Staszkiewicz v. Thomas

2024 UT App 183, 562 P.3d 723
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 12, 2024
DocketCase No. 20230229-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2024 UT App 183 (Staszkiewicz v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staszkiewicz v. Thomas, 2024 UT App 183, 562 P.3d 723 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 183

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

MADISON STASZKIEWICZ, Appellee, v. TIFFANY N. THOMAS, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20230229-CA Filed December 12, 2024

Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Robert P. Faust No. 230900048

Lillian M. Reedy, Attorney for Appellant Kimberley L. Hansen and Amy L. Herrington, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE AMY J. OLIVER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN M. HARRIS and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.

OLIVER, Judge:

¶1 The district court entered a civil stalking injunction against Tiffany N. Thomas at Madison Staszkiewicz’s request. After a hearing on Thomas’s objection to the injunction, the district court kept the stalking injunction in place. Thomas now appeals. For the reasons outlined below, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Staszkiewicz is married to the father (Father) of Thomas’s daughter (Daughter). Thomas and Father have had a contentious relationship and have been involved in legal disputes over parent- time and child support for Daughter. In January 2023, Staszkiewicz v. Thomas

Staszkiewicz filed a petition for a civil stalking injunction against Thomas, alleging that Thomas had (1) abducted her and Father’s five-year-old son (Son) from elementary school in August 2022 (the School Incident) and (2) two months later, attempted to hit her car near the elementary school before pulling alongside it and yelling, “Fuck you fuck you, you’re dead!!!” (the Driving Incident). The court denied the request.

¶3 The following day, Staszkiewicz filed an amended request for a civil stalking injunction, alleging additional incidents of harassment: “multiple disturbing and harassing texts and emails” from 2015 and an incident in February 2019 when Thomas came to Staszkiewicz’s house “unannounced and attempted to break into [the] home” (the Porch Incident). The district court granted the amended request and entered a temporary civil stalking injunction.

¶4 Thomas requested a hearing to challenge the injunction. At the hearing in February 2023, the district court heard testimony from Thomas and Staszkiewicz and received documentary evidence, including text messages, photographs, and a Google map of the streets surrounding the school.

¶5 Regarding the School Incident, Thomas testified she had simply given Son a ride home when it appeared to her that he had been forgotten after school. According to Thomas, she had arrived to pick up Daughter, who was with Son, “waited and waited, and no one showed up to pick him up,” so Thomas called Father, who “calmly” told her, “Please drop him off at home, if you don’t mind.” When the court asked for corroborating evidence of Father’s permission, Thomas could produce only a screenshot showing a thirty-four-second phone call to Father. Staszkiewicz, on the other hand, produced texts between Father and Thomas from later that same day in which he told Thomas, “I don’t ever want [Son] in your car ever[;] . . . you are not approved to take him from school.” Staszkiewicz testified that her neighbor

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(Neighbor) who was driving the carpool that day called her “panicking[] because she couldn’t find” Son. In a signed statement filed with the court, Neighbor testified that Thomas’s claim that she took Son “because she was the ‘last car in the parking lot’ and ‘there were not any kids left at all before’ [Son] got in her car . . . was false.” Neighbor testified she had been “waiting in [the] regular pick-up area, when class dismissed for the day.”

¶6 Regarding the Driving Incident, Thomas denied that it occurred. Thomas testified that although she drove past Staszkiewicz’s car during school pickup, she did not veer her car toward Staszkiewicz’s in a menacing manner or say anything to her. Staszkiewicz, for her part, testified that Thomas swerved her car out of its lane, accelerated, and came within “[t]hree or four inches” of Staszkiewicz’s car before she “backed up to pull directly up to [Staszkiewicz’s] window,” “screaming profusely” and “threatening [her] life.” Staszkiewicz testified that she immediately called the police. The police report, which was attached to the request for the injunction, indicated Staszkiewicz “was crying, at times uncontrollably,” while describing the event and “was clearly scared due to the encounter.”

¶7 And regarding the Porch Incident, Thomas testified she had received permission from Father to drop off Daughter’s valentines but when she knocked on the door, Staszkiewicz “slammed the door in [her] face.” For her part, Staszkiewicz clarified she did not know Thomas was coming over and when Staszkiewicz tried to close the door, Thomas “put her foot in the door and pushed the door open.”

¶8 At one point in the hearing, the court explained it was “trying to understand what the dynamics may be between [the] parties . . . to see what sparks are lighting the fire between the conduct between these two.” The court also clarified it would consider the information from the amended request for a civil

20230229-CA 3 2024 UT App 183 Staszkiewicz v. Thomas

stalking injunction as evidence because it “was signed and delivered under oath.” This included what Staszkiewicz described as “multiple disturbing and harassing texts and emails” she received from Thomas in 2015.

¶9 After the hearing, the court denied Thomas’s objection to the stalking injunction in a written ruling. In its entirety, the court’s ruling states as follows:

The objection to the stalking injunction came on for hearing on February 16, 2023. Both parties were represented by counsel and both parties admitted exhibits. . . . The [c]ourt determined the testimony [of Staszkiewicz] was credible and that the actions of [Thomas] in taking her minor child from school without her knowledge would cause distress/fear. In addition an attempt to enter into [Staszkiewicz’s] home would cause her to fear for her safety, particular[ly] after the incident at the school of driving next to or so close to the car and making the statements listed in the Request. The [c]ourt denies the objection to the stalking injunction, which shall remain in place. No further Order required.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶10 Thomas now appeals, challenging the district court’s entry of the civil stalking injunction against her. First, she contends the court erred in concluding her alleged acts constitute a course of conduct as required by the statute. “Whether someone has engaged in a course of conduct under the stalking statute is a question of law, which we review for correctness.” Hardy v. Hardy, 2020 UT App 88, ¶ 4, 467 P.3d 931.

20230229-CA 4 2024 UT App 183 Staszkiewicz v. Thomas

¶11 Second, she contends the district court erred in finding that her conduct would cause a reasonable person to suffer fear or emotional distress. “Whether the course of conduct would cause a reasonable person in a petitioner’s circumstances to suffer fear or emotional distress is a question of fact that we review for clear error,” but “we review the district court’s interpretation of the underlying legal standard for correctness.” Richins v. Weldon, 2023 UT App 147, ¶ 42, 541 P.3d 274 (cleaned up).

ANALYSIS

¶12 Under Utah law, stalking occurs when an individual

intentionally or knowingly . . . engages in a course of conduct directed at a specific individual and knows or should know that the course of conduct would cause a reasonable person (i) to fear for the individual’s own safety or the safety of a third individual; or (ii) to suffer emotional distress.

Utah Code § 76-5-106.5(2)(a) (2022). 1 In other words, “the crime of stalking consists of two elements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 UT App 183, 562 P.3d 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staszkiewicz-v-thomas-utahctapp-2024.