R.R. v. C.R.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
DocketB339866A
StatusPublished

This text of R.R. v. C.R. (R.R. v. C.R.) 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
R.R. v. C.R., (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 1/20/26; Original opn. filed 12/2/25; certified for pub. 12/26/25; vacated 1/2/26

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

R.R., II, B339866

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. Nos. 24STRO03652, v. 19STFL04998)

C.R.,

Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Dennis F. Hernandez, Commissioner. Reversed and remanded with directions. Ben Gharagozli for Plaintiff and Appellant. C.R., in pro. per., for Respondent. INTRODUCTION R.R. appeals from the denial of his request for entry of a domestic violence restraining order (DVRO) against his ex-wife, C.R. He contends the trial court failed to apply the proper legal standard for abuse and therefore abused its discretion. We agree. We therefore reverse the court’s order and remand with directions to the trial court to enter the DVRO. BACKGROUND I. Prior Proceedings R.R. and C.R. were married in 2014. They have one child, son W.R., born in 2015. R.R. filed a petition for dissolution of marriage in April 2019, seeking full custody of W.R. He also requested a temporary emergency order granting him full custody of W.R., based on C.R.’s recent psychiatric hospitalization “following her attempt to overdose on her Prozac medication.” The court denied the emergency request. The family was referred to the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) in 2019 based on allegations by C.R. that W.R. had been sexually abused by his paternal grandfather (grandfather). DCFS ultimately determined those allegations were inconclusive. In November 2019, DCFS filed a petition in juvenile court alleging that W.R. was at risk of harm due to C.R.’s mental and emotional problems, including a diagnosis of psychosis, paranoid and erratic behavior, and suicidal ideation. DCFS cited C.R.’s April 2019 suicide attempt and subsequent hospitalization. C.R. told DCFS that she was not trying to kill herself, rather, she had accidentally overdosed on Prozac. She admitted having depression and anxiety but denied other mental health issues. In November 2019, R.R. reported an incident where C.R. was acting paranoid, claiming that people were chasing her and driving erratically late at night with W.R. in the car. She refused to cooperate with R.R. or with police, leading to her detention and a second hospitalization. In December 2019, C.R. began to see a psychiatrist and started taking medication for her mental condition. In January 2020, the juvenile court ordered joint legal custody of W.R. and sole physical custody to R.R., with monitored visitation to C.R. The

2 juvenile court also terminated jurisdiction over the matter. In August 2020, the family court entered a judgment of dissolution. The parties agreed to a stipulated judgment, including joint legal custody of W.R. and primary physical custody to R.R., with monitored visitation by C.R., with increased visitation as approved by C.R.’s psychiatrist. In April 2022, the parties entered into a stipulated order allowing C.R. unmonitored visitation. II. DVRO Petition In May 2024, R.R. filed a request for DVRO against C.R. He alleged ongoing abuse by C.R. since December 2023 that was “progressively getting worse.” He also requested a return to professionally monitored visitation for C.R. due to reoccurring issues with her “severe and untreated mental health issues.” R.R. also filed a declaration outlining his allegations of abuse. He stated that C.R.’s conduct included sitting in her car outside of his home at all hours of the night and ringing his doorbell incessantly, refusing to leave, even after he threatened to call the police. He stated that C.R.’s conduct had worsened over the past six months and she was “now stalking us almost daily,” putting him in fear for his and W.R.’s safety. He further stated that C.R. sent him threatening communications after he refused to communicate with her. According to R.R., he had agreed to unmonitored visitation for C.R. in mid-2021 after her mental health had stabilized. This arrangement continued successfully until late 2023, when C.R. “fell back into some sort of delusional mental state and began stalking and following me incessantly as well as harassing me via text and calls.” R.R. detailed multiple specific instances of C.R.’s alleged abuse. In December 2023, C.R. followed R.R. and W.R. home and entered the residence without permission, refusing to leave for two hours. She also made accusations toward R.R.’s parents and grabbed R.R.’s father by the shirt. W.R. was present and yelled for C.R. to stop. Ultimately, R.R. left with W.R. and stayed at a hotel. On March 29, 2024, C.R. followed R.R. home and rang his doorbell repeatedly. She refused to leave despite his requests that she do so. In early April, C.R. picked W.R. up from school without notice to R.R. According to W.R., she was recording him, taking pictures of his body, and asking

3 questions about injuries and scratches. She asked W.R. if R.R. was taking care of him and disparaged R.R. to the child. On April 29, 2024, R.R. and W.R. were at home sick. C.R. began texting him incessantly and threatened to call in a welfare check on W.R. She parked in R.R.’s driveway and refused to leave until W.R. came out and spoke to her. When R.R. blocked her text messages, she began texting his parents. In early May 2024, R.R. detailed several instances in which C.R. followed R.R. and W.R. to various outings to which she was not invited, outside of her agreed visitation time with W.R. In one instance she tried to gain access to the home of a friend where they were spending the afternoon, and then began video recording, asking W.R. questions, and making accusations about R.R. being with other women. Another time, she called R.R. repeatedly from several phone numbers, then appeared at a dinner she had agreed not to attend. After R.R. left, she texted him “It is not my fault you follow the devil instead of God.” On May 11, 2024, C.R. got into R.R.’s car with R.R. and W.R. without permission and refused to leave. R.R. stated that W.R. was scared of his mother. C.R. then followed them in her car, pulling up next to R.R.’s car and threatening to send someone to “inspect” W.R. and ensure there were no scratches on him. On May 17, 2024, R.R. alleged that C.R. followed him and W.R. in her car despite his texts requesting that she stop. She also threatened to message his boss. That evening, C.R. rang his doorbell incessantly, ignoring his requests that she stop and leave. She then sat in her car outside his house for hours and continued to call and text him. At 5:30 the following morning, R.R. left home to drive W.R. to a soccer tournament. C.R. followed him from his neighborhood onto the freeway. Once on the freeway, she “sped up” to pull alongside his vehicle, signaling him to call her. R.R. exited the freeway to try to lose her, but when he got back on, he saw C.R. had pulled onto the freeway shoulder. She “continued to chase after me,” and texted that she would pay his parents a visit. R.R. attached copies of some of these texts to his declaration as well as evidence of repeated phone calls, and photos and videos purporting to show C.R. at his

4 door and following his car. The court granted a temporary restraining order against C.R. on May 23, 2024, protecting R.R. and W.R. until the scheduled hearing the following month. The court retained R.R.’s sole custody over W.R. and ordered monitored visitation for C.R. III. C.R.’s Response C.R. filed a response in propria persona, objecting to the request. She denied each of the incidents R.R. alleged. She contended that she was fearful for W.R.’s safety due to past incidents of sexual abuse by grandfather and physical abuse by father, and explained that she often attempted to “stay nearby” to W.R.

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Bluebook (online)
R.R. v. C.R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rr-v-cr-calctapp-2026.