R.E.S. v. M.J.M.

2025 Ohio 546
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2025
Docket113894, 113895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ohio 546 (R.E.S. v. M.J.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.E.S. v. M.J.M., 2025 Ohio 546 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as R.E.S. v. M.J.M., 2025-Ohio-546.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

R.E.S., :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : Nos. 113894 and 113895

v. :

M.J.M., :

Defendant-Appellee. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: February 20, 2025

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Domestic Relations Division Case Nos. DV-23-397059 and DV-23-397088

Appearances:

Charles Tyler, Sr., for appellant.

EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, J.:

In this consolidated appeal, appellant, R.E.S., appeals judgments

denying her petition for a domestic-violence civil protection order (“DVCPO”)

against appellee, M.J.M., and granting the petition for DVCPO filed by M.J.M.

against her. R.E.S. claims the following errors: 1. The magistrate erred by arbitrarily limiting the presentation of petitioner’s evidence to events that occurred since April 7, 2021, the last time petitioner filed a domestic violence civil protection order petition.

2. The court erred in finding that [M.J.M.] did not strike [R.E.S.].

3. The court erred in failing to protect [R.E.S.] pursuant to R.C. 3113.31.

4. The court considered the conduct of R.E.S.’s fiancé, which is an error of law.

5. [M.J.M.]’s communication through “Our Family Wizard” rises to the level of domestic violence pursuant to R.C. 3113.31.

6. The court erred in finding that [R.E.S.] committed domestic violence.

We affirm the trial court’s judgments.

I. Facts and Procedural History

On November 1, 2023, R.E.S. filed a petition for DVCPO against M.J.M.

in Cuyahoga C.P. No. DV-23-397059. That same day, a magistrate of the domestic

relations court conducted an ex parte hearing and granted an ex parte DVCPO in

that case. On November 2, 2023, M.J.M. filed a petition for DVCPO against R.E.S.

in Cuyahoga C.P. No. DV-23-397088. The court denied the petition in DV-397088

because it had already granted an ex parte DVCPO against M.J.M. in DV-397059,

the previous day.

On November 30, 2023, a magistrate held a hearing on the parties’

competing petitions for DVCPO. The testimony and evidence presented focused

primarily on an event that occurred at the Oakwood Village Police Department on

October 31, 2023. R.E.S. and M.J.M. were never married, but they had a child together. The child, R.M., was born on November 2, 2015, and the parties share

custody of him.

M.J.M. had custody of R.M. and agreed to deliver him to R.E.S. at the

Oakwood Village Police Department on October 31, 2023. M.J.M. testified that he

arrived at the Oakwood Village Police Department at the appointed time and waited

for R.E.S. to arrive. Minutes later, R.E.S. entered the parking lot, drove toward

M.J.M.’s car, and parked very close to M.J.M.’s car.

R.E.S.’s fiancé (“C.L.”) came with her to pick up R.M. R.E.S. testified

that she got R.M. out of M.J.M.’s car and placed him in her own car. Meanwhile,

she noticed “something going on between [M.J.M.] and [C.L.].” (Tr. 28.) R.E.S.

could not open the driver’s side door so she entered through the passenger side of

her car and slid over to the driver’s seat. She asserts in her brief that when she got

into the driver’s seat, she leaned out the window to see what was happening between

M.J.M. and C.L. and M.J.M. struck her in the face. (Tr. 28.)

M.J.M. described a different version of the incident. He testified that

upon arrival, R.E.S. quickly exited her car, approached the back door of his car, and

yanked, aggressively, on the door handle. After opening the door, R.E.S. pulled

some of M.J.M.’s belongings out of the car before taking R.M. and placing him in

her car. Meanwhile, R.E.S.’s fiancé, C.L., approached M.J.M. and threatened to kill

him. (Tr. 52.) R.E.S. testified that she did not know why C.L. exited the vehicle.

(Tr. 39.) M.J.M. explained the encounter as follows: [C.L.] walks over to me, he says something, then starts saying, “I’m going to kill you.” Comes back at me.

[R.E.S.] come back, then leaves again.

And then boom, he comes right at me.

I’m using my door as a barrier. She comes through the driver side and starts punching on me, two on one.

I take off and retreat, because he is an off-duty cop. I know he carries a weapon with him.

He goes after me.

I thought he had a gun.

(Tr. 52-53.) Finally, M.J.M. testified that every time he asks the juvenile court for

more parenting time with R.M., R.E.S. files a petition for a DVCPO in order to

prevent him from receiving additional parenting time. (Tr. 61.)

Both parties presented video footage of the incident taken from the

Oakwood Village Police Department surveillance camera. The video shows M.J.M.

arrive first and back into a parking spot. Shortly thereafter, R.E.S.’s vehicle enters

the parking lot and parks very closely, next to M.J.M.’s vehicle. After parking her

car, R.E.S. walks over to the rear passenger’s side of M.J.M.’s car and removes R.M.

from the backseat. M.J.M. also exits his car and walks toward the back driver’s side

door of his car. At the same time, C.L. exits R.E.S.’s car and stands between the two

vehicles facing M.J.M. As R.E.S. passes behind C.L., she lets go of R.M.’s hand,

briefly walks between the cars where M.J.M. and C.L. are facing each other, and then

retreats to place R.M. in her car. As R.E.S. is placing R.M. in her car, C.L. moves aggressively toward

M.J.M. and a struggle ensues. After securing R.M. in the car, R.E.S. climbs through

her vehicle and reaches through the window at M.J.M. As M.J.M. and C.L. move

away from the cars, R.E.S. climbs out through the window. M.J.M. runs away, and

C.L. follows him out of view of the camera. R.E.S. also runs out of view of the camera

in another direction.

R.E.S. testified that M.J.M. texted her several times through Our

Family Wizard after he was aware of the existence of the ex parte civil protection

order protecting R.E.S. M.J.M. explained that in the parties’ custody case, which

was then pending in the Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court, the court had ordered

that visitation of the parties’ child should continue despite the issuance of the ex

parte civil protection order. M.J.M. testified he thought communication through

Our Family Wizard was permitted despite the protection order because the parties

continued to have shared visitation of their child.

M.J.M. conceded on cross-examination that his messages contained

inappropriate name calling and profanity. He explained, however, that he was

expressing frustration because R.E.S. prevented him from visiting with his son even

though the court explicitly ordered that visitation could continue. (Tr. 48.) M.J.M.

argued that although he used profanity, he never threatened anyone with violence

and never stalked anyone. (Tr. 48.)

After hearing the testimony and viewing the surveillance-video

footage, the magistrate found that the video evidence more closely matched M.J.M.’s testimony regarding the incident. The magistrate further found that M.J.M.’s

testimony was more credible than R.E.S.’s testimony.

Based on the evidence, the magistrate concluded that R.E.S. and her

fiancé, C.L., were the primary aggressors in the incident and that if M.J.M. struck

R.E.S., he was acting in self-defense. (Magistrate’s decision p. 3.) The magistrate

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/res-v-mjm-ohioctapp-2025.