T.F. v. C.G.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 2025
Docket23-1761
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
T.F. v. C.G., (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1761 Filed February 5, 2025

T.F., Jr. on behalf of E.F., a minor, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

C.G., Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Elizabeth Dupuich,

Judge.

A party appeals a protective order entered pursuant to chapter 236.

AFFIRMED.

David R. Fiester, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.

T.F., Cedar Rapids, self-represented appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

C.G. appeals from a protective order prohibiting contact with E.F., her

ex-husband T.F.’s child. We first consider whether this appeal is moot and elect

to proceed to the merits of C.G.’s challenge. Then, on our review, we affirm.

Background Facts and Proceedings. T.F. filed a petition for relief from

domestic abuse, alleging C.G. abused his minor child, E.F. At the outset of the

hearing, T.F. told the court he was interested in obtaining a no-contact order

without a finding of domestic abuse—in other words, a consent order. See Iowa

Code § 236.5(2) (2023). Also at the start of the hearing, the court informed C.G.

of her right to a continuance to obtain counsel, which C.G. twice declined. Then

the court asked C.G. if she was interested in the consent order T.F. mentioned.

Rather than answer the question, C.G. made a number of statements about

jurisdiction and argued domestic-abuse protective orders could not apply to

children. The court told her the petition was properly filed, explained what the

hearing would entail, and again asked C.G. if she wanted to consent to the order

and avoid the evidentiary hearing and a potential finding of domestic abuse. C.G.

told the court she wanted to “move forward” with the hearing.

T.F. testified that C.G. was his ex-wife and had been physically aggressive

and violent with E.F. on multiple occasions. The allegations generally involved

grabbing, shoving, and screaming at E.F. while E.F. was between the ages of four

and seven. T.F. explained that he had asked C.G. to stay away from and not

contact E.F., but C.G. picked E.F. up from school without his permission anyway.

Midway through the hearing, the court again reminded C.G. she could

proceed by consent instead of the court making a finding of domestic abuse, and 3

the court instructed C.G. to speak up if she wanted to take that approach. C.G.

never did so. Instead, she testified and gave a lengthy description of the

breakdown in her relationship with T.F. and her contact with E.F.’s biological

mother. She also denied the incidents of physical abuse.

After she testified, C.G. had a somewhat disjointed back-and-forth with the

court about whether she would consent to a protective order. C.G. eventually

asked the court a legal question about whether she would be “labeled as a

domestic abuser,” and the court declined to advise her but explained what the

order would say. Rather than accept an order by consent, C.G. asked for a

continuance. The court responded: “Well, it’s too late. We already did the

hearing.” C.G. responded: “Then I don’t consent.” The court acknowledged C.G.’s

lack of consent and found C.G. “committed domestic abuse” against E.F. and

“represent[ed] a credible threat to [E.F.’s] physical safety.” And the court entered

a one-year protective order. C.G. appeals, and T.F. has not participated in the

appellate process.

Mootness. The protective order expired on September 26, 2024. We

invited the parties to file statements addressing mootness, and C.G. filed a

statement generally referring to collateral consequences. She specifically cited

state and federal firearms statutes but did not explain how concerns about firearms

persist since the protective order expired. She also vaguely alluded to “difficulty in

securing employment with children, elderly, and otherwise dependent persons,”

particularly in the field of healthcare. C.G. has left us in a tough spot evaluating

whether she is suffering from ongoing negative effects from the order, as she

offered no detail or evidence for this claim in her statement. In an abundance of 4

caution, we elect to credit her bare assertion that she is suffering collateral

employment consequences, and we find this case is not moot.

But we also offer a practical observation for future litigants in appeals from

chapter-236 orders: ask for expedited briefing. See Iowa Rs. App. P. 6.901(2),

6.902. After completion of the briefing process, the supreme court transferred this

case to our court on August 29, 2024, and it was submitted without oral argument

to our panel on September 11, 2024. It was not realistically possible for this court

to issue a decision in the fifteen days between submission and expiration of the

protective order—particularly given our other priority cases, including cases

involving termination of parental rights, child custody, and indictable crimes. This

is a recurring problem. See, e.g., McGuire v. McGuire, No. 22-2067, 2024

WL 108867, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 10, 2024) (dismissing appeal of an expired

chapter-236 order as moot and collecting cases doing the same).

Merits. As a threshold matter, C.G. is unhappy the district court did not

enter a protective order by consent (absent a finding of domestic abuse), yet the

record establishes she repeatedly declined the court’s invitation to do just that.

Now represented by counsel, she complains in her appellate brief that she wanted

the consent order “but was talked out of it by the judge due to misleading

statements.” But we read the record differently. In our review, we find the district

judge did the best she could answering C.G.’s questions without crossing the

sometimes-fine line into offering legal advice. To the extent C.G. alleges some

error in how the judge conducted the hearing, we find no basis for reversal.

As an academic point, we note it is unclear whether the district court heard

this matter at law or in equity, which could impact our standard of review. See 5

Bacon ex rel. Bacon v. Bacon, 567 N.W.2d 414, 417 (Iowa 1997) (reviewing for

substantial evidence when a chapter-236 petition was tried at law). But we

conclude that issue is not dispositive here because, even on de novo review, we

defer to credibility determinations like the district court’s resolution of irreconcilable

testimony. See Hora v. Hora, 5 N.W.3d 635, 645 (Iowa 2024).

In part, C.G also seems to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting the order, given her complaints about the lack of corroborating

evidence. But corroboration of victim testimony is not required in criminal cases

for proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.21(3). And it certainly is

not required under the preponderance standard here. See Iowa Code § 236.4(1).

Regardless of corroboration, the district court was in the best position to determine

credibility, and it was free to credit T.F.’s testimony and reject C.G.’s—as it

necessarily did when entering the protective order. In light of the district court’s

implicit credibility assessment and the comparatively low burden of proof, we affirm

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Related

State v. LaGrange
541 N.W.2d 562 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1995)
Bacon Ex Rel. Bacon v. Bacon
567 N.W.2d 414 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1997)

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