Rollings v. Shelton

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 6, 2022
Docket22-523
StatusPublished

This text of Rollings v. Shelton (Rollings v. Shelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rollings v. Shelton, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-791

No. COA22-523

Filed 6 December 2022

Carteret County, No. 21 CVD 1040

SHERIKA ROLLINGS, Plaintiff,

v.

RYAN SHELTON, Defendant.

Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 14 December 2021 by Judge Andrew

Kent Wigmore in District Court, Carteret County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 1

November 2022.

Legal Aid of North Carolina, Inc., by Cynthia Sanders, Sandy L. Lee, TeAndra H. Miller, James Battle Morgan, Jr., and Celia Pistolis, for plaintiff-appellant.

No brief filed for defendant-appellee.

STROUD, Chief Judge.

¶1 Plaintiff Sherika Rollings appeals from an order granting Defendant Ryan

Shelton’s motion to dismiss Plaintiff’s “Complaint and Motion for Domestic Violence

Protective Order” under Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). (Capitalization altered.)

Because Plaintiff adequately pled all the required elements for a complaint seeking

a Domestic Violence Protective Order (“DVPO”), the trial court erred by dismissing

her complaint based upon failure to state a claim. We therefore reverse the trial ROLLINGS V. SHELTON

Opinion of the Court

court’s dismissal and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background

¶2 On 13 October 2021, Plaintiff filed a “Complaint and Motion for Domestic

Violence Protective Order” against Defendant using form AOC-CV-303.

(Capitalization altered.) Plaintiff alleged on 8 October 2021 Defendant “choked [her]

after an argument.” Plaintiff further alleged Defendant was a “threat” to her because

it was not the first time he hit her. Plaintiff then alleged on 12 October 2021

Defendant had keyed her car by carving “[B—]” into it so “[a]t this point” she was

“starting to get scared of what he might do to” her. Finally, Plaintiff alleged

Defendant had a gun and a concealed carry permit and, while drunk, had “threatened

[her] with his gun saying he will kill himself if [she] left him.” Because Defendant

had a gun, Plaintiff alleged she “need[ed] to be careful” and was “afraid for [her] life.”

As a result, Plaintiff stated she “would like a protective order against [Defendant] so

he can stay away from me.” Plaintiff also checked boxes on the form indicating: she

believed “there is danger of serious and immediate injury” to her; Defendant had

firearms; Defendant had threatened her with a deadly weapon (the gun); and

Defendant had threatened to commit suicide.

¶3 Based on those allegations, Plaintiff requested the trial court initially enter an

ex parte order. Plaintiff also requested an order barring Defendant from her

residence, place of employment, and school, and from her “child(ren)[‘s]” day care and ROLLINGS V. SHELTON

school. Finally, Plaintiff asked the order include a no contact provision and a

provision requiring Defendant to “attend an abuser treatment program.”

¶4 On the same day Plaintiff filed her Complaint, the trial court granted an “ex

parte Domestic Violence Order of Protection” based on a finding Defendant had

“intentionally caused bodily injury” to Plaintiff on 8 October 2021 as indicated in

Plaintiff’s Complaint.1 The ex parte DVPO was effective until 19 October 2021 and a

hearing was set for that day. But on 19 October, upon Defendant’s request, the trial

court entered an “Order Continuing Domestic Violence Hearing and Ex Parte Order”

to allow Defendant time to hire an attorney. (Capitalization altered.) On 2 November

2021, the trial court entered another order continuing the hearing and ex parte DVPO

for the same reason.

¶5 On 14 December 2021, the trial court held a hearing on Plaintiff’s Complaint

and Motion for a DVPO. At the start of the hearing, Defendant’s counsel moved to

dismiss under Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) because Plaintiff did not contact police

after the alleged choking incident, waited five days after the alleged choking incident

to file the Complaint, and Plaintiff made “no allegation of any personal knowledge . .

. that she knows” about the car keying incident. Plaintiff’s attorney responded

1 It is not entirely clear which judge issued the ex parte DVPO because only a signature, which was illegible, was required and the name was not printed or typed. But the signature on the ex parte DVPO appears to be different from Judge Wigmore’s, so it appears a different trial judge granted the ex parte DVPO. ROLLINGS V. SHELTON

Plaintiff had alleged “on October 8 the Defendant physically assaulted her. Which is

defined by the 50B Statute as an act of domestic violence. Which she’s here to testify

to.” Plaintiff’s attorney also argued the domestic violence statutes do not have “a

requirement . . . as to when” complaints are filed and Plaintiff’s testimony would

“address” the “five-day lag.”

¶6 After hearing those arguments, the trial court made an oral ruling dismissing

Plaintiff’s Complaint:

The problem I got is in her own writing. I mean, it happens on the eighth, and there’s a delay. And people have delays for many reasons. Ability to get to the courthouse. Seeking legal counsel. Trying to decide what they want to do, if they should go forward or not. But, then, her own words at the bottom of page 2, her car gets keyed. There’s nothing to show evidence that in this document that there’s a police report. That there’s anything that she knows this individual keyed the car. But the most important part of the whole document is, “at this point, I am starting to get scared of him.” So that says on October 8, she wasn’t scared of him. So that goes back to explain why nothing was done on the eighth. And that’s basically the essential paragraph to go forward is the allegation of domestic violence that in it, you know, is fear of it happening again. So, based on the Motion, the 12(b)(6) Motion on the four corners of the complaint, I’m going to dismiss this action.

¶7 Following that ruling, Plaintiff’s attorney again argued Plaintiff’s testimony

would explain the delay. The trial court responded because it was a motion on the

pleading, “the pleading itself has to prove the domestic violence.” Plaintiff’s attorney

countered the domestic violence statute requires only showing “the Defendant ROLLINGS V. SHELTON

attempted or physically caused bodily injury” and “[f]ear is not an element.” The trial

court ended the hearing at that time by saying it had already dismissed the

Complaint.

¶8 On the same day as the hearing, 14 December 2021, the trial court entered a

written order dismissing Plaintiff’s Complaint based on Rule 12(b)(6) and voiding the

ex parte order as a result. Plaintiff filed written notice of appeal on or about 12

January 2022.

II. Analysis

¶9 Plaintiff argues on appeal “the Complaint alleges the necessary elements

sufficient for a claim under Chapter 50B.” (Capitalization altered.) Specifically,

Plaintiff contends “the allegations in the complaint that Defendant choked [her] are

sufficient to state a claim upon which relief may be granted under N.C. Gen. Stat. §

50B-1(a)(1)” and the allegations “Defendant had threatened [her] and she was afraid

state a claim upon which relief may be granted under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50B-1(a)(2).”

(Capitalization altered.)

¶ 10 Plaintiff also argues “under notice pleading, the complaint provided Defendant

sufficient notice of the nature and basis for [her] claim for a” DVPO. (Capitalization

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Rollings v. Shelton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollings-v-shelton-ncctapp-2022.