Court Opinion

ID: 4910839
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-14 17:35:38.133994+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:27.787795
License: Public Domain

Filed
                                                                                            Washington State
                                                                                            Court of Appeals
                                                                                             Division Two

                                                                                           September 14, 2021

      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

                                         DIVISION II
    STACY MARIE JURSS,                                                No. 53617-0-II

                                                                     (Consolidated with:
                                Respondent,                           No. 54061-4-II)

         v.

    LIAM ALOYSHA MOONEY,                                       UNPUBLISHED OPINION

                                Appellant

        LEE, C.J. — Stacey M. Jurss and Liam A. Mooney have a child together, H.J. The superior

court granted Jurss’s petition for a domestic violence protection order (DVPO) against Mooney.

Mooney appeals the terms imposed in the DVPO, arguing that the superior court abused its

discretion by ordering that the DVPO remain in effect until H.J. is eighteen years old, imposing

provisions in the DVPO to protect H.J., and restricting his possession of firearms. Mooney also

challenges a portion of the superior court’s findings of fact 12.1

        We agree that the superior court abused its discretion by imposing the challenged

provisions in the DVPO. Further, the challenged portion of the superior court’s finding of fact 12

is speculative. Accordingly, we reverse the improper provisions in the DVPO and remand for the

1
  Mooney also assigns error to a portion of finding of fact 16, which states, “‘Ms. Jurss is entitled
to the order requested.’” Br. of Appellant at 24. Mooney does not provide any argument and
simply points out that, for the reasons already explained in his brief, Jurss was not entitled to all
the relief granted in the trial court’s order. Because Mooney fails to provide any further argument,
we do not address this argument beyond the issues addressed in this opinion. See RAP 10.3(a)(6);
Cowiche Canyon Conservancy v. Bosley, 118 Wn.2d 801, 809, 828 P.2d 549 (1992).
No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

superior court to limit the length of the DVPO to one year, strike the provisions protecting H.J.,

strike the provisions restricting Mooney’s possession of firearms, and strike the challenged portion

of finding of fact 12.

                                              FACTS

       On March 20, 2019, Jurss filed a petition for a DVPO against Mooney based on a 2009

sexual encounter with Mooney. Jurss’s DVPO petition sought protections for herself, but did not

seek protections for H.J. However, she did request that protection order restrain Mooney from

interfering with her custody of H.J. and removing H.J. from the state. Jurss also requested that the

order remain effective for more than one year because Mooney was likely to resume acts of

domestic violence against her.

       Both Jurss and Mooney testified at the hearing for the protection order. The following

evidence was presented to the superior court.

       Jurss and Mooney have a child together, H.J., born in 2010. H.J. was conceived following

a 2009 New Year’s Eve party that Jurss and Mooney attended together. At the time, Mooney was

18 years old and Jurss was 27 years old. Both parties consumed alcohol at the party.2

       Jurss testified that she remembered going to a New Year’s Eve party in 2009 with Mooney.

Mooney drove to the party in his truck. Jurss agreed that she could have supplied Mooney with

alcohol during the party but she could not remember. Jurrs was so intoxicated, she blacked out.

2
  On appeal, Mooney only assigns error to portions of findings of fact 12 and 16. Therefore, the
remaining findings of fact are verities on appeal. Miles v. Miles, 128 Wn. App. 64, 69-70, 114
P.3d 671 (2005).

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

Jurss does not recall what happened after the party. And Jurss cannot remember any details of the

sexual contact between her and Mooney.

       Mooney testified that he believed he drove the two of them to the party in Jurss’s van.

Jurss, and several other people, supplied him with alcohol during the party. According to Mooney,

a coworker drove him and Jurss back to their apartment in Jurss’s van. When they returned to the

apartment, Jurss led Mooney into her bedroom. Mooney “believed she wanted to have sex with

[him].” Verbatim Report of Proceeding (April 22, 2019) at 117. Mooney testified that the sex

was consensual.

       Both parties agree they had sexual intercourse that night. Both parties also agree that this

was the only time Jurss and Mooney had any sexual contact, and H.J. was born as a result.

       Mooney was shocked when he learned that Jurss was pregnant. He already had plans to

move to New York for college at the time. Although Jurss was pregnant, Mooney followed

through with his plans to move to New York. Jurss raised H.J. alone for five years until 2015.

       Jillian Scheibeck, a friend of Jurss’s, testified and provided a detailed declaration to the

superior court about the time period when Jurss was raising H.J. alone. Jurss and H.J. lived with

Schieibeck in 2014. While Jurss was living with Scheibeck, Jurss was arrested for driving under

the influence (DUI) while H.J. was in the car. H.J. was temporarily placed in foster care in

Scheibeck’s home. During this time, Mooney visited with H.J., and Scheibeck met Mooney.

       In 2015, Jurss was again arrested for DUI. Jurss again had H.J. with her. This DUI resulted

in a dependency action, and H.J. was again placed in Scheibeck’s custody. In the dependency

action, Jurss denied knowing the identity of H.J.’s father. Scheibeck decided to contact Mooney

and tell him about the dependency.

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

       As soon as Mooney learned of the dependency, he called the social worker and filed a

parentage action. In less than six weeks, he had left New York and returned to Washington. H.J.

was placed in Mooney’s custody. The dependency was dismissed when the superior court

approved Jurss and Mooney’s agreed parenting plan.

       Following the hearing on Jurss’s 2019 DVPO petition, the superior court entered the

following relevant findings of fact:

       12.     In this case, Ms. Jurss argues that she lacked the mental capacity to consent.
               Both parties agree that Ms. Jurss was intoxicated that night. Both parties
               testified that Ms. Jurss did not drive home, though there is dispute over if
               Mr. Mooney or a third party provided the transportation. The court
               concludes that if Mr. Mooney knew that Ms. Jurss did not have the capacity
               to drive her car, he should have suspected she did not have the capacity to
               consent.

       13.     Additionally, Mr. Mooney offered the testimony of a witness, Jillian
               Scheibeck (formerly Andrews). Ms. Scheibeck testified that at a later
               occasion, Ms. Jurss became so intoxicated that she blacked out. This is
               consistent with the testimony of Ms. Jurss indicating that she blacked out
               on the night in question. Ms. Scheibeck[’s] declaration and oral testimony
               both support the conclusion that Ms. Jurss has a problem consuming alcohol
               to excess resulting in her blacking out. This testimony of Ms. Scheibeck
               supports Ms. Jurss’ testimony that she was blacked out on the night of
               December 31, 2009/January 1, 2010.

       14.     Both parties raised the issue of credibility of the other. Each have made
               inconsistent statements over the course of the last nine years and additional
               information has been raised over time. The court does not find these
               inconsistencies to be problematic for either party. The nature of the
               allegations, the balancing needs of sharing a child, the legal ramifications
               of certain statements, and the passage of time all contribute to these
               inconsistencies and additions. However, the main crux of the narrative for
               both parties on the night in question has been effectively unchanged over
               time.

       15.     Ms. Jurss also testified that her mental health has been impacted by the
               trauma of the event. Even simple courtesy interactions with Mr. Mooney
               place her in fear. Mr. Mooney argued that Ms. Jurss has interacted with him

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

               without fear on many occasions. The court does not conclude that these
               interactions evidence a lack of fear. Instead, they evidence that Ms. Jurss
               had tried, on occasions, [to] make the best of an uncomfortable situation
               setting aside her personal fears for the welfare of the child. The court
               concludes that Ms. Jurss has an ongoing, reasonable fear of Mr. Mooney.

       16.     The court further concludes that Ms. Jurss has proven, by a preponderance
               of evidence, that due to her severe level of intoxication, she lacked the
               capacity to consent to sexual intercourse. Because Ms. Jurss lacked the
               capacity to consent that evening and Mr. Mooney proceeded to participate
               in sexual intercourse with Ms. Jurss anyway, Ms. Jurss is entitled to the
               Order requested.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 477-79. The superior court’s findings regarding Jurss’s fear were based

exclusively on the sexual contact that occurred on New Year’s Eve 2009. The superior court did

not make any findings about any additional conduct by Mooney. 3 Based on its findings, the

superior court issued a DVPO.

       In the DVPO, the superior court found that Mooney represented a credible threat to Jurss’s

physical safety. The protection order restrained Mooney from “causing physical harm, bodily

injury, assault, including sexual assault, and from molesting, harassing, threatening, or stalking”

Jurss and H.J. The protection order also restrained Mooney from interfering with Jurss’s physical

3
  Jurss’s fear of Mooney is based on her psychological reaction to the past event (2009 sexual
contact), rather than Mooney committing or threatening to commit acts of domestic violence. Even
accepting the trial court’s finding that the sexual contact between the two was a sexual assault,
there is no evidence that Mooney presents any actual threat of committing acts of domestic
violence against Jurss or is a threat to her physical safety. See RCW 26.50.010(3)(a). However,
Mooney does not challenge the granting of the order. Instead, Mooney argues the Jurss was not
entitled to the full relief requested in her petition or the expanded relief granted by the trial court
and that Jurrs was only “entitled to, at most, a basic one-year DVPO that protected her alone, not
the child, and did not restrict Mooney’s right to possess a firearm.” Br. of Appellant at 24. Because
Mooney does not challenge the trial court’s findings regarding the sexual contact or the trial court’s
decision to grant the protection order, we do not address the propriety of granting the protection
order.

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

or legal custody of H.J. and restrained Mooney from removing H.J. from the State. The DVPO

also contained the following provision:

       The parties share a child. Nothing in this order prohibits Mr. Mooney from having
       contact with the child consistent with the terms of any parenting plan. Parties shall
       only communicate through Our Family Wizard re child only. Parties may attend
       joint functions for the child, but Mr. Mooney shall give Ms. Jurss at least 2 hours
       notice of his intent to attend any function and shall not have contact with her at said
       function.

CP at 470. And although the DVPO granted temporary care, custody, and control of H.J. to Jurss,

Mooney was given visitation “[p]ursuant to any parenting plan order.” CP at 470.

       The DVPO also ordered that Mooney could not possess or obtain firearms because Mooney

“presents a serious and imminent threat to public health or safety, or the health or safety of any

individual by possessing a firearm or other dangerous weapon.” CP at 472. The DVPO is effective

until September 28, 2028.

       Mooney appeals the length of the DVPO and the provisions in the DVPO protecting H.J.

and restricting his possession of firearms.

                                              ANALYSIS

       We review a trial court’s decision granting a DVPO for an abuse of discretion. Freeman

v. Freeman, 169 Wn.2d 664, 671, 239 P.3d 557 (2010). We will not reverse a trial court’s decision

for an abuse of discretion unless it is manifestly unreasonable, or based on untenable grounds or

untenable reasons. Id.

       Under RCW 26.50.020(1)(a), a person may petition for a DVPO alleging that he or she has

been the victim of domestic violence committed by the respondent. “Domestic violence” is

defined as “[p]hysical harm, bodily injury, assault, or the infliction of fear of imminent physical

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

harm, bodily injury, or assault, sexual assault, or stalking as defined in RCW 9A.46.110 of one

intimate partner by another intimate partner.” RCW 26.50.010(3)(a). Intimate partners include

people who have a child together. RCW 26.50.010(7)(c). Following a hearing on the petition, the

trial court may restrain the respondent from committing acts of domestic violence and order “other

relief as it deems necessary for the protection of the petitioner and other family or household

members sought to be protected.” RCW 26.50.060(1)(a), (f).

A.       DURATION OF DVPO

         First, Mooney argues that the superior court abused its discretion by granting a DVPO for

longer than one year without making the required statutory finding under RCW 26.50.060(2). We

agree.

         RCW 26.50.060(2) provides:

         If a protection order restrains the respondent from contacting the respondent’s
         minor children the restraint shall be for a fixed period not to exceed one year. This
         limitation is not applicable to orders for protection issued under chapter 26.09,
         **26.10, 26.26A, or 26.26B RCW. With regard to other relief, if the petitioner has
         petitioned for relief on his or her own behalf or on behalf of the petitioner’s family
         or household members or minor children, and the court finds that the respondent is
         likely to resume acts of domestic violence against the petitioner or the petitioner’s
         family or household members or minor children when the order expires, the court
         may either grant relief for a fixed period or enter a permanent order of protection.

(Emphasis added).

         Here, there is nothing in the record that demonstrates that Mooney was likely to resume

acts of domestic violence against Jurss. The only act of domestic violence that the superior court

found Mooney committed was the sexual contact in 2009. Jurss argues extensively that the

superior court’s order was appropriate because of Mooney’s harassing behavior towards Jurss, but

the superior court did not find that any of Jurss’s allegations regarding Mooney’s conduct was

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

either domestic violence, harassing, or a basis for issuing the DVPO. Instead, the superior court

found that Jurss’s post-traumatic stress regarding the 2009 sexual contact was the cause of her fear.

The superior court even recognized that “simple courtesy interactions” would cause Jurss’s fear.

CP at 478.

       Here, there was no evidence, other than the 2009 sexual contact against Jurss, that Mooney

had engaged in any act of domestic violence against Jurss or that Mooney had ever engaged in any

violent act against H.J., and the superior court made no such findings. Therefore, there was no

tenable reason to fix the term of the protection order until September 2028, when H.J. turns

eighteen years old. Accordingly, the superior court abused its discretion, and we reverse the term

of the DVPO and remand to the superior court to limit the length of the DVPO to one year.

B.     PROVISIONS PROTECTING THE CHILD

       Second, Mooney argues that the superior court abused its discretion by imposing provisions

protecting H.J. We agree.

       As noted above, the superior court has the discretion to order “other relief as it deems

necessary for the protection of the petitioner and other family or household members sought to be

protected.” RCW 26.50.060(1)(f). However, here, the provisions regarding H.J. are not necessary

and the superior court abused its discretion by imposing them.

       Mooney did not commit any acts of domestic violence against H.J., and the superior court

did not make any finding that Mooney posed any risk of harm to H.J. Furthermore, as the DVPO

recognizes, the parties have a parenting plan that governs Mooney’s residential time with H.J.

       There was no evidence that Mooney violated the terms of the parenting plan or that the

terms of the parenting plan were inappropriate. The provisions in the DVPO regarding H.J. are

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

not necessary to protect Jurss or H.J. Therefore, the superior court had no tenable reason for

imposing them. Accordingly, the superior court abused its discretion and we remand to the

superior court to strike the provisions regarding H.J. from the DVPO.

C.     PROVISIONS RESTRICTING POSSESSION OF FIREARMS

       Third, Mooney argues that the superior court abused its discretion in restricting Mooney’s

possession of firearms. We agree.

       Under RCW 26.50.060(1)(k), the superior court may consider firearm restrictions under

RCW 9.41.800. Former RCW 9.41.800 (2014) was in effect at the time the superior court entered

the DVPO. Former RCW 9.41.800(5) states,

       In addition to the provisions of subsections (1), (2), and (4) of this section, the court
       may enter an order requiring a party to comply with the provisions in subsection
       (1) of this section [restricting firearms and dangerous weapons] if it finds that the
       possession of a firearm or other dangerous weapon by any party presents a serious
       and imminent threat to public health or safety, or to the health or safety of any
       individual.

(Emphasis added).

       Here, there are no grounds justifying the superior court’s finding that Mooney presents “a

serious and imminent threat” by possessing a firearm or other dangerous weapon. Although the

superior court found that in 2009, Mooney had sexual contact with Jurss when Jurss was unable to

consent due to intoxication, the court did not find any violent or forceful act by Mooney. And the

sexual assault did not involve the use of a firearm or any other weapon. The trial court did not

make any findings that Mooney has engaged in any acts of harassment or domestic violence since

that incident. Therefore, a finding that Mooney’s possession of firearms “presents a serious and

imminent threat to public health or safety, or to the health or safety of any individual” has no basis

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

in the record and is untenable. Accordingly, the superior court abused its discretion and we remand

to the superior court to strike the firearm restrictions from the protection order.

D.     FINDING OF FACT 12

       Mooney argues that the superior court’s finding of fact 12 is not supported by substantial

evidence. Specifically, Mooney assigns error to the portion of finding of fact 12 which states,

“The court concludes that if Mr. Mooney knew that Ms. Jurss did not have the capacity to drive

her car, he should have suspected she did not have the capacity to consent.” CP at 478. Mooney

argues that this finding is not supported by substantial evidence because there was no testimony

that Mooney knew that Jurss could not drive.

       Here, the superior court did not find that Mooney knew Jurss could not drive. Rather, the

superior court concluded that if Mooney knew she could not drive, he should have been suspect of

her ability to consent. This conditional statement resolves no factual issues and is speculative.

Therefore, we remand for the superior court to strike the improper finding.

       We reverse the term of the DVPO, the provisions of the DVPO protecting H.J. and

restricting Mooney’s access to firearms, and the improper portion of finding of fact 12. We remand

to the trial court to enter a one year order and strike the improper provisions.

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No. 53617-0-II/No. 54061-4-II

        A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the

Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040,

it is so ordered.

                                                    Lee, C.J.
 We concur:

 Worswick, J.

 Veljacic, J.

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