Sarah Craig v. Krystal Gayle Caron , 2014 Me. LEXIS 124 ( 2014 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                         Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:   
    2014 ME 115
    Docket:     Aro-13-555
    Submitted
    On Briefs: July 30, 2014
    Decided:    October 21, 2014
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ.
    SARAH CRAIG et al.
    v.
    KRYSTAL GAYLE CARON
    SAUFLEY, C.J.
    [¶1] This appeal requires us to address the statutory definition of “stalking”
    for purposes of obtaining a protection from abuse order pursuant to 19-A M.R.S.
    § 4005(1) and 4007(1) (2013). Krystal Gayle Caron appeals from a judgment
    entered in the District Court (Houlton, O’Mara, J.) granting Sarah Craig,
    individually and on behalf of her two children, an order of protection from abuse
    based on a finding that Caron engaged in stalking the alleged victims, and from the
    court’s ruling on Caron’s post-judgment motion for findings of fact and
    conclusions of law. See M.R. Civ. P. 52(a). Caron contends that the court erred in
    entering the judgment because Craig and her children are not “family or household
    members or dating partners” of Caron and the conduct found by the court does not
    2
    constitute stalking. 19-A M.R.S. §§ 4002(1), (3-A), (4), 4007(1) (2013); see 17-A
    M.R.S. § 210-A (2013). We agree and vacate the judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] Craig filed a complaint for protection from abuse on October 2, 2013,
    alleging that Caron, the “ex wife of [Craig’s] current boyfriend,” had come into her
    home and hit her, resulting in criminal assault charges against Caron. Caron
    moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that Craig lacked standing to bring a
    complaint for protection from abuse against Caron. Specifically, Caron argued that
    Craig lacked standing because she did not allege that she and Caron were “family
    or household members or dating partners.” 19-A M.R.S. § 4002(1), (3-A), (4).
    [¶3] The court acknowledged that the matter would have been properly
    presented as a protection from harassment complaint. See 5 M.R.S. §§ 4651-4655
    (2013). Nonetheless, it denied the motion to dismiss because of the possibility that
    Craig could demonstrate an alternative factual basis for standing to bring a
    protection from abuse action, that is, that Caron had stalked her. See 19-A M.R.S.
    § 4005(1); see also 17-A M.R.S. § 210-A (defining “stalking”). The court held an
    evidentiary hearing at which Craig and Caron testified.
    [¶4] At the hearing, both parties testified that Caron’s ex-husband, the father
    of two children with Caron, is in a relationship with Sarah Craig and living with
    her. The Carons’ children are sometimes at Craig’s home with their father. Craig
    3
    testified that, on September 27, 2013, Caron’s children were at Craig’s house and
    that one of them was ill. She described the genesis of the dispute as follows. After
    Caron’s ex-husband argued with Caron over the telephone about what to do for the
    sick child, Craig sent Caron a text message containing “some pretty vulgar
    statements.” Caron’s ex-husband and the two children then left Craig’s home to
    seek medical assistance for the ailing child. Shortly thereafter, Caron arrived at
    Craig’s house. The women both testified that an altercation ensued, but they
    disagreed about who was the initial aggressor.         Craig’s three-year-old son
    witnessed the altercation, and he was scared. He fell down while trying to help his
    mother.
    [¶5] After hearing the evidence, the court reached the following findings of
    fact based on competent evidence offered at trial. See Preston v. Tracy, 
    2008 ME 34
    , ¶ 10, 
    942 A.2d 718
    .      Caron entered Craig’s home unexpectedly without
    knocking or announcing herself. Craig told Caron to leave, but Caron did not
    leave. Caron was upset and struck Craig. Craig fell to the floor.
    [¶6] Based on these findings, the court found that Caron had stalked Craig,
    and the court entered an order of protection from abuse. Caron moved for findings
    of fact and conclusions of law related to the finding of stalking, and the court
    entered written findings and conclusions. The court found that Caron had engaged
    in a “course of conduct,” meaning two or more acts, of stalking by (1) entering
    4
    Craig’s home unexpectedly without knocking and without being invited,
    (2) refusing to leave the home when she was asked to do so, and (3) striking Craig
    in the head. See 17-A M.R.S. § 210-A.
    [¶7] Caron timely appealed from the judgment. See 14 M.R.S. § 1901(1)
    (2013); M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3).
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶8] To obtain an order of protection from abuse, a plaintiff must ordinarily
    establish that the acts complained of occurred “between family or household
    members or dating partners or by a family or household member or dating partner
    upon a minor child of a family or household member or dating partner.” 19-A
    M.R.S. § 4002(1); see 19-A M.R.S. § 4007(1). By statute, family or household
    members are
    spouses or domestic partners or former spouses or former domestic
    partners, individuals presently or formerly living together as spouses,
    natural parents of the same child, adult household members related by
    consanguinity or affinity or minor children of a household member
    when the defendant is an adult household member and, for the
    purposes of Title 15, section 1023, subsection 4, paragraph B-1, this
    chapter and Title 17-A, sections 15, 207-A, 209-A, 210-B, 210-C,
    211-A, 1201, 1202 and 1253 only, includes individuals presently or
    formerly living together and individuals who are or were sexual
    partners. Holding oneself out to be a spouse is not necessary to
    constitute “living as spouses.” For purposes of this subsection,
    “domestic partners” means 2 unmarried adults who are domiciled
    together under long-term arrangements that evidence a commitment to
    remain responsible indefinitely for each other’s welfare.
    5
    19-A M.R.S. § 4002(4). Dating partners are “individuals currently or formerly
    involved in dating each other, whether or not the individuals are or were sexual
    partners.” 
    Id. § 4002(3-A).
    Neither the evidence nor the court’s findings would
    support a determination that Craig and Caron were family or household members
    or dating partners for purposes of the statute. Nor does Craig argue that they were.
    [¶9] In certain circumstances, however, the plaintiff need not show a family,
    household, or dating relationship between the parties, such as when the plaintiff is
    “[a]n adult who has been a victim of conduct defined as stalking in Title 17-A,
    section 210-A.” 
    Id. § 4005(1).
    In that circumstance, the plaintiff can establish a
    claim “whether or not the conduct was perpetrated by a family or household
    member or dating partner,” even if no criminal prosecution has occurred. 
    Id. [¶10] Pertinent
    to this case, a person engages in stalking if
    [t]he actor intentionally or knowingly engages in a course of conduct
    directed at or concerning a specific person that would cause a
    reasonable person:
    (1) To suffer serious inconvenience or emotional distress;
    (2) To fear bodily injury or to fear bodily injury to a close
    relation;
    (3) To fear death or to fear the death of a close relation;
    (4) To fear damage or destruction to or tampering with
    property; or
    6
    (5) To fear injury to or the death of an animal owned by or in
    the possession and control of that specific person.
    17-A M.R.S. § 210-A(1)(A) (emphasis added). A “course of conduct” means “2 or
    more acts, including but not limited to acts in which the actor, by any action,
    method, device or means, directly or indirectly follows, monitors, tracks, observes,
    surveils, threatens, harasses or communicates to or about a person or interferes
    with a person’s property.” 
    Id. § 210-A(2)(A).
    “‘Course of conduct’ also includes,
    but is not limited to, threats implied by conduct and gaining unauthorized access to
    personal, medical, financial or other identifying or confidential information.” 
    Id. [¶11] The
    evidence unquestionably supports the court’s finding that Caron
    engaged in conduct that would cause a reasonable person to suffer serious
    inconvenience or emotional distress or to fear bodily injury to oneself, bodily
    injury to a close relation, or damage or destruction to or tampering with property.
    See 
    id. § 210-A(1)(A)(1),
    (2), (4). The crucial question on appeal, therefore, is
    whether Caron, by entering Craig’s home one evening without permission,
    refusing to leave when asked, and assaulting Craig, all in the course of a brief
    period of time, engaged in “2 or more acts” of following, monitoring, tracking,
    observing, surveilling, threatening, harassing, communicating to or about Craig, or
    interfering with Craig’s property. See 
    id. § 210-A(2)(A).
                                                                                         7
    [¶12] In interpreting the meaning of this statute, we look first to the statute’s
    plain language. See L’Heureux v. Michaud, 
    2007 ME 149
    , ¶ 7, 
    938 A.2d 801
    .
    “Only if the plain language of the statute is ambiguous do we look beyond that
    language to other indicia of legislative intent.”       
    Id. “Statutory language
    is
    ambiguous if it is reasonably susceptible to multiple interpretations.” 
    Id. [¶13] There
    is no allegation or evidence that Caron, on two or more
    occasions, monitored, tracked, observed, surveiled, or communicated to or about
    Craig. The question is whether, through her actions on September 27, 2013, Caron
    engaged in two or more acts of threatening Craig, harassing Craig, or interfering
    with Craig’s property. Based on the language of the statute, Caron’s conduct could
    be viewed as either a single act or three separate acts.           See 17-A M.R.S.
    § 210-A(2)(A). In the face of such ambiguity, we examine extrinsic information
    such as the legislative history of the statutes to resolve the question of statutory
    interpretation. See L’Heureux, 
    2007 ME 149
    , ¶ 7, 
    938 A.2d 801
    .
    [¶14] The current statutory language defining “course of conduct” to require
    “2 or more acts” originated in the Act to Amend the Laws Governing Stalking,
    L.D. 1873 (123d Legis. 2007). Although the issue here is not addressed directly in
    any legislative materials, the following testimony presented to the Joint Standing
    Committee on Criminal Justice and Public Safety demonstrates that the Legislature
    8
    was considering circumstances in which the “2 or more acts” were distinct acts
    separated by time:
    • Speaker of the House Glenn Cummings testified, “Two-thirds of stalkers
    pursue their victims at least once per week; many do so daily, using more
    than one method.”
    • Donna Strickler, Executive Director of the Sexual Assault Crisis and
    Support Center, testified as follows on behalf of the Maine Coalition Against
    Sexual Assault:
    In Somerset County, we worked with a young woman whose
    landlord was letting himself into her apartment a couple of
    times a week and going through her things. His behavior was
    escalating by the time she called us. One night she was
    awakened from a nap on her couch to him standing over her.
    Another night, after working late, he was in her home waiting
    for her. . . .
    In another central Maine community, we worked with a woman
    who was being stalked by her ex-boyfriend. By the time the
    woman contacted our center for support and assistance, she had
    moved seven or eight times, staying with friends, renting her
    own place even utilizing one of the safe homes of the Maine
    Coalition to End Domestic Violence.
    • A newspaper article submitted to the Committee stated: “[T]he woman
    called [the police] at 1 p.m., reporting she was being followed by a man she
    didn’t know . . . . [He] had followed her on more than three occasions in
    9
    Rumford over the past month and a half.” Terry Karkos, Cops File Stalking
    Charge, Sun Journal, May 9, 2007.
    • Jen LaChance Sibley, Outreach Coordinator for Family Crisis Services,
    testified as follows on behalf of the Maine Coalition to End Domestic
    Violence:
    Seeking contact may seem innocent to you all sitting here
    today. However, what I hear is 47 phone messages left on a
    woman’s voicemail in a morning. Her ex-partner wants to
    know where she had spent the night before because he didn’t
    see her car parked at her apartment. I hear a victim who has
    walked into her work and seen a flyer that her ex-partner left
    that defamed her character; after work, the same posters
    plastered on telephone poles and local businesses in the Old
    Port confront her. I hear a victim who has relocated to a new
    home, bought a new car and changed job locations because her
    stalker found her at the last place she moved to. Her stalker
    frequented her place of employment and stood in her line at the
    register to purchase items even though he lived 60 miles away.
    I hear victims whose stalkers follow them to work everyday and
    sit in the parking lot to make sure they are really going to work
    and to monitor their movements. . . .
    . . . . What I see and hear . . . are victims who have to change
    their daily routine and their work schedule, carry pepper spray,
    and make phone calls to their family members notifying them
    that they got to work okay that day without an incident.
    [¶15]    None of the examples depicted in any of the legislative history
    describes as stalking a single event of a person arriving uninvited at a home and
    assaulting another person. The Legislature, in adding “stalking” to the protection
    from abuse statute, intended to address the types of repeated acts that create fear
    10
    and apprehension, and that may signal a potential escalation toward lethality. See
    P.L. 2007, ch. 685, § 3 (“The Legislature finds stalking can lead to death, sexual
    assault, physical assault and property damage.”).
    [¶16] Stalking, as described in the statute and by those who supported the
    statutory amendment, involves repeated behavior that must be taken seriously by
    law enforcement, prosecutors, and the courts. To employ “stalking” as a catch-all
    phrase that incorporates any bad behavior that, although occurring in a single
    incident, can be described as multiple actions, would undermine the Legislature’s
    intent in specifically defining the crime of stalking. We cannot conclude that the
    Legislature intended the definition of stalking to be so diluted, especially when an
    alternative process initiated by a protection from harassment complaint can address
    single incidents of assault or other violent crimes. See 5 M.R.S. § 4651(2)(C)
    (defining harassment to include a “single act or course of conduct constituting a
    violation of . . . Title 17-A, section[] . . . 207,” the assault statute).
    [¶17] It is understandable that the trial court would endeavor to afford
    protection to a person who experienced violence in her home given the pernicious
    nature of domestic violence and its responsibility for forty-six percent of Maine’s
    total homicides during 2012 and 2013. See Maine Domestic Abuse Homicide
    Review Panel, 10th Report: Building Bridges Towards Safety and Accountability
    11
    to End Domestic Violence Homicide 10 (Apr. 2014).1 If a protection order is
    required, however, Craig may seek relief by filing a protection from harassment
    complaint pursuant to 5 M.R.S. § 4652.
    [¶18] Although Caron’s conduct may have been criminal,2 see 17-A M.R.S.
    § 207 (2013) (assault), it does not fall within the definition of stalking, and the
    court erred in concluding that it was. To interpret the statute broadly enough to
    encompass the conduct at issue here would dishonor the legislative intent to protect
    victims of the serious crime of stalking who have suffered from other individuals’
    recurrent interference with their daily lives through the means that the Legislature
    described. See 
    id. § 210-A(2)(A).
    III. CONCLUSION
    [¶19] Because the parties are not family or household members or dating
    partners, and because the facts do not establish that Caron violated the stalking
    1
    Children who observe interpersonal violence may be injured by that exposure even when they are
    not, themselves, the target of, or physically injured by, that violence. The co-chairs of the United States
    Attorney General’s National Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence noted, “Advances in
    neuroscience and child development have taught us that the trauma children experience when they are
    exposed to physical, sexual, and emotional violence harms their ability to mature cognitively and
    emotionally, and it scars them physically and emotionally well into their adult lives.” U.S. Department of
    Justice, Report of the Attorney General’s National Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence,
    Introduction From the Task Force Co-Chairs (Dec. 12, 2012); see also Child Welfare Information
    Gateway, Child Witnesses to Domestic Violence 1-2 (current through Nov. 2012) (“Children who witness
    domestic violence can suffer severe emotional and developmental difficulties that are similar to those of
    children who are direct victims of abuse.”). Craig’s three-year-old son witnessed the violence in this case
    and began crying and trying to help his mother. We urge the parties to focus their attention on avoiding
    further harm to their children through exposure to adult violence.
    2
    Craig did testify that she called the police after Caron left her home.
    12
    provisions of the protection from abuse statute, the statute did not authorize the
    entry of a protection from abuse judgment for Craig and her children.           See
    19-A M.R.S. §§ 4002(1), (3-A), (4), 4007(1); see also 17-A M.R.S. § 210-A.
    Accordingly, we vacate the judgment.
    The entry is:
    Judgment vacated and remanded for the entry of a
    denial of an order for protection from abuse.
    On the briefs:
    Stephen D. Nelson, Esq., Severson, Hand, & Nelson, P.A., Houlton, for
    appellant Krystal Gayle Caron
    Sarah Craig did not file a brief
    Houlton District Court docket number PA-2013-78
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Docket Aro-13-555

Citation Numbers: 2014 ME 115, 102 A.3d 1175, 2014 Me. LEXIS 124

Judges: Saufley, Alexander, Silver, Mead, Gorman, Jabar

Filed Date: 10/21/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024