Yin v. Li CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 2022
DocketH048173
StatusUnpublished

This text of Yin v. Li CA6 (Yin v. Li CA6) 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
Yin v. Li CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 7/8/22 Yin v. Li CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SHUANGLING YIN, H048173 (Santa Clara County Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 18-DV-000979)

v.

QIAOCHU LI,

Appellant.

Qiaochu Aaron Li appeals from mutual domestic violence restraining orders issued after hearing. He raises various statutory challenges to the order restraining him from his ex-girlfriend, Shuangling Yin. He also contends the trial court abused its discretion in the manner in which it conducted the trial and considered the evidence, and he claims error in the handling of his new trial motion. For the reasons stated here, we will affirm the orders. I. BACKGROUND Restraining Order Requests In December 2018, an attorney for Shuangling Yin filed a request for a domestic violence restraining order against her ex-boyfriend, Qiaochu Aaron Li. Yin’s supporting declaration described harassing conduct by Li following their summer breakup, an incident in October which culminated in Li’s arrest at a Starbucks cafe, and continued inappropriate conduct afterward. Five days later, Li filed his own request for a domestic violence restraining order seeking protection from Yin for himself and a coworker whom he had also dated. Li’s supporting declaration focused on an incident in August 2018 when Yin went to his workplace uninvited and physically assaulted him. The court issued temporary restraining orders, and a hearing was scheduled for January 2019. Li retained counsel, and the matter was continued to June and then August 2019. Li’s attorney withdrew in July 2019, and Li represented himself for the remainder of the proceedings. In August the court authorized Li to depose Yin and her boyfriend, ordered discovery to conclude by December, and continued the trial to January 2020. Short Cause Trial Li and Yin testified at trial. Li called as witnesses his coworker, a Starbucks employee who saw some of the October incident, and a friend who was present during a video call between Li and Yin after the October incident. The court admitted the deposition testimony of the receptionist at Li’s workplace who observed the August incident, and some text messages and video chat history from September 2018. We summarize the evidence here in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling. (Melissa G. v. Raymond M. (2018) 27 Cal.App.5th 360, 373–374 (Melissa G.).) Li and Yin dated for about eight months. They broke up and reconciled several times. In August 2018, Yin confronted Li at his place of work. She was sad and angry over their most recent break up, and she entered his office uninvited and upset. The receptionist observed Yin hitting and cursing at Li. Yin was crying, and struck Li in the face and head using her hands. Li remained calm, told the receptionist not to call the police, and he and Yin went outside to talk. Li related that he had bruises on his head, abdomen, and arms from the incident, and he experienced slower thinking and depression. He saw a doctor and made a police report of the incident in December 2018, and he was fearful of Yin. The parties continued to communicate (in Mandarin and English) by text and video calls in 2018. In September 2018, Li texted Yin using temporary numbers after Yin had blocked his personal cell phone number. In one of those exchanges, Yin texted, 2 “If you have no feelings [for me] now can you just stop bothering me?” Li said he contacted Yin at that time “because she acted like she was really angry and I was afraid of making her more angry.” During a text exchange the following week, Li commented on Yin’s relationship with her new boyfriend. As translated by Yin, Li texted, “Your relationship with your coworker [] is an extremely dangerous hidden danger. [¶…¶] Others can see what’s going on. […] Don’t wait until you lose your job, lose your friends and get a bad reputation, and regret then. Plus even your work visa might be indirectly affected by it.”1 A second physical clash occurred in October 2018. Li went to Yin’s home uninvited, left because Yin was not home, and returned a short while later after Yin returned with her boyfriend. Yin told Li he shouldn’t come to her home because they had broken up. Li insisted on talking with Yin alone, and “wouldn’t let it go.” Li and Yin went to a park where they talked, and from there they went to a Starbucks where Yin’s boyfriend was waiting. Yin suggested meeting at Starbucks because “it is a public place, and I think it helps for everybody to calm down in a public place.” Li had threatened Yin’s boyfriend before, and as they approached Starbucks Li told Yin he “would win” if he had to fight Yin’s boyfriend . Yin’s boyfriend was outside the cafe, and Li told Yin to go inside. Yin was afraid for her boyfriend, so she refused and asked Li why he wanted her to go inside. Li said, “ ‘[b]ecause there is something you might not want to see outside.’ ” Li kept yelling at Yin to go inside, she would not comply, and he started pushing her toward the door. He pushed her back against the door, and he continued to push. Li grabbed Yin by the forearm, and Yin flailed her arm

1 Alternatively to Yin’s translation, Li translated the message as: the “[r]elationship between you and your colleague is a very troublesome issue, hidden issue. … I’m telling you very sincerely others see it. And when there’s something that goes wrong or they’re unhappy about something, problems may arise. [¶…¶] [D]on’t get into a situation when friends are lost or reputation[s] are damaged or jobs are at risk. … And, in addition, the immigration status may be indirectly affected. At that time, it wouldn’t be a matter just for dating.” 3 away. Yin’s boyfriend stepped in and pushed Li. Yin entered the cafe, and a confrontation between Li and Yin’s boyfriend ensued outside. The police were called, and Li was taken into custody. At trial, Li denied pushing Yin. Li had a friend sit with him during a two- to three-hour video call with Yin which occurred almost immediately following the October incident. The friend recalled general topics that were discussed in Mandarin, but not specific details. Li began the conversation by asking Yin if she was ok. They proceeded to discuss what happened at Starbucks, “followed by [Li] explaining some of the … implications of what all this is,” and further discussion “based on what [Li] said.” Yin was initially sympathetic to Li’s situation. She accompanied Li to an attorney’s office because he wanted her to drop the case and she wanted to help him. But her position changed after reviewing the police report (which included a statement by Li that Yin had been violent in the past) and discussing the relationship with other attorneys. She decided the relationship was abusive and she needed to protect herself. Li’s behavior also disturbed Yin. Li contacted three or four of Yin’s friends after the incident. About 10 days after the incident, Li went to the parking garage in Yin’s apartment complex. Li knew Yin was upset after learning he told the police that Yin “beat me up.” He knew she did not want to see him, so he told a friend he would wait in her garage for an hour should Yin wish to communicate. A few days later, concerned that he would be charged with domestic violence, Li texted a friend that “the worst case is she and I [¶…¶] both go to prison for four years for felony D.V.” Yin also understood that Li had asked her friends for her parents’ contact information.

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