Tommy Barber v. Gina Keas
This text of Tommy Barber v. Gina Keas (Tommy Barber v. Gina Keas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
|
COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH |
NO. 02-11-00073-CV
|
TOMMY BARBER |
APPELLANT |
V.
|
GINA KEAS |
APPELLEE |
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FROM THE 367TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY
MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]
I. Introduction
In three issues, Appellant Tommy Barber argues that the trial court erred by granting a protective order to Appellee Gina Keas. We affirm.
II. Factual and Procedural Background
Barber and Keas had known each other for three years and had been in a dating relationship during that time. Barber would often stay at Keas’s home, he kept some of his clothes and personal belongings there, and for a month or two before Keas filed her application for a protective order against him, he had been staying with her, paying rent, and helping to pay bills.
On the evening of October 22, 2010, the parties argued after Keas reminded Barber of her schedule for the next day. Keas told Barber that she was going to work from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., then help Strickland Junior High School with an “extreme school makeover,” and then go to Bridgeport to see her mother, her twenty-two-year-old son Ryan, and her granddaughter. Barber told her that he did not believe her, that she was lying, that he would “just handle this [his] way,” and that he would follow her.
The next morning, around 4 a.m., Barber woke Keas, said that he did not believe her, accused her of lying and cheating, and insisted that she call Ryan, who was at Keas’s mother’s house. After Keas called Ryan and woke him, Barber told her, “I don’t think you just called him,” and he acted very aggravated and agitated.
Keas got up and went into the kitchen for a soda. Barber got up too, and from the living room, he said, “[I]f this is the way it’s going to be, I’m going to pack my stuff and leave.” Keas replied, “Why don’t you just do that.” According to Keas, Barber came after her. She stated, “He came across the living room. He grabbed me by the head of my hair [sic], he drug [sic] me into the living room, and basically the next thing I know is I woke up on the living room floor. . . . And he was over me.”
When Keas regained consciousness, Barber was kneeling beside her with his hand on her head. He told her that he was sorry and asked if she was okay. Keas asked him if he could promise her that it would never happen again, and he said, “No, I can’t promise you that if you—if you raise your voice at me.” After they finished talking, she took a shower, got dressed, and went to work. After she told her coworkers what had happened, her supervisor called the police and reported the assault. At the time of the protective order hearing, Barber’s criminal charge was still pending.
On October 29 or 30, Keas found a comment by Barber on Facebook that caused her concern for her safety. The comment was “[t]hat he would never—never intentionally put a person in a position to fail, but being put in that position, that he’ll still be standing when the dust clears.” Keas took this as a veiled threat.
Prior to the October assault, Keas did not recall any instances of physical violence, but she testified, “I remember we were at a club one time and I was talking to another gentleman and [Barber] got aggravated. And when he did, he grabbed me by the arm and said, ‘Let’s leave.’”
On the Monday before Christmas, Barber sent Keas a dozen red roses and a card on which “It[’]s not very fun spending [Christmas] without the one that you love” was written and in which he told her that he was sorry, that it would never happen again, and that he was sorry for losing his temper. The trial court admitted into evidence a photocopy of the card’s message. Barber and Keas remained “friends” on Facebook, and she would occasionally check his status. Keas said there were other comments on Facebook that made her feel unsafe. On December 27, 2010, the State filed an application for a protective order for Keas, who received a temporary ex parte protective order against Barber pending the protective order hearing. Keas stated that Barber did not contact her in any way while the emergency protective order was in place.
At the protective order hearing, in addition to recounting the foregoing events, Keas stated that she believed a protective order was necessary to prevent violence between Barber and herself in the future. She also stated that she felt that Barber was capable of harming her and willing and able to harm her.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court entered a protective order for Keas, to last for the shorter of two years or a finding of not guilty in the assault case. In the order, the trial court found that the parties had a dating relationship under family code section 71.0021, that family violence under family code section 71.0004 had occurred and was likely to occur in the future, that Barber had committed family violence, and that a protective order for Keas’s protection should be entered under chapter 85 of the family code.[2] The order prohibited Barber, inter alia, from committing family violence against Keas, communicating directly with Keas in a threatening or harassing manner, communicating a threat through any person to Keas, and going within 200 yards of her residence or place of employment. This appeal followed.
III. Protective Order
In his first two issues, Barber complains that the trial court’s finding that he was likely to commit future violence or harm to Keas is based on no evidence or legally insufficient evidence.[3]
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Tommy Barber v. Gina Keas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tommy-barber-v-gina-keas-texapp-2011.