Robyn v. DeBert CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 22, 2022
DocketH049049
StatusUnpublished

This text of Robyn v. DeBert CA6 (Robyn v. DeBert 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
Robyn v. DeBert CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 8/22/22 Robyn v. DeBert CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

KATHRYN ROBYN, H049049 (Santa Cruz County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 21CV00343)

v.

CHARLENE DEBERT,

Defendant and Appellant.

Plaintiff Kathryn Robyn obtained a civil harassment restraining order (Code Civ. Proc., § 527.6)1 against her neighbor, defendant Charlene DeBert. DeBert appeals, arguing that the facts before the trial court did not justify issuance of a permanent restraining order, and that the absence of certain videos from the appellate record denies DeBert a meaningful appeal. Finding no reversible error, we affirm. I. Factual and Procedural Background2 On February 11, 2021, Robyn filed a petition for a civil harassment restraining order against DeBert, her neighbor in an apartment complex in Soquel. The petition alleged that DeBert had “yelled at, spoken rudely to, called names, and video recorded [Robyn], [her] husband, and [her] children.” Robyn elaborated that DeBert had intentionally parked her vehicle in a fire lane blocking one of the garages. Because of

1 Unspecified statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. 2 We summarize the facts in the light most favorable to the judgment. (Brekke v. Wills (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 1400, 1405.) this, Robyn put up a no parking sign. During one incident, DeBert kicked over the sign. Robyn then put it back up. DeBert then kicked the sign again, yelling in Robyn’s face and continuing to kick the sign. Robyn attempted to put the sign back up, but DeBert kicked it, injuring Robyn’s feet and hands. Robyn then picked up DeBert’s “2 Liter liquor bottle [that] she had set on the ground.” DeBert grabbed Robyn’s left arm and “yanked on it as she yelled” at Robyn. Robyn stated, “ ‘I’m moving your property just like you are moving my sign.’ ” Robyn pulled her arm away and “tossed [the] 2 Liter whiskey bottle gently into the grass.” Robyn then called the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office. The responding sheriff’s deputy took statements, but indicated that DeBert was justified in “ ‘physically restrain[ing]’ ” Robyn because she had grabbed DeBert’s liquor bottle. Robyn’s petition listed additional incidents. One time, DeBert parked her vehicle to block a neighbor’s garage. That neighbor asked Robyn for help. Robyn asked DeBert to move the vehicle, but DeBert refused. The sheriff’s office was called. The responding sheriff’s deputy asked DeBert to move, and DeBert “moved 1 foot [but] refused to move [fully] out of the way.” The sheriff’s deputy guided the neighbor out of the garage. At another incident, DeBert parked her car “within inches of [Robyn’s] vehicle, blocking [her] in.” DeBert had “30ft of space in front of her vehicle where she could have parked, not blocking [Robyn] in.” Robyn also described four additional incidents where DeBert parked her vehicle so close to Robyn’s that she was unable to move. Finally, Robyn described an incident when DeBert sat in her car in front of Robyn’s garage “and began loudly narrating while she filmed [Robyn].” Robyn asked DeBert to “ ‘stop recording me and my children inside my private garage.’ ” On February 16, 2021, based on the petition, the trial court issued a temporary restraining order and set the matter for a hearing. DeBert filed a response denying the allegations in the petition. DeBert argued that the issue boiled down to “DeBert parking a car,” and it was “[n]ot clear how

2 parking a car, in a designated parking area justifies a harassment restraining order.” DeBert asserted that Robyn would “park [her] car very close to DeBert’s car” and then ask DeBert to move her car. DeBert also claimed that the reason Robyn made an issue of her parking “is that Ms DeBert is gay.” She elaborated that Robyn “demands that DeBert listen to [Robyn’s] homosexual fantasies,” and that Robyn and her husband “impose[] their need to talk about their gay fantasies on DeBert . . . .” Finally, DeBert asserted she had never threatened Robyn or her husband “or any of the other apartment Dweller gang, that [Robyn] has now organized . . . .” On March 2, 2021, the trial court held a hearing. Robyn testified that although parking was “one of the issues,” DeBert had “used parking as . . . [a] way to mess with us,” in addition to “verbal, videotaping, slanderous comments, name calling, pushing past me in the laundry room, things like that.” Robyn explained that DeBert would often park in such a way as to make “it difficult—very difficult to get out.” When DeBert saw Robyn, she would often call Robyn “a crazy bitch and crazy motherfuckers,” and would say other “rude, negative, or mean [things] about [Robyn] or even about [her] children.” On one specific occasion, Robyn was doing laundry, when DeBert walked in and “pushed past” her and started making comments like, “ ‘I’m allowed to be here,’ and stuff like that.” Robyn left the laundry room and sat outside, waiting for DeBert to finish. Robyn also described an incident when she was sitting outside with her children. DeBert started to “video record [the group] while narrating,” “ ‘Look at these homophobic gay-bashers. I am a gay woman, and they just mess with me because I am gay.’ ” According to Robyn, it got to a point where they could not “just sit without her approaching” to say something or do something.

3 A neighbor, Carla Kornder,3 testified that Robyn and her husband were often outside using their fire pit next to the parking area, and barbecuing with their children, and so it was difficult for them to avoid incidents with DeBert. In one incident, Kornder saw Robyn sitting in her chair when DeBert arrived driving her vehicle. DeBert started to back up toward an area where Robyn was sitting, while yelling out of her car, “ ‘I’m backing up. You better move. I’m backing up. I can’t see you. I’m backing up.’ ” DeBert then hit Robyn with her car—“[n]ot hard or anything, but a bump . . . .” Kornder went to check on DeBert, while DeBert remained in her vehicle. DeBert “purposefully started up her car again so that she would exhaust us out because we were right behind her . . . car.” After this story was told, Robyn elaborated about another incident a week prior to the backing-up incident. One day, Robyn was sitting in her chair, when DeBert “pulled up to back up to my chair. She yelled out her window, ‘You better be a grown-up and move, or I’m going to run you over.’ ” DeBert indicated that she had a video that she had sent to the court clerk that she wanted to play for the court. The video was then played in open court. The court interrupted the video and asked Robyn and DeBert to describe what happened before the video recording. Robyn stated she had put up a sign stating, “ ‘Please don’t park here. Please don’t block the garage.’ ” Robyn explained on the day depicted in the video, DeBert arrived, got out of her vehicle, moved the sign, and parked where the sign had been located. DeBert disagreed with Robyn’s recollection, stating the sign fell over on its own as she was backing up, perhaps “because [of] the wind.” The video was eventually played to its conclusion.

3DeBert asserts that Kornder “was not sworn in as a witness.” However, the transcript of the hearing reflects that at the beginning of the hearing, the trial judge instructed Robyn, DeBert, and “any other potential witnesses in the courtroom” to stand and raise their hands to be sworn by the clerk.

4 DeBert then indicated that there was another video depicting a parking incident. The video was played in open court.

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Brekke v. Wills
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Robyn v. DeBert CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robyn-v-debert-ca6-calctapp-2022.