to the house. And when Don asked her to leave, Amal told him she “would leave when [A.G.] is doing okay.” Don and his subtenants called the police multiple times to get Amal to leave, but Don said officers told them Amal had a right to visit A.G. In December 2022, a couple days before Don requested the TRO, Amal and A.G. were served with eviction notices at the house and told to vacate the premises. The following day, Amal went back to the house and called A.G. “a hundred times, waiting for hours and knocking on the door,” then knocking on his window. According to Amal, A.G. eventually let her in, and when she walked into the home, one of the subtenants was taking a video of her and telling A.G. not to open the door. The subtenants asserted that the video showed Amal opening the door with her own keys, even though she never lived at the house and had no permission to enter. After Amal went inside, she gave A.G. medication and took him out for a drive. When she came back and tried to enter the house, she realized that Don had changed the locks while they were out. The next day, Don applied for a TRO. He accused Amal of “breaking and entering,” among other things. A.G. went back to live at the house after

4 he spent some time hospitalized, but Don’s subtenants decided to move out around January or February 2023. After an evidentiary hearing in April 2023 in which both parties appeared without counsel, the family court granted Don a two-year DVRO. The court found that Amal was frequently at and inside Don’s residence uninvited, and even if A.G. allowed her inside, she remained in the residence all day without permission. The court further credited testimony that Amal locked the subtenants out of the house when she was inside, and that she also let herself into the home after somehow obtaining a key. The court stated that it understood and appreciated Amal’s “concern for her son’s physical and mental health,” and that Amal was “not capable right now of having [A.G.] live with [her].” It also observed it was “understandable that [Amal] want[s] to take him to the doctor or shopping or other outings.” The court nonetheless found that taking care of A.G. did not require Amal to be inside the residence, and that in the past, it “was fine” for her to stay outside and allow A.G. to come out. The court also noted that Amal herself testified she sometimes called her adult sons up to 100 times per day, knocked on the window and door of the house until she was let in, and was “inside the residence often enough and long enough” to know what was in the bedrooms and what food the subtenants were eating. The court found that Amal’s refusal to leave when asked led Don and the subtenants to call the police numerous times for assistance.

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