Tyrice Brown v. Victoria McCauley

2020 Ark. App. 437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 23, 2020
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 Ark. App. 437 (Tyrice Brown v. Victoria McCauley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyrice Brown v. Victoria McCauley, 2020 Ark. App. 437 (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Cite as 2020 Ark. App. 437 Reason: I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS document Date: 2021-07-12 11:09:22 Foxit PhantomPDF Version: DIVISION III 9.7.5 No. CV-19-785

Opinion Delivered: September 23, 2020

TYRICE BROWN APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 23DR-19-46]

VICTORIA MCCAULEY HONORABLE H.G. FOSTER, APPELLEE JUDGE

AFFIRMED

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

Appellant Tyrice Brown appeals a final order of protection entered by the Faulkner

County Circuit Court prohibiting him for contacting appellee Victoria McCauley until

March 7, 2029. He argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the ten-year

protection order. We affirm.

Appellee filed a petition for an ex parte temporary order of protection on behalf of

herself on January 15, 2019. In the petition, appellee alleged that on August 28, 2018,

Tyrice rolled on top of me and inserted his penis into me while I was trying to push him off and telling him no and to stop. He also finished inside of me against my will.

I am scared that now that I am doing something about what he did he may try to find me and we go to the same University. In the accompanying affidavit, appellee also stated that she “asked if he at least had a

condom. He lied and said no.” She further stated that appellant stopped in the middle of

sex and told her that he did have a condom, he “just didn’t want to use it.” A temporary

order of protection was entered the same day, effective until February 7. The order was

extended for fifteen days on February 7. It was extended for fourteen more days on

February 21.

The court held a hearing on the petition on March 7. Appellee testified that she had

been in an on and off dating relationship with appellant for a couple of years. She stated

that on the date in question, appellant came to her residence unannounced and walked into

the residence without knocking. She said that she was naked at the time and the two just

engaged in conversation. Appellant informed her that he had to go help his mom but that

he would be back later so they could have sex. Appellee testified that she did not really

think that appellant was going to return. She said that appellant returned around 11:00 p.m.

Appellee testified in pertinent part:

When he came back he did not knock, he walked in, but I heard him walking in this time. I was on my bed. He laid down on my bed, I wrapped up in a blanket, and we talked for a while. We just talked about his mom; I think his brother was brought up. And then at the end of that conversation, there was, like, no build-up or anything, he just rolled over on top of me. At that time, there had been no been any indication that that was going to happen. There was no build-up to it. He doesn’t kiss, so there was no kissing.

I asked him if he had a condom, and he said no. I basically told him, if he doesn’t have a condom, then we don’t need to have sex. After that he had his arms on the side of me and he started moving up. And he moved his penis to where he could put it inside of me. I had my hands on his shoulders and pushing, like, down to, like, kind of moving me away.

2 Obviously, he’s much stronger than me, so it didn’t do much. But he stuck his penis inside of me and said, “Oh, there it is.” And I froze and I stopped. I was on my back. He did what he needed to do.

In the middle of it, he stopped and said, “I do have a condom; I just didn’t want to use it.” He finished inside of me without telling me, without my knowledge. He didn’t have a condom on. He said that he didn’t have one.

I said, “Did you not finish?” He said, “If I said no, I would be lying.” And so he got off me.

I went to the bathroom. I freaked out because he didn’t know this at the time, but I had just got my birth control. It wasn’t working. Since he finished inside of me it was a possibility that, like, I could be pregnant. So I went to the bathroom, freaked out, came back, explained that to him. He asked me why I was acting the way I was acting, and basically implied that this had happened before. To my knowledge, this had never happened before. I just was just explaining to him, like, no, like, this is serious. You don’t understand. Like, you finishing inside of me means that, like, I could be pregnant with your kid right now.

She stated that they subsequently rode around until they found a Plan B that she could take.

She said that appellant came back to the residence with her and did not leave until he was

sure that she had taken the pill. She testified that other than running into appellant at

Einstein’s, she has not had any contact with him. At Einstein’s, appellant tried to touch her

with his foot and told her he did not understand why she had blocked him on everything.

She stated that she told him that it was okay, and she walked away after she received her

drink. She said that she saw appellant again at Cadron, but he just smiled and kept walking.

Appellee testified that she received counseling at UCA and that eleven days after the sexual

contact, she went to an urgent-care facility for a full screening. She was adamant that she

did not indicate to appellant that she wished to have sex and insisted that she “explicitly told

him that [she] did not want to have sex with him.”

3 On cross, appellee stated that she has told her family, friends, bosses, and a counselor

about what happened to her. She also said that she filed a police report. She stated that she

initially told a friend about what took place, and the friend suggested that she block appellant

on social media. The friend subsequently told her to “say something about it” because it

“wasn’t right.” She said that she filed a police report in November or December but that

to her knowledge, no criminal charges had been filed against appellant. She admitted that

appellant has come into her residence before without knocking and that they had

unprotected sex on prior occasions. She said that appellant did not remove his clothing

before lying in the bed with her. She stated that they talked for a while before he got on

top of her, pulled his pants down, and put his penis inside her. She said that when she told

him about her birth-control situation, he told her to get dressed so they could go to the

store. Appellee testified that she blocked appellant’s phone numbers and social media. She

said that they had only had the one contact in Einstein’s, and she was unsure if appellant

had tried to come to her residence because she had moved twice since August 28. She

stated that she and appellant no longer share mutual friends. She admitted that appellant has

not made any contact with her since Einstein’s. She stated that her relationship with

appellant was routinely off and on and that it was frustrating. She said that over the two

years, she would have liked for their relationship to have developed into something more.

Appellee stated that prior to August 2018, appellant had never threatened or physically

abused her. However, she said that she sought an order of protection because she is afraid

of what appellant might do now that she is “vocalizing this.”

4 On redirect, appellee stated that she was not jealous, and she was never upset enough

to do something to get back at appellant. She said that on the date in question, she and

appellant were not in the type of relationship where he could just walk in her door

unannounced. She stated that she was afraid of appellant when he approached her at

Einstein’s.

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2020 Ark. App. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyrice-brown-v-victoria-mccauley-arkctapp-2020.