Marriage of Walker CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 2015
DocketH037905
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Walker CA6 (Marriage of Walker CA6) 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.

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Marriage of Walker CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/6/15 Marriage of Walker CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of ELENA WALKER H037905 and RALPH WALKER. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 1-08-FL145115)

ELENA WALKER,

Respondent,

v.

RALPH WALKER,

Appellant.

Appellant Ralph D. Walker challenges the trial court’s order granting respondent Elena M. Walker’s request for renewal of a domestic violence restraining order (DVRO). He claims that the order must be reversed because (1) the trial court “did not follow the legal guidelines” setting forth the requirements for renewal of a DVRO, (2) the court’s order is not supported by the evidence, (3) the court abused its discretion in excluding evidence, (4) the court abused its discretion in permitting the children’s therapist to testify at the hearing, (5) Elena’s testimony was false and misleading, and (6) the court 1 denied him due process. We reject his contentions and affirm the order.

I. Background Ralph and Elena married in 1993 and have two minor sons. In September 2007, Ralph punched Elena several times and caused a large bruise to her arm. On another occasion, Ralph put his arms around the neck of the older son, lifted him off the ground, and choked him. Ralph and Elena separated in January 2008, and Elena filed for a dissolution in February 2008. She also sought a temporary DVRO against Ralph that protected both her and their two sons. Elena declared that Ralph suffered from mental health disorders and had “anger management issues.” She recounted how Ralph had repeatedly threatened her and verbally abused her and their sons. In February 2008, Ralph threw a piece of wood at Elena’s car as she was driving away with their older son in the car. The piece of wood struck the windshield, which terrified their son. The temporary DVRO was granted. After Elena obtained the temporary DVRO, Ralph repeatedly violated it. He “showed up” at their younger son’s baseball games, and he sent letters to Elena and to the children. The temporary DVRO remained in place until November 2008, when the court granted Elena’s request for a three-year DVRO. This DVRO permitted Ralph “peaceful contact with the children during therapeutic visits” with a therapist. The November 2008 visitation order permitted Ralph only therapeutic visits with the children, and any further contact between Ralph and the children was to be at the recommendation of the therapist. The therapist attempted to initiate therapeutic visits, but the children told her that they did not want to have any contact with Ralph. The

1 Ralph also makes other contentions that are either forfeited or bear no relationship to the order that is under review in this appeal.

2 children were suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that was aggravated by even discussion of possible contact with Ralph. Both boys were afraid of Ralph. Consequently, no therapeutic visits occurred. Ralph repeatedly violated the three-year DVRO. In December 2008, Ralph sent an abusive note to Elena and signed it “Ralph the asshole.” He also sent her letters in April 2009 and December 2009 pleading with her to let him have contact with the children. In October or November 2010, Ralph tried to arrange a meeting with the teachers of one of the boys. In early October 2011, Ralph filed a motion to modify the November 2008 visitation order. In his motion, he noted that the DVRO was due to expire in November 2011, and he sought an order permitting “reasonable and gradual future contact” with his sons. He asked to be allowed to begin by e-mailing his sons and then to progress to phone calls and eventually to in-person contact. Elena opposed his modification motion. Ralph’s modification motion was set for hearing on November 2, 2011. In late October 2011, Elena filed a request for a five-year renewal of the DVRO. She submitted a declaration in which she recounted Ralph’s numerous violations of the November 2008 DVRO. Elena feared that Ralph would contact her if the restraining order was not renewed. She “worried” that, “[b]ecause he’s unstable,” he might “take” one of the children. She believed that Ralph was “obsessed” with their younger son, and “[m]any times he said he wanted to take [the younger son].” The children’s therapist believed that renewal of the DVRO was in the children’s best interest so that they would “feel safe enough emotionally to continue their healing process as a result of their experiences with their father.” The older son had “strong negative feelings towards” Ralph and “was fearful and worried about contact with” Ralph. Elena’s request to renew the DVRO was set for hearing on November 2, 2011, at the same time as the hearing on Ralph’s modification motion. Ralph did not file any opposition to the request for renewal in advance of the November 2 hearing.

3 At the November 2, 2011 hearing, Ralph sought a continuance of the hearing on the renewal request, and the court granted his request and continued the hearing on the renewal request to November 8. The court heard and largely rejected Ralph’s modification motion. The court explained: “I’m not willing to do a graduated plan. I’m not willing to do any of that. I’m willing to let him send an innocuous initial e-mail.” “I don’t think there’s any down side.” A determination of appropriate content for this initial e-mail was deferred until the November 8 hearing. At the November 8, 2011 hearing, Elena agreed to deliver a short letter from Ralph to the children that included Ralph’s e-mail address so that they could contact him if they wished. The court then proceeded to consideration of the renewal request. Ralph presented to the court a written response to the renewal request that he had not provided to Elena or her attorney in advance. In his response, Ralph asserted that no violations had occurred since 2009 and that the preceding violations had been “unintentional.” He declared that he had been regularly seeing both a psychiatrist and a psychologist. Ralph requested “that the Court schedule a long cause hearing at which time I will have the opportunity to cross examine Petitioner’s declarants as well as bring in my own witnesses.” At the same time, he asserted “that a long cause hearing is entirely unnecessary in light of its alternative, which is a custody evaluation limited in its scope to the question of whether my original proposal for graduated communication is reasonable, and, more important, in the best interest of our sons . . . .” He requested that “the cost of this evaluation be split equally.” The court denied Elena’s motion to strike Ralph’s belated response and told Ralph that it wanted him “to have a full and fair hearing.” Ralph sought “a reasonable extension of time” to further respond to the renewal request and expressed a willingness to stipulate to a temporary extension of the DVRO for 90 days to give him time to respond. Because Ralph seemed to confuse the DVRO renewal issue with visitation issues, the court explained to Ralph that it was not the restraining order that precluded

4 him from having peaceful contact with the children but the custody and visitation orders. “You can come in here if I granted the renewal, you can still make a motion regarding custody and visitation . . .

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