Odden v. Rath

2007 ND 51, 730 N.W.2d 590, 2007 N.D. LEXIS 49, 2007 WL 1052949
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 2007
Docket20060170
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2007 ND 51 (Odden v. Rath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odden v. Rath, 2007 ND 51, 730 N.W.2d 590, 2007 N.D. LEXIS 49, 2007 WL 1052949 (N.D. 2007).

Opinion

VANDE WALLE, Chief Justice.

[¶ 1] Mark A. Rath appealed from a district court order extending a domestic violence protection order against him for two additional years. Rath argues the district court abused its discretion because no evidence justified an extension of the order. We affirm.

I

[¶ 2] Mark Rath and Heather Odden dated for about ten months in 2004 and lived together for part of that time. They have a two-year-old son who was born near the end of their relationship. Since their separation, the parties have been involved in multiple legal actions stemming from their turbulent relationship.

[¶ 3] In January 2005, Odden filed a petition for a domestic violence protection order against Rath. The district court dismissed the petition because of insufficient evidence. Shortly thereafter, the City of Bismarck charged Rath with harassment for making repeated telephone calls to Od-den. On March 28, 2005, Rath was convicted of harassment in municipal court. Following this conviction, Rath contacted Odden repeatedly through text messages, instant messages, and voicemail. He sent Odden approximately thirty-five instant messages on her computer in the span of three days. Rath appealed the harassment conviction to the district court and was acquitted after a bench trial. Additionally, Rath was charged with stalking Odden in late March 2005, but the charge was eventually dismissed.

[¶ 4] In April 2005, Odden again filed a petition for a domestic violence protection order against Rath. The petition alleged that since their separation, Rath had harassed her with multiple electronic messages and voicemails, some of which were threatening. The petition also alleged that in November 2004, when Odden was seven months pregnant, Rath cornered her and yelled curses and threats at her for more than an hour. According to Odden, Rath punched a door twice during the incident and asked whether she would rather he hit the door, the wall, or her. On April 15, 2005, after holding a full hearing, the district court issued a domestic violence protection order against Rath for one year.

[¶ 5] In late March 2006, Odden moved to extend the protection order before it expired on April 15, 2006. In her motion for an extension, Odden claimed that she still felt threatened by Rath and wished to have the protection order in place due to the ongoing custody dispute over their son. She also alleged that Rath had violated the protection order by e-mail, and that he had been talking about her obsessively on his web site. The district court issued a temporary order for renewal, which stated that the protection order was to remain in effect pending a full hearing on Odden’s request for an extension.

[¶ 6] The district court held the extension hearing on April 4, 2006. At the hearing, the district court heard testimony from both Odden and Rath. Odden testified that Rath had obeyed the no-contact protection order, with the exception of an e-mail she received on August 10, 2005. Despite this minimal contact, Odden claimed that she was still afraid of Rath and that she felt the protection order was necessary to keep him from contacting her. In particular, Odden pointed to Rath’s personal web site, where he posted multiple messages discussing her and their custody dispute, as evidence that he still posed a threat to her and their son. Odden stated that she had concerns about Rath contacting her if the custody issue was not resolved in his favor.

*593 [¶ 7] Both parties testified in detail about the e-mail which Odden received from Rath on August 10, 2005. Odden also offered a copy of the e-mail into evidence. Rath’s name was part of the sender’s e-mail address, and the subject was “Mark Rath’s invitation.” The e-mail invited Odden to join a particular company’s Mobile Friends Network to connect with Rath. The text of the e-mail stated, “Mark says, ‘This looks like a really good way for us to stay in touch.’ ” In her testimony, Odden acknowledged that the e-mail was likely generated and sent by the company. However, she also stated that Rath had obviously kept her information in his email address book, and that Rath likely had to approve any mailing sent to his entire e-mail list.

[¶ 8] Rath testified that he was not aware of the e-mail until Odden offered it as evidence against him. He claimed that he had given the mobile networking company access to his e-mail address book, but he had forgotten that Odden’s e-mail address was still in it. Rath admitted he had to approve the sending of that particular email to the addresses in his address book by providing the company with his user name and password. He also stated that he had one to two hundred e-mail addresses in his address book, and that he did not clean up or maintain the list.

[If 9] Additionally, the district court received detailed evidence about Rath’s web site, which was a message board called “Ravenz Poems.” On the web site, Rath posted messages where he discussed Od-den and their custody dispute at length. For example, he posted a message on January 28, 2006, which stated in part:

Haha it must kinda suck for heather knowing that all of her hard work lying the last year has done absolutly nothing. And even if she did manage to get supervised visitation, it actually plays in my behalf, for the next couple months I’ll have access to detailed records and witnesses to testify for me.
She never learns, and honestly in my opinion i think she needs to stop acting like a selfish little brat. She’s never going to keep me out of [our son’s] life, she could run again, but she’d eventually get caught and then lose [him] herself. If you think about it, she hasn’t hurt me at all this last year, yeah it sucks knowing I couldn’t see my son, but i also knew her allegations were not bad enough to not get visitations. I never hurt her so why the hell would she think i would now that I was fighting for custody of our son ... yea ... that makes a whole lot of sense.
She can say i need professional help, but yet she knows nothing about me, people change and i’m no where near the same person I was a year ago, oh I still like playing video games, mabey i’ll buy a game when i know i shouldn’t, or buy a movie when i shouldn’t, but there is nothing wrong with that. And i’m not the one sitting there playing this delusion to others that I’m in any type of danger from a person who may have yelled at me, and said some other things, but had never hurt me in anyway physically. You see that just doesn’t fly, someone yelling at you isn’t grounds to keep their son away, and honestly if she wouldn’t have kept [our son] from this last year, none of this would have happened. That something she doesn’t seem to understand either.

Rath also posted multiple pictures of their son, which he took during his supervised visitation, on the web site.

[¶ 10] In her testimony, Odden admitted she had not seen any threats of violence toward her in Rath’s web postings. However, she characterized Rath’s repeated message posts about her as “obses *594 sive” and “awful stuff.” She also objected to Rath’s practice of posting pictures of their son on his web site, which she claimed was dangerous because anybody could access the pictures on the public site.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 ND 51, 730 N.W.2d 590, 2007 N.D. LEXIS 49, 2007 WL 1052949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odden-v-rath-nd-2007.