Tanguilig v. Valdez

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 2019
DocketA151994
StatusPublished

This text of Tanguilig v. Valdez (Tanguilig v. Valdez) 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
Tanguilig v. Valdez, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 5/20/19; Certified for publication 6/18/19 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

FELICIANO TANGUILIG, No. A151994 Plaintiff and Respondent, (San Francisco County Super. Ct. v. No. CCH-17-579178) STEVE VALDEZ, Defendant and Appellant.

In this dispute between neighbors in the city of San Francisco, Steve Valdez, respondent to a petition for a restraining order filed by Feliciano Tanguilig under the Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (Elder Abuse Act, Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15600 et seq.), seeks reversal of the superior court’s order, issued after a hearing on Tanguilig’s petition, restraining Valdez from engaging in abusive conduct toward Tanguilig and Tanguilig’s family members, all of whom lived next door to Valdez, and ordering him to stay away from them. Valdez, appearing in propria persona, either contends or questions whether the court made three categories of reversible error at the hearing. These involve the court’s consideration of statements by Tanguilig’s son-in-law at the hearing; the burden of proof the court applied in reviewing the evidence; and the court’s consideration, or lack of consideration, of Valdez’s “mens rea.” We conclude Valdez’s arguments have been forfeited for failure to raise them first below, lack merit and/or are insufficient to affirmatively show error. Therefore, we affirm the order.

1 BACKGROUND In April 2017, Tanguilig, then 74 years of age, filed his petition for a restraining order under Welfare and Institutions Code section 15657.03 of the Elder Abuse Act in San Francisco Superior Court. He sought protection from elder abuse allegedly committed against him by Valdez.1 Tanguilig also sought protection for four members of his family, including his son-in-law Michael Rutledge, all of whom lived in the same house, located on Niagara Avenue in San Francisco (the Tanguilig/Rutledge residence), immediately next to Valdez’s house. Under penalty of perjury, Tanguilig recounted a number of incidents that he asserted constituted elder abuse by Valdez against him. We focus on two categories of incidents that are relevant to our resolution of this appeal. According to Tanguilig’s sworn petition statements, he was seeking a protective order against Valdez “for mental anguish, emotional distress and general nuisance behavior causing additional harm and keeping plaintiff, and plaintiff’s family from the full enjoyment of their property.” Among his contentions was, first, that “[n]early every trash day in 2016 [Valdez] places his trash cans in the driveway of [the Tanguilig/Rutledge residence], blocking the residents of [the Tanguilig/Rutledge residence] from using their driveway. In order to get to medical appointments, and other errands, Tanguilig is forced to move [Valdez’s] trash cans, which is a nuisance and also dangerous as Tanguilig has to sometimes go into the street in order to move them. Tanguilig has asked [Valdez] numerous times to stop doing this. [Valdez] has his own driveway, but refuses to place his trash cans there, instead he chooses to annoy, harass and be a nuisance on the residents of [the Tanguilig/Rutledge residence] and block their access to their driveway. This causes Tanguilig mental anguish, and endangers Tanguilig’s safety as he is elderly and has to go into [the] street and lift the trash cans out

1 Tanguilig filed a previous petition in December 2016 for a restraining order against Valdez under the Elder Abuse Act. According to Valdez, this petition was dismissed without prejudice in March 2017 because of problems with its service. Because Valdez’s appeal is from the court’s rulings regarding Tanguilig’s April 2017 petition, we do not discuss the December 2016 petition further, other than to discuss contentions about a photograph attached to that previous petition. 2 of the way constantly.” Second, Tanguilig wrote, Valdez “has assaulted Tanguilig by spraying him with his garden [hose] (through the fence separating the properties) on numerous occasions. This is assault on an elder.” The court issued a temporary restraining order. It concluded Tanguilig had provided insufficient facts to support an order restraining Valdez from contact with anyone other than Tanguilig (besides other family members, Tanguilig asserted that Valdez was also harassing workers on his property). The court issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting Valdez from engaging in conduct that was abusive to Tanguilig and from having any contact with Tanguilig, and ordered Valdez to stay five yards away from Tanguilig and his home. Valdez filed a written response to Tanguilig’s petition, which likewise included statements under penalty of perjury. He denied Tanguilig’s allegations about the trash cans and contended that photographs Tanguilig attached to his petition and previous petition showed trash cans placed in certain positions by others, including employees of the trash collection company, not by himself as Tanguilig alleged. He stated that he had “never directed a spray from a ‘garden [hose]’ thru the fence at the petitioner,” and that “[t]he backyard fence as viewed from my side measures 10 feet above my grade and has two rows of solid panels on both sides forming a solid barrier with zero openness.” The superior court held a hearing on Tanguilig’s petition. Tanguilig, his son-in- law, Michael Rutledge,2 and Valdez appeared at the hearing. The court, without swearing anyone in as a witness, heard from each about what had occurred between them. Tanguilig told the court that Valdez blocked his driveway with his trash cans “on a regular basis,” once a week on trash collection day. Valdez’s claim that someone else put the cans in Tanguilig’s driveway was “a lie,” and Tanguilig sometimes saw Valdez put the cans there from where he lived in the downstairs part of the house at the Tanguilig/Rutledge residence. Once, Tanguilig asked Valdez to please move the cans because they were directly behind Tanguilig’s car, but Valdez would not move them;

2 Rutledge’s name is misspelled in the reporter’s transcript of the hearing as “Rutlage.” 3 Tanguilig backed his car into a trash can and Valdez said, “ ‘Thank you.’ ” Rutledge told the court that after the filing of Tanguilig’s first petition, Valdez started putting his trash cans in his own driveway and the cans were no longer blocking the driveway at the Tanguilig/Rutledge residence. He contended this showed it was not the trash collection company that had been blocking the driveway. Tanguilig also told the court that Valdez had sprayed him with a garden hose “[s]everal times.” Tanguilig said, “I’m outside my yard doing some yard work. He turn on his garden hose and tried to direct his water hose towards my fence, and I’m right behind the fence, and he knew I’m right behind the fence because I’m making some noises there. [¶] And the water came over towards me, and the fence was kind of taller than me so I yell at him ‘Stop’ and ‘I’m here.’ ” Tanguilig continued, “He stop a little bit, and then—and he came back again. The water came back again. And I yell and try to hit the fence with the broom. That’s how I stop.” Police arrived a few minutes later. Tanguilig believed Valdez had called them, but Valdez would not answer his door when the police knocked on it. Tanguilig and Rutledge then recounted other incidents involving Valdez consistent with allegations in Tanguilig’s petition. Valdez told the court he never put any trash cans behind Tanguilig’s car, either someone from the trash collection company, another neighbor or someone taking a parking space did it, and there was no conversation about the trash cans.

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