Schroeder v. Clouse

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 2026
DocketA-25-624
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Schroeder v. Clouse, (Neb. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

SCHROEDER V. CLOUSE

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

WHITNEY A. SCHROEDER, APPELLEE, V.

BENJAMIN A. CLOUSE, APPELLANT.

Filed March 24, 2026. No. A-25-624.

Appeal from the District Court for Frontier County: MARK J. YOUNG, Judge. Affirmed. James A. Wagoner for appellant. Jaclyn N. Daake, of Daake Law Office, L.L.C., for appellee.

RIEDMANN, Chief Judge, and BISHOP and WELCH, Judges. RIEDMANN, Chief Judge. INTRODUCTION Following the entry of an ex parte protection order, the respondent requested a show cause hearing in which he contested the continuation of the order. Based upon the evidence received at the hearing, the district court for Frontier County determined the order should remain in effect for 1 year. The respondent appealed. Based on our de novo review, we affirm the district court’s order. BACKGROUND Whitney A. Schroeder and Benjamin A. Clouse began dating in late January 2025. At the time, Schroeder was the county attorney for two counties, and Clouse was a deputy sheriff in a nearby county. They spent the night together on Valentine’s Day, but on February 16, Schroeder informed Clouse via text message that she no longer wanted to have a relationship with him. According to Schroeder, over the next week, she received “a plethora of desperate texts and social media messages” from Clouse. This continued until the Frontier County sheriff, at Schroeder’s

-1- request, telephoned Clouse and told him to stop trying to contact Schroeder. According to Clouse, he ceased any further attempts to contact her after February 20. Schroeder filed a petition and affidavit for a harassment protection order on April 24, 2025. In addition to the information set forth above, Schroeder stated that on February 20 she noticed fresh footprints in the snow leading to her living room window. This led her to contact both the Frontier County Sheriff’s Department and the sheriff’s department where Clouse was employed. Clouse was placed on administrative leave on February 21 and was terminated on February 24. Schroeder identified several incidents allegedly involving Clouse. She claimed that on March 26, he rode past her house on a bicycle and on March 8 and April 17, he appeared at the location where she was exchanging her children with their father for parenting time. She further stated that on approximately 13 occasions since February 16, Clouse’s vehicle has either passed her or followed her while she was traveling in her car. In a narrative attached to her petition, Schroeder listed 13 messages from February 16 to 20, 2025, that she received from Clouse. She relayed that on March 31, a friend sent her a video taken about 2 a.m. in which four state patrolmen and two sheriff deputies were across the street from Schroeder’s house with “a tall man, who appears to be [Clouse].” Finally, she detailed that from April 5 though 23 she had received “incessant phone calls from various ‘spoof’ phone numbers.” The district court entered an ex parte harassment protection order on April 28, 2025. The next day, Clouse filed a request for hearing on the protection order. The hearing was scheduled for May 14 but was later continued to July 8. At the hearing on the show cause order, the petition and affidavit were received into evidence. Both Schroeder and Clouse testified along with the Frontier County sheriff and one of his deputies. The law enforcement officers corroborated Schroeder’s claims regarding the footprints in the snow and Schroeder’s request for assistance. The sheriff described Schroeder’s demeanor as “scared” when reporting these events. Clouse called a friend to testify to address Schroeder’s allegation regarding one of the encounters that occurred while she was exchanging her children with their father. Clouse denied the allegations of the petition except for the initial attempts to contact Schroeder, which he claimed ended on February 20, 2025, after he was contacted by the sheriff. He offered bank records to rebut testimony that he was present at certain locations at specific times and phone records to rebut testimony that he had called Schroeder after February 20. On cross-examination, Clouse confirmed that his ex-wife had sought a protection order containing allegations that Clouse was appearing in locations where she was present when he should not have known where she was, similar to the allegations here. The court filed a journal entry in which it acknowledged that Clouse successfully rebutted some of the encounters claimed by Schroeder. However, even without considering these incidents, the district court found the direct and circumstantial evidence led to a finding that Clouse attempted to contact Schroeder on numerous occasions, was responsible for the footprints outside her window, and was the man depicted in the video across the street from her house. It further found that the evidence “strongly suggests” that Clouse made the “spoof calls” and that all these events constituted a course of conduct that would seriously threaten or intimidate an individual. Accordingly, it continued the protection order for 1 year. Clouse appeals.

-2- ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR Restated and reordered, Clouse assigns that the district court erred in (1) relying upon circumstantial evidence to determine that he was outside of Schroeder’s home on two occasions and made “spoof calls” to her; (2) finding phone calls to Schroeder in mid-February 2025 evinced conduct that intimidated, threatened, or terrified her and had no legitimate purpose; and (3) determining credible evidence supported the issuance of a protection order. STANDARD OF REVIEW The grant or denial of a protection order is reviewed de novo on the record. Dugan v. Sorensen, 319 Neb. 326, 22 N.W.3d 623 (2025). In such de novo review, an appellate court reaches conclusions independent of the factual findings of the trial court. Id. However, where the credible evidence is in conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the circumstances that the trial judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another. Id. ANALYSIS The Legislature has enacted laws to protect victims from being willfully harassed, intentionally terrified, threatened or intimidated by individuals who intentionally follow, detain, stalk, or harass them or impose any restraint on their personal liberty. See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-311.02 (Reissue 2016). The definition of harassment is provided by § 28-311.02(2)(a): “Harass means to engage in a knowing and willful course of conduct directed at a specific person which seriously terrifies, threatens, or intimidates the person and which serves no legitimate purpose.” Course of conduct is defined as “a pattern of conduct composed of a series of acts over a period of time, however short, evidencing a continuity of purpose, including a series of acts of following, detaining, restraining the personal liberty of, or stalking the person or telephoning, contacting, or otherwise communicating with the person.” See § 28-311.02(2)(b). Although the conduct described above must also not serve a legitimate purpose, the Legislature did not define that phrase. Recently, the Nebraska Supreme Court articulated that under § 28-311.02(2)(a), the inquiry of whether the course of conduct directed at a specific person serves a legitimate purpose consists of two parts: (1) whether the actor genuinely holds a justifiable purpose for engaging in the course of conduct and (2) whether the course of conduct is in logical service of such purpose under the circumstances. Flinn v.

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Related

Glantz v. Daniel
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984 N.W.2d 909 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2023)
Dugan v. Sorensen
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Flinn v. Strode
320 Neb. 813 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2026)

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Bluebook (online)
Schroeder v. Clouse, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schroeder-v-clouse-nebctapp-2026.