TIFFANI AUSTIN, Petitioner-Respondent v. LARRY JARRED

578 S.W.3d 847
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 2019
DocketSD35663
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 578 S.W.3d 847 (TIFFANI AUSTIN, Petitioner-Respondent v. LARRY JARRED) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TIFFANI AUSTIN, Petitioner-Respondent v. LARRY JARRED, 578 S.W.3d 847 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District Division One

TIFFANI AUSTIN, ) ) Petitioner-Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. SD35663 ) LARRY JARRED, ) Filed June 20, 2019 ) Respondent-Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF DUNKLIN COUNTY

Honorable John C. Spielman

REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

Larry Jarred appeals the trial court’s judgement of full order of protection entered against

him claiming that the trial court’s finding in that judgment that he stalked Tiffani Austin is not

supported by substantial evidence. We agree, reverse the judgment, and remand the case to the

trial court with directions to enter judgment denying Austin’s petition.

Standard of Review

Review of the grant of a full order of protection under the Adult Abuse Act is under the same standard as any other court-tried case; that is, this Court will uphold the trial court’s judgment as long as it is supported by substantial evidence, it is not against the weight of the evidence, and it does not erroneously declare or apply the law.

Lawyer v. Fino, 459 S.W.3d 528, 530 (Mo.App. 2015) (internal quotation marks and citations

omitted). The facts and inferences are viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court’s 1 ruling. Id. It is well-settled, nevertheless, that a party is bound by his or her own testimony on

matters of fact unless corrected or explained. Scott v. Hicks, 567 S.W.3d 266, 269 (Mo.App.

2019). The following factual background is recited in accordance with this standard of review.

Factual and Procedural Background

Tiffani Austin and Larry Jarred are co-workers at the City of Hornersville. She is the city

clerk, and he is the elected city marshal. Each has an office in the Hornersville city hall

separated by a door. While the record is not clear, apparently at some point the city’s board of

alderman suspended and impeached Jarred as city marshal. Jarred appealed that action and

thereafter was reinstated as city marshal.

On May 10, 2018, while suspended, Jarred came to Austin’s office in the Hornersville

city hall and made a Sunshine Law request 1 for a copy of minutes of a board of alderman

meeting. The city maintenance man, Harley Harvey, was present. Jarred told Austin that “he

was going to sue [her] and bring things against [her] in regards to that matter.”

Harley Harvey described an occurrence on some unspecified date and time as follows:

While sitting in the office at coffee break, I have seen [Jarred] come to the window and ask for things that [Austin] told him she couldn't get him, and he was very persistent, insisting upon her giving these things to him, paperwork of some sort – I don't remember what it was -- to the point of I finally spoke up and said, “You know she can't do that.[”] I have no reason to be involved in it other than the fact that it was not going anywhere, it was getting worse.

According to Harvey, Jarred’s “mannerism made me believe that he was getting angry” and,

while Harvey had no concern about Austin’s safety, he “just wanted it to stop.” It appeared to

Harvey that Jarred “was being too persistent, asking [Austin] for things she couldn’t do” and that

Harvey “did not want any more confrontation.”

1 See section 610.026. All statutory references are to RSMo 2016, unless otherwise indicated.

2 One unspecified day, apparently after he was reinstated, Jarred came into Austin’s office

seeking copies of some city ordinances from her. At that time, the city did not provide Jarred

with his own independent access to its ordinances, and his only access to city ordinances was to

come to Austin’s office and request them. In response to Jarred’s request to look at some city

ordinances, Austin “told him that they weren’t allowed to leave the office and that he had to kept

[sic] them in there and look at them.” Jarred then threatened to arrest Austin, told her “to call

[her] attorney because he was going to arrest [her], and to call [the] city attorney[,]” and walked

out of the office while grabbing for his phone. 2 Jarred knew he had no authority to arrest

someone for an alleged Sunshine Law violation.

There were numerous times that Jarred came to Austin’s office requesting to see

ordinances or presenting Sunshine Law requests for minutes and ordinances and Austin refused

to give them to him. Because Austin and the city withheld the ordinances from Jarred, they were

forcing him to come to Austin’s office to access them. At some unspecified time, Jarred stopped

coming into Austin’s office to look at city ordinances because Austin and the city “made copies

of the ordinances for him.” When asked why she did not do that “months and months ago to

avoid him having to come into [her] office[,]” Austin stated that “[i]t wasn’t my choice. I don’t

know.” Austin agreed that “at some point somebody decided to give [Jarred] the ordinances so

he could do his job[.]”

There were other unspecified times, as many as four or five times a day, when Jarred

would come into Austin’s office and say to her that “[she] was doing stuff wrong that he could

get [her] in trouble for.”

2 Jarred denied he ever threatened to arrest Austin. Under our standard of review, however, we must disregard that testimony.

3 One evening around 11:30, after he was reinstated, Jarred stopped to talk to Austin’s

boyfriend while they were getting gas at a gas station in Hornersville. Austin inserted herself

into that conversation. During the conversation, Jarred told Austin “[t]hings about [her] boss and

[the city’s] board members and how he was being treated wrong, and how he was going to try to

have them arrested and sue the city and stuff.”

Austin lives on a circle drive in Hornersville. She has observed Jarred, while on patrol as

city marshal in his patrol car, driving by her house as many as ten times within a 24-hour period.

Jarred has never been on Austin’s property or in her residence.

Jarred’s job as city marshal is to patrol the streets in the city. As a part of that patrol, he

is to drive around and keep an eye on things, look for bad guys, check things out and keep a

watch on things. Because Hornersville is “not very big[,]” Jarred’s patrol probably will take him

around everything in town, including Austin’s house and city hall, “quite a number of times.”

At some unspecified time, Austin saw a copy of Jarred’s log that showed where he had

“run” her boyfriend’s vehicle tags twice within an unspecified three-day period. The log

indicated on both instances that the reason for running the tags was that the vehicle’s lights were

on. While Austin was not sure whether the lights on her boyfriend’s vehicle were on at the time

the tags were first run, she was sure they were not on at the time the tags were run the second

time.

Also at some unspecified time, Jarred told Austin “that he records all of [their] phone

calls and all of the phone calls between him and [her] boss.”

Austin is not married to Jarred and never has been. They have no children together.

They are not related. They have never lived together. Jarred has never “done anything

inappropriate, as far as any kind of advances sexually or anything of that nature” toward Austin.

4 Jarred has never “indicated that he wanted any kind of relationship” with Austin. The only

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 S.W.3d 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiffani-austin-petitioner-respondent-v-larry-jarred-moctapp-2019.