Morrell v. Chadick

965 So. 2d 1277, 2007 WL 3010200
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 17, 2007
Docket2D07-53
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 965 So. 2d 1277 (Morrell v. Chadick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrell v. Chadick, 965 So. 2d 1277, 2007 WL 3010200 (Fla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

965 So.2d 1277 (2007)

Charles T. MORRELL, Appellant,
v.
Cheryl D. CHADICK, Appellee.

No. 2D07-53.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.

October 17, 2007.

*1278 Robert H. Mackenzie of Levine, Hirsch, Segall, Mackenzie & Friedsam, P.A., Tampa, for Appellant.

Jarrod M. Scharber of The Law Office of Charles D. Waller, P.A., Dade City, for Appellee.

VILLANTI, Judge.

Charles T. Morrell appeals a final judgment of injunction for protection against sexual violence. Mr. Morrell contends that there was insufficient record evidence to support the trial court's final judgment. After reviewing the record, we agree and reverse.

On November 20, 2006, Cheryl D. Chadick filed a petition for injunction for protection against sexual violence. The petition alleged that Mr. Morrell, who had been Ms. Chadick's supervisor, had sexually harassed her and coerced her into having sex against her will. The petition claimed Ms. Chadick had sex with Mr. Morrell because she felt threatened by his "extreme anger and violent temper problem" and because she did not want to lose her job. The petition also alleged that Mr. Morrell had continued to call Ms. Chadick at her home, work, and cellular telephone numbers and had threatened "blackmail to cause injury to [her] and [her] family." Ms. Chadick specifically claimed concern for her safety.

The trial court heard Ms. Chadick's petition on November 29, 2006. At the beginning of the hearing, Mr. Morrell moved to dismiss the petition, arguing that it was facially insufficient because the facts asserted did not reflect that Ms. Chadick had been the victim of sexual violence as defined in section 784.046, Florida Statutes (2006), because the parties had been involved in a consensual sexual relationship. The trial court denied Mr. Morrell's motion, finding that the petition alleged sex against Ms. Chadick's will as well as stalking, both of which could constitute forms of violence under the statute.

The matter proceeded to an evidentiary hearing. Ms. Chadick testified that she worked with Mr. Morrell from June 2005 to July 2006, when she voluntarily resigned her employment with their employer. She and Mr. Morrell were involved in a sexual relationship from September 2005 to August 2006 — after her resignation. Although Ms. Chadick claimed she felt pressured to have sex with Mr. Morrell, she was unable to identify anything in particular he said or did to pressure her into having sex. Mr. Morrell was never physically violent towards Ms. Chadick, but she felt intimidated by him because he had previously yelled at her over the telephone on work-related issues and because she had heard him yell at his wife, children, and other employees. She also claimed that in March or April 2006 when she told Mr. Morrell over the telephone that she did not want to meet him to have sex, he got angry, told her that "it was unacceptable," and yelled at her over the telephone, at which point she agreed to have sex with him.

*1279 As noted above, Ms. Chadick quit her job in July 2006 and her sexual encounters with Mr. Morrell ended in August 2006. Therefore, she was not working with Mr. Morrell when she filed the petition for injunction on November 20, 2006. In fact, Ms. Chadick had not seen Mr. Morrell since early October 2006. At the November 29 hearing, Ms. Chadick failed to present any evidence that she was in fear of Mr. Morrell after the two stopped working for the same employer. The essence of Ms. Chadick's testimony was that beginning in October 2006, Mr. Morrell had called her cellular telephone, home, and place of employment so frequently that her new employer terminated her. Ms. Chadick claimed she told Mr. Morrell in September or October 2006 that she did not want any contact with him, but he continued to call her. She stopped calling him and answering his calls in mid-October 2006. At the hearing, Ms. Chadick put into evidence thirteen messages left by Mr. Morrell on her cellular telephone between October 20 and November 2, 2006. Many of the messages asked Ms. Chadick to call Mr. Morrell; none of the messages contained violent language, threats of violence, or requests for sex. In fact, many of the messages urged Ms. Chadick to terminate an affair with her supervisor at her subsequent place of employment and to reconcile with her husband. There was no evidence of any contact between Ms. Chadick and Mr. Morrell after November 3, 2006.

After hearing the evidence, the trial court concluded that Mr. Morrell's repeated telephone calls supported "a preliminary showing of stalking," which did not require threats of violence. The court then concluded that Mr. Morrell was stalking Ms. Chadick with repeated telephone calls, which the court considered a form of harassment under the statute. Therefore, it granted an injunction. The final judgment entered by the court, however, did not mirror its oral findings and conclusions. Rather, the trial court issued a "final judgment of injunction for protection against sexual violence," stating:

After hearing the testimony of each party present and of any witnesses . . . the Court finds, based on the specific facts of this case, that Petitioner is a victim of Sexual violence and/or Petitioner has reasonable cause to believe he or she is in imminent danger of becoming a victim of an act of Sexual violence by Respondent and meets requirements for an injunction established by law.

The final judgment does not mention the trial court's findings of stalking. Mr. Morrell appeals this final judgment.[1]

Section 784.046(2) contains three separate and distinct causes of action upon which a trial court may issue an injunction against violence. See § 784.046(2)(a)-(c). A court can issue an injunction against (1) repeat violence, (2) dating violence, or (3) sexual violence. Id. While some of the elements necessary to state a cause of action under each provision overlap, each *1280 cause of action contains allegations that differ from the other two. See id. Consequently, like any other cause of action, the evidence presented at trial for each of these causes of action must be sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss. In this case, the evidence at trial did not support a finding of sexual violence as defined in the statute and did not support the entry of a final judgment of injunction for protection against sexual violence.

Ms. Chadick filed her petition for injunction using a court-provided form that tracked the section of the statute allowing relief based upon sexual violence. The trial court, in denying Mr. Morrell's pretrial motion to dismiss, specifically found the allegations in the petition for injunction sufficient to state a cause of action for sexual violence. Thereafter, at the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, the court entered a final judgment based upon a finding that Ms. Chadick was "a victim of Sexual violence." In denying Mr. Morrell's pretrial motion to dismiss, the trial court made a preliminary finding that the extramarital affair between the parties could constitute coercion sufficient to support sexual violence. In pretrial proceedings this may have been a permissible, albeit somewhat broadened, interpretation of the term "sexual violence" as defined in section 784.046(1)(c). However, once Ms. Chadick testified, she was unable to objectively substantiate the basis for her belief that her "consensual" sex with Mr. Morrell during an eleven-month period was actually the result of coercion.

When asked by the trial court what Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
965 So. 2d 1277, 2007 WL 3010200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrell-v-chadick-fladistctapp-2007.