Q.N. v. E.H. CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 8, 2026
DocketH051707
StatusUnpublished

This text of Q.N. v. E.H. CA6 (Q.N. v. E.H. 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.

Bluebook
Q.N. v. E.H. CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 1/8/26 Q.N. v. E.H. CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

Q.N., H051707 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 23DV000160)

v.

E.H.,

Defendant and Appellant.

Appellant E.H. and respondent Q.N. dated for several years until Q.N. ended the relationship when she discovered E.H. had also been dating another woman at the same time. After their breakup, Q.N. filed a request for domestic violence restraining order (DVRO) against E.H. pursuant to the Domestic Violence Prevention Act (DVPA, Fam. Code, § 6200, et seq.).1 E.H. thereafter filed a DVRO request against Q.N. Following several days of testimony from the parties and witnesses, the court granted Q.N.’s DVRO request and denied E.H.’s DVRO request. E.H. now appeals those orders, contending the court denied him an opportunity to conduct discovery under the Civil Discovery Act (Code Civ. Proc., § 2016.010 et seq.), erroneously precluded testimony related to Q.N.’s motive for filing her DVRO request, and incorrectly applied the DVPA’s definition of “coercive control” in granting Q.N.’s DVRO request. Because E.H. failed to meet his burden to show reversible error on appeal, we affirm.

Because this case involves proceedings under the DVPA, we refer to the parties 1

by their initials to protect the privacy interests of protected persons. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90(b)(1), (11).) I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The Parties’ Relationship and Breakup Q.N., a physicist, and E.H., an entrepreneur, began dating in 2019. In 2020, they lived with Q.N.’s family out-of-state and planned to move to California together. In January 2021, when E.H. did not show up for the drive to California, Q.N. ended the relationship and told E.H. to stop contacting her and to get out of her life. Both parties eventually moved to California, albeit separately. E.H. repeatedly texted and emailed Q.N. asking to meet, apologize, and expressed suicidal thoughts. In late January 2021, E.H. texted Q.N. that he was in the emergency room due to an allergic reaction. Out of guilt, Q.N. picked up E.H. from the hospital, and soon after, they resumed their dating relationship. In December 2022, Q.N. discovered E.H. had purchased a house with another woman, J.J. Q.N. drove to the house, waited outside, and saw J.J. inside. While there, Q.N. observed a car that looked like E.H.’s car drive by the street. When Q.N. confronted E.H. about the house in his and J.J.’s names, he denied it and questioned where Q.N. had obtained such information. He expressed concern about potential identity fraud, or someone spreading false information to intentionally damage their relationship or harm his business. Over text, E.H. stated to Q.N., “I’m freaking out. I’m going to throw up now.” He told Q.N. that he asked his business associates and was informed that “this kind of thing is not uncommon,” and such “malicious attacks” were “usually intended to cause disruption in a business/deal.” On December 14, 2022, while Q.N. and E.H. were visiting Q.N.’s terminally ill mother out-of-state, Q.N. again asked E.H. about the house and also inquired as to why E.H.’s name was on J.J.’s insurance card that she had discovered. E.H. ultimately admitted he had lied to Q.N.; he was in a romantic relationship with J.J. and had purchased a house with her. That evening, Q.N. ended the relationship and told E.H. to “[g]et out of [her] life.”

2 Unbeknownst to Q.N. at that time, E.H. and J.J. had been in a relationship since at least 2020, had gotten married in July 2022, and were expecting a child together. When E.H. had gone home out-of-state to prepare for his wedding in July 2022, he told Q.N. it was because his parents had been hospitalized due to COVID-19, which was untrue. During this same time and continuing the false narrative, E.H. sent Q.N. details of his parents supposed vital signs and hospitalization status. He also reached out to Q.N.’s sister—a pharmacist—for medical advice regarding his parents’ alleged hospitalization.

B. Allegations Related to Q.N.’s Request for DVRO On December 14, 2022, Q.N. told E.H., “This is it. This is over. Get out of my life.” Q.N. stated that, during their relationship, they had conversations that, once the relationship was over, Q.N. wanted E.H. to never contact her. After the breakup, E.H. sent multiple text messages to Q.N. to apologize and asked to talk. Over text, E.H. said “I was/am despicable and a liar. I said I loved you, but I still lied to your face.” Q.N. did not respond and, by the end of January 2023, she blocked his number on her phone. On January 27, 2023, Q.N. saw E.H. in his car parked one house away from her apartment, which frightened her. She was informed by colleagues that E.H. had been outside her apartment on two other occasions in February 2023. E.H. admitted that he “sat in the neighborhood where we used to live together,” on January 27 but denied being near her apartment for the other times alleged. Q.N. believed E.H. was also “cyberstalking” her online LinkedIn account because her account history showed the employers or affiliations of persons that had recently searched and/or viewed her profile were connected to E.H. However, E.H. testified he “never searched for [Q.N.] on LinkedIn after we broke up.” Q.N. also believed that E.H. was trying to contact her through family members and colleagues because they reached out to her during that period expressing concern for both parties’ wellbeing. E.H.

3 admitted he contacted Q.N.’s brother-in-law after their breakup to ask her family to look after Q.N. because her friends had been worried about her. In February 2023, believing that Q.N. was in Hamburg, Germany for a work event, E.H. traveled there. E.H. sent Q.N. an email, stating “There’s no other way to say this . . . I flew to Hamburg in the hopes you’re here and we can talk. [¶] If you’re here, I know you’re busy with [work], but I just can’t do this anymore. My life without you is meaningless. [Ellipses in original.]” He sent another email shortly thereafter, stating “I’m sorry. . . . I should have respected your space. I should not be here, I’m sorry. [Ellipses in original.]” E.H. claimed the trip to Germany was arranged before their breakup and that he had business reasons to be there; although, once in Germany, he “was too depressed to engage in work activities” and returned home the next day. E.H. admitted that, “[a]t the time I arrived, I felt that it was potentially an infringement of her space.” When Q.N. saw E.H.’s emails and became aware of his travel to Germany, she was horrified and scared by his conduct. On February 3, 2023, Q.N. emailed E.H., stating “I do not want any communication from you by any means, in person, through friends, emails, phone calls, messages, social media. [¶] DO NOT ever contact me, DO NOT come near me, my home, my work place. [Emphasis in original.]” E.H. responded to her email asking to “talk one last time.” On February 7, 2023, Q.N. reported E.H.’s conduct to the police and her employer. The police made three calls to E.H. and left messages for him to contact them. E.H. ignored them, and testified he believed the police were calling him regarding a traffic citation. A few days later, E.H. attended a business event at Q.N.’s workplace. Although E.H. alleged a colleague had invited him there (the parties’ respective occupations have overlapping areas of interest in research and development), he later testified that he suggested that they meet at Q.N.’s workplace.

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