Garrison v. Otto , 311 Neb. 94 ( 2022 )


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    04/28/2022 08:08 AM CDT
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    GARRISON v. OTTO
    Cite as 
    311 Neb. 94
    Margaret L. Garrison, appellee,
    v. Logan M. Otto II, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed March 4, 2022.     Nos. S-21-478, S-21-641.
    1. Protection Orders: Appeal and Error. The grant or denial of a protec-
    tion order is reviewed de novo on the record. In such de novo review, an
    appellate court reaches conclusions independent of the factual findings
    of the trial court. However, where the credible evidence is in conflict
    on a material issue of fact, the appellate court considers and may give
    weight to the circumstances that the trial judge heard and observed the
    witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another.
    2. Protection Orders. Whether domestic abuse occurred is a threshold
    issue in determining whether an ex parte protection order should be
    affirmed.
    3. ____. Absent abuse as defined by 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-903
     (Cum. Supp.
    2020), a protection order may not remain in effect.
    4. ____. The goal of domestic abuse protection orders is to protect victims
    of domestic abuse from further harm.
    5. ____. In considering whether to continue an ex parte domestic abuse
    protection order following a finding that domestic abuse has occurred, a
    court is not limited to considering only whether the ex parte order was
    proper, but may also consider a number of factors pertinent to the likeli-
    hood of future harm.
    6. ____. Factors in considering whether to continue an ex parte domestic
    abuse protection order following a finding that domestic abuse has
    occurred might include, but are not limited to, the remoteness, severity,
    nature, and frequency of past abuse; past or pending credible threats
    of harm; the psychological impact of domestic abuse; the potential
    impact on the parent-child relationship; and the nuances of household
    relationships.
    7. Protection Orders: Statutes: Affidavits: Time. The statutory scheme
    does not impose any limitation on the time during which a victim of
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    domestic abuse may file a petition and affidavit seeking a protection
    order subsequent to the abuse.
    8.   Protection Orders. The renewal of a protection order shares the same
    fundamental characteristics of the original protection order.
    9.   ____. The requisite past act of domestic abuse is necessarily found in
    relation to the underlying protection order and is not to be relitigated
    simply because the petitioner seeks a renewal of the order.
    10.   Actions: Appeal and Error. Principles of law of the case generally bar
    reconsideration of the same or similar issues at successive stages of the
    same suit or prosecution.
    11.   Protection Orders. A protection order upon renewal, just as at its incep-
    tion, is oriented toward the future with the goal to protect victims of
    domestic abuse from further harm.
    12.   ____. The court at a hearing on a petition for renewal must reevaluate
    the likelihood of harm over the course of another year in which it would
    be in effect if the petition for renewal is granted.
    13.   ____. In determining if a contested renewal of the protection order
    is justified in light of the likelihood of future harm, the court consid-
    ers factors similar to those applicable to the initial contested protec-
    tion order.
    14.   ____. In determining if a contested renewal of the protection order is
    justified in light of the likelihood of future harm, the court considers all
    the surrounding circumstances, including the passage of time since the
    abuse that was found in relation to the original order and all the factors
    relating to its severity, nature, frequency, and impact.
    15.   ____. The court may consider, in determining whether to renew a pro-
    tection order, whether any new domestic abuse has occurred during the
    period of the original protection order and its severity, nature, frequency,
    and impact.
    16.   ____. In determining the likelihood of future harm based on past domes-
    tic abuse, as well as on any abuse during the duration of the original
    protection order, the court may consider evidence of the relationship
    of the parties as demonstrated by their behavior both before and since
    the issuance of the original protection order and by their testimony at
    the hearing.
    Appeals from the District Court for Lancaster County: Ryan
    S. Post, Judge. Appeal in No. S-21-478 dismissed. Judgment in
    No. S-21-641 affirmed.
    Edith T. Peebles, of Brodkey, Cuddigan, Peebles, Belmont &
    Line, L.L.P., for appellant.
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    John W. Ballew, Jr., of Ballew Hazen, P.C., L.L.O., for
    appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Freudenberg, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    The respondent appeals the renewal of a domestic abuse
    protection order. He argues the evidence in this case was
    insufficient to support the court’s finding that renewal of the
    protection order was necessary to prevent future harm, when
    there was no further abuse or violation of the protection order.
    We affirm.
    II. BACKGROUND
    This case involves the renewal, under 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-924
    (3)(b) (Cum. Supp. 2020), of a domestic abuse protec-
    tion order issued on March 18, 2020. The order was against
    Logan M. Otto II. The protected party was his former spouse,
    Margaret L. Garrison.
    1. Underlying Order
    The underlying domestic abuse protection order in this case
    was originally issued ex parte, upon a finding that Garrison had
    stated facts showing Otto attempted to cause, or intentionally,
    knowingly, or recklessly caused, bodily injury to Garrison; or
    that he had, by means of credible threat, placed Garrison in
    fear of bodily injury. Further, the court found it reasonably
    appeared from the specific facts included in the affidavit that
    Garrison would be in immediate danger of abuse before the
    matter could be heard on notice.
    The petition and affidavit had described as the most recent
    and severe incident of abuse Otto’s actions occurring on
    February 26, 2020, in a parking lot after a court hearing involv-
    ing a dispute between Garrison and Otto. Garrison averred that
    Otto was exiting the lot in his vehicle, when he sped up and
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    swerved toward Garrison, who was walking with her husband
    to her car. Garrison described that she was almost hit, but that
    her husband grabbed her arm to remove her from the vehicle’s
    path. Attached photographs showed skid marks in the lot. The
    petition and affidavit also described, over the course of the
    preceding 7 years, other acts of violence, prior assault charges
    against Otto, and other protection orders against Otto.
    Otto contested the ex parte order, and a hearing was held in
    which Otto claimed, among other things, that he did not know
    Garrison and her husband were in the lot on February 26,
    2020. Otto testified he had been driving slowly while on his
    cell phone and swerved away when he noticed two pedestri-
    ans, who ended up being Garrison and her husband. Otto also
    testified that the tire tracks in the photograph did not resemble
    tracks his tires could make.
    The district court found from the credible evidence adduced
    that the March 18, 2020, order should be affirmed.
    Otto appealed the district court’s decision affirming the
    March 18, 2020, ex parte domestic abuse protection order,
    arguing there was insufficient evidence of abuse or likelihood
    of future harm. In a two-paragraph opinion, we affirmed the
    district court’s decision. 1
    2. Renewal
    (a) Petition
    On March 17, 2021, Garrison filed a petition and affidavit
    to renew the domestic abuse and protection order. Garrison
    averred that she and Otto have had ongoing proceedings in
    district court since 2009, stemming from their divorce. She
    generally asserted there was a long history of abuse by Otto
    of herself, their children, and her husband, as well as a viola-
    tion by Otto of another harassment protection order in the past.
    Garrison averred that she feared for the safety of everyone in
    her household.
    1
    Garrison v. Otto, 
    308 Neb. 372
    , 
    953 N.W.2d 568
     (2021).
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    (b) Ex Parte Order
    The court issued an ex parte renewal of the ex parte domes-
    tic protection order, effective for 1 year from March 19, 2021.
    In so ordering, the court found that Garrison had stated facts
    showing Otto had attempted to cause, or intentionally, know-
    ingly, or recklessly had caused, bodily injury to Garrison and
    by means of credible threat had placed her in fear of bodily
    injury. Further, the court found it reasonably appeared from the
    specific facts included in the affidavit that Garrison would be
    in immediate danger of abuse before the matter could be heard
    on notice.
    (c) Hearing
    Otto contested the ex parte renewal and requested a hearing.
    At the hearing, Garrison again gave her version of the incident
    in the parking lot, which occurred directly after a court hear-
    ing in which the court ruled Otto would not have his parenting
    time “renewed.” Garrison testified that she still felt her life was
    in danger from Otto.
    Otto also testified at the hearing. He again denied trying to
    hit or scare Garrison with his vehicle. He presented pictures
    of the tires on the vehicle he was driving and asserted that the
    tracks in the photograph that had been submitted were not from
    his vehicle. He acknowledged he had presented this same evi-
    dence at the hearing on the original protection order.
    Otto also generally testified that he had a positive rela-
    tionship with his children and has historically tried to avoid
    interacting with Garrison. Otto testified that he has had 551
    days of parenting time suspended since October 2019, with the
    exception of his parenting time with his then 14-year-old son.
    During that time of suspended parenting time, he has had only
    limited visitation in public places with his other children, dur-
    ing which the youngest child misbehaved. Otto testified that
    his children’s behavior has deteriorated while his parenting
    time has been suspended.
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    Otto’s wife testified that Otto is very careful to avoid having
    any contact with Garrison at public sporting events the children
    participate in, which both they and Garrison attend.
    (d) May 10, 2021, Order
    In an order on May 10, 2021, the court affirmed the ex parte
    renewal of the domestic abuse protection order and ordered it
    remain in effect.
    The court concluded that a violation of the initial order was
    not a prerequisite for a renewal, noting that no such require-
    ment is found in the statutes and that it would undermine the
    goal of domestic abuse protection orders to protect victims of
    domestic abuse from further harm.
    The court also concluded that although the remoteness of the
    past abuse is a matter for the court to consider, the occurrence
    of additional acts of abuse since the original protection order is
    not a legal prerequisite for its renewal.
    Finally, the court concluded that the petitioner for a renewal
    of a domestic abuse protection order is not required at the
    hearing on renewal to reestablish the truth of all facts sup-
    porting the issuance of the initial order. Noting principles of
    the ­law-of-the-case doctrine, the court stated that a hearing on
    renewal “is not an opportunity to relitigate the initial protection
    order.” The petitioner must only establish, by a preponderance
    of the evidence, the truth of the facts supporting renewal. Once
    that burden is met, explained the court, the burden shifts to
    the respondent to show why the protection order should not
    be renewed.
    The court took notice of the fact that it had already been
    determined that Garrison was a victim of domestic abuse under
    
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-903
    (1) (Cum. Supp. 2020). The court
    found that Garrison had established by a preponderance of the
    evidence the truth of the facts supporting renewal and that Otto
    did not show cause as to why the protection order should not
    be renewed.
    More specifically, the court noted that the affidavit and
    Garrison’s testimony at the hearing provided the reasons she
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    sought renewal, additional events since the initial protection
    order was issued, that there have been no material changes in
    relevant circumstances, she remains fearful of Otto and feels
    her life is still in danger, and she was not requesting a modifi-
    cation of the prior order. The court found Garrison’s testimony
    at the hearing was credible and showed she has a present fear
    of future harm due to the history and pattern of such abuse
    to date.
    The court noted that Otto testified to numerous confronta-
    tions between Garrison and Otto over the last few years, but
    “despite the past conduct leading up to his testimony, future
    harm is unlikely and Garrison is trying to alienate him from
    his children.” The court generally observed that both parties
    took “detours” in their testimony into grievances from many
    years before and “squabbled” over matters pending before
    the court in other proceedings. The court stated that these
    detours showed that “the relevant circumstances since entry of
    the initial protection order certainly have not improved.” The
    court stated that it had considered the factors pertinent to the
    likelihood of future harm and that Otto had not met his bur-
    den of proof as to why the protection order should not remain
    in effect.
    The court summarized that Garrison had established by a
    preponderance of the evidence that she was a victim of domes-
    tic abuse as defined by § 42-903, that there has been no mate-
    rial change in relevant circumstances since entry of the initial
    protection order, that Garrison remains in fear for her safety
    now and in the future, and that renewal of the protection order
    is needed to prevent future harm.
    (e) Terminating Motion and
    Notices of Appeal
    On May 20, 2021, Otto filed a motion for a new trial or to
    alter or amend. Before the court ruled on the motion, however,
    Otto filed a notice of appeal on June 9, 2021. That appeal was
    docketed as case No. A-21-478.
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    The district court found that despite Otto’s notice of appeal,
    pursuant to 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1912
    (3) (Cum. Supp. 2020), it
    had jurisdiction to rule on the motion for new trial or to alter
    or amend. The court then denied the motion for new trial or to
    alter or amend.
    Otto filed another notice of appeal on August 4, 2021, dock-
    eted as case No. A-21-641. The Court of Appeals consolidated
    the two appeals, and we moved them to our docket.
    III. ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    Otto assigns that the trial court erred in affirming the ex
    parte renewal of the domestic abuse protection order.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] A protection order pursuant to § 42-924 is analogous to
    an injunction. Thus, the grant or denial of a protection order
    is reviewed de novo on the record. In such de novo review, an
    appellate court reaches conclusions independent of the factual
    findings of the trial court. However, where the credible evi-
    dence is in conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate
    court considers and may give weight to the circumstances that
    the trial judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted
    one version of the facts rather than another. 2
    V. JURISDICTION
    As a threshold jurisdictional matter, we briefly address
    which of these two consolidated appeals, derived from two
    separate notices of appeal but purporting to appeal from the
    same underlying order of renewal of the protection order, is
    properly before us.
    Section 25-1912(3) provides in relevant part that the running
    of the time for filing a notice of appeal shall be terminated
    as to all parties by a timely motion for a new trial or motion
    to alter or amend a judgment. It provides further, “When any
    2
    Robert M. on behalf of Bella O. v. Danielle O., 
    303 Neb. 268
    , 
    928 N.W.2d 407
     (2019).
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    motion terminating the time for filing a notice of appeal is
    timely filed by any party, a notice of appeal filed before the
    court announces its decision upon the terminating motion shall
    have no effect, whether filed before or after the timely filing
    of the terminating motion.” 3 Instead, “A new notice of appeal
    shall be filed within the prescribed time after the entry of the
    order ruling on the motion.” 4
    The first notice of appeal, resulting in what is presently
    docketed as case No. S-21-478, was premature. It was filed
    after the terminating motion for new trial or to alter or amend
    and before the court announced its decision on that motion.
    Pursuant to § 25-1912(3), it had no effect. As such, case
    No. S-21-478 is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
    The notice of appeal resulting in what is presently docketed
    as S-21-641 was timely filed. Our opinion herein addresses the
    merits of that appeal.
    VI. ANALYSIS
    Otto’s argument on appeal is that the evidence was insuf-
    ficient to support the district court’s determination that renewal
    of the protection order was justified by the likelihood of future
    harm. Both the underlying protection order and its renewal
    were issued as ex parte orders that were affirmed after show
    cause hearings in which both parties had the opportunity to
    present evidence and make arguments. Otto does not attack the
    renewal order on procedural grounds, and we express no opin-
    ion on the procedure followed here. In arguing that the court
    should not have renewed the protection order, Otto claims the
    incident on February 26, 2020, was a simple case of distracted
    driving. He also points out that he did not violate the protection
    order or commit any acts of abuse since the protection order
    was issued. This is our first occasion to address what findings
    are necessary to support the renewal of a domestic abuse pro-
    tection order.
    3
    § 25-1912(3).
    4
    Id.
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    Under the Protection from Domestic Abuse Act, 5 “[a]ny
    victim of domestic abuse” may seek a domestic abuse protec-
    tion order. 6 Subsection (1)(b) of § 42-924 provides that the
    “petition for a protection order shall state the events and dates
    or approximate dates of acts constituting the alleged domes-
    tic abuse, including the most recent and most severe incident
    or incidents.”
    [2,3] In the context of a court’s deciding whether to affirm
    or rescind the initial ex parte protection order, we have held
    that whether domestic abuse occurred is a threshold issue, and
    absent abuse as defined by § 42-903, a protection order may
    not remain in effect. 7 “Abuse” is statutorily defined as the
    occurrence of one or more of the following acts between family
    or household members: (1) attempting to cause or intentionally
    and knowingly causing bodily injury with or without a dan-
    gerous instrument; 8 (2) placing, by means of credible threat,
    another person in fear of bodily injury, 9 or (3) engaging in
    sexual contact or sexual penetration without consent as defined
    in 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-318
     (Cum. Supp. 2020). 10 Family or
    household members includes former spouses. 11
    [4] We have also held, in the context of a court’s decision
    to affirm or rescind an initial ex parte protection order, that a
    finding that domestic abuse has occurred does not end a court’s
    inquiry. 12 In Maria A. on behalf of Leslie G. v. Oscar G., 13
    5
    
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-901
     et seq. (Reissue 2016 & Cum. Supp. 2020).
    6
    § 42-924.
    7
    See Robert M. on behalf of Bella O. v. Danielle O., supra note 2. See, also,
    § 42-924.
    8
    § 42-903(1)(a).
    9
    § 42-903(1)(b).
    10
    § 42-903(1)(c).
    11
    § 42-903(3).
    12
    See Maria A. on behalf of Leslie G. v. Oscar G., 
    301 Neb. 673
    , 
    919 N.W.2d 841
     (2018).
    13
    See 
    id.
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    we explained that the goal of domestic abuse protection orders
    is to protect victims of domestic abuse from further harm.
    Thus, the court must conduct a wider inquiry that weighs the
    likelihood of future harm to the petitioner in light of all the
    surrounding circumstances. 14 We noted that we have repeatedly
    analogized domestic abuse protection orders to injunctions,
    which sound in equity. 15 And injunctions are not meant to pun-
    ish past actions but to prevent future mischief. 16 On a consid-
    eration of all the circumstances of each case, the court, before
    issuing an injunction, weighs the burdens the order will inflict
    against its benefits. 17
    [5-7] We accordingly held that in considering whether to
    continue an ex parte domestic abuse protection order following
    a finding that domestic abuse has occurred, a court is not lim-
    ited to considering only whether the ex parte order was proper,
    but may also consider a number of factors pertinent to the like-
    lihood of future harm. 18 Those factors might include, but are
    not limited to, the remoteness, severity, nature, and frequency
    of past abuse; past or pending credible threats of harm; the
    psychological impact of domestic abuse; the potential impact
    on the parent-child relationship; and the nuances of household
    relationships. 19 With respect to the factor of remoteness, we
    have observed that the statutory scheme does not impose any
    limitation on the time during which a victim of domestic abuse
    may file a petition and affidavit seeking a protection order after
    the abuse. 20
    14
    See 
    id.
    15
    See 
    id.
    16
    
    Id.
    17
    See 
    id.
    18
    
    Id.
    19
    
    Id.
    20
    See 
    id.
     See, also, Sarah K. v. Jonathan K., 
    23 Neb. App. 471
    , 
    873 N.W.2d 428
     (2015).
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    Under § 42-924(3), the protection order is generally effec-
    tive for a period of 1 year, “unless dismissed or modified by
    the court prior to such date.” 21 But, under § 42-924(3)(b), any
    victim of domestic abuse may, within 45 days before expira-
    tion, file a petition and affidavit to renew a protection order.
    Section 42-924(3)(b)(ii) indicates that the petition for renewal
    shall state that “there has been no material change in relevant
    circumstances since entry of the order” and set forth “the rea-
    son for the requested renewal.” The renewed protection order
    is effective for 1 year. 22
    [8] Thus, as opposed to the underlying petition and affida-
    vit for the underlying order, in which petitioner “shall state
    the events and dates or approximate dates of acts constituting
    the alleged domestic abuse,” 23 the petition and affidavit for
    renewal must state “there has been no material change in rele­
    vant circumstances since entry of the order” and “the reason
    for the requested renewal.” 24 The Protection from Domestic
    Abuse Act does not otherwise elaborate on what the dis-
    trict court must find in order to renew the protection order.
    However, the renewed protection order necessarily shares the
    same fundamental characteristics of the original protection
    order. The renewed protection order must, therefore, be sup-
    ported by the same statutory and equitable considerations as
    an original order.
    [9,10] As “no material change in relevant circumstances”
    suggests, the requisite past act of domestic abuse is necessar-
    ily found in relation to the underlying protection order and
    is not to be relitigated simply because the petitioner seeks a
    renewal of the order. Principles of law of the case generally
    bar reconsideration of the same or similar issues at successive
    21
    §   42-925(5).
    22
    §   42-924(3)(iii).
    23
    §   42-924(1)(b).
    24
    §   42-924(3)(b)(ii).
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    stages of the same suit or prosecution. 25 There is nothing in the
    statutory scheme suggesting that a new act of abuse is a pre-
    requisite for renewal of a domestic abuse protection order or
    that a petition for renewal gives the respondent an opportunity
    to relitigate the prior finding of abuse that was foundational to
    the underlying protection order.
    On the other hand, the statutory scheme can be read to sug-
    gest that an evidentiary hearing on the petition for renewal
    should be held unless the respondent fails to appear or indicates
    he or she does not contest the renewal. Section 42-924(3)(b)
    states that the protection order “may be renewed on the basis of
    the petitioner’s affidavit” when the petitioner seeks no modifi-
    cation of the order and either (1) the respondent has been prop-
    erly served with notice of the petition for renewal and notice of
    hearing and fails to appear at the hearing or (2) the respondent
    indicates that he or she does not contest the renewal. The stat-
    ute is silent as to the standard governing renewal if an eviden-
    tiary hearing is held. 26
    [11,12] The purpose of that hearing is to receive evidence
    so that the court may reweigh the burdens the order will inflict
    against its benefits in light of all the relevant circumstances,
    including what has or has not changed since its issuance.
    A protection order upon renewal, just as at its inception, is
    oriented toward the future with the goal to protect victims of
    domestic abuse from further harm. 27 Here, the district court
    applied the standard from Maria A. on behalf of Leslie G. and
    reevaluated the likelihood of harm over the course of another
    year in which it would be in effect if the petition for renewal
    is granted. 28 Because the question of the likelihood of future
    harm and the relative equities of the case pertain to a different
    25
    See   Tierney v. Tierney, 
    309 Neb. 310
    , 
    959 N.W.2d 556
     (2021).
    26
    See   § 42-924.
    27
    See   Maria A. on behalf of Leslie G. v. Oscar G., supra note 12.
    28
    See   id.
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    effective period of time, the court’s prior determinations of
    these matters were not law of the case.
    [13-16] In determining if a contested renewal of the pro-
    tection order was justified in light of the likelihood of future
    harm, the court here considered factors similar to those appli-
    cable to the initial contested protection order. Relevant factors
    included, but were not limited to, the passage of time since the
    abuse that was found in relation to the original order and all the
    factors relating to the severity, nature, frequency, and impact of
    abuse. The court also considered any violations of the protec-
    tion order and any new domestic abuse occurring during the
    period of the original protection order and the severity, nature,
    frequency, and impact of any violation of the protection order
    or additional abuse. Further, in determining the likelihood of
    future harm, the court considered evidence of the relationship
    of the parties as demonstrated by their behavior both before
    and since the issuance of the protection order and by their tes-
    timony at the hearing.
    Specifically, the district court correctly recognized as law of
    the case the abuse that supported the original protection order.
    In Otto’s prior appeal to this court from the initial order, he
    principally contested the court’s finding of abuse by claiming
    that on February 26, 2020, he had simply been driving slowly
    while distracted on his cell phone and with no intention of
    either hurting or scaring anyone. When we affirmed the lower
    court’s order, we implicitly rejected this argument. We will not
    revisit it here. The original incident on February 26 was seri-
    ous and could have resulted in Garrison’s injury or death. That
    fact was properly weighed by the district court in considering
    Garrison’s petition for renewal.
    The court also properly considered the evidence of ongoing
    legal proceedings between Garrison and Otto stemming from
    their divorce, which were similar to the legal proceeding that
    spurred Otto’s vehicular attack. The district court, after the
    hearing on renewal, found that the continuing conflict between
    the parties had not improved during the effective period of
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    the original protection order. The court observed that Otto
    himself testified as to numerous confrontations and accused
    Garrison of trying to alienate him from his children, yet at the
    same time asserted future harm to be unlikely. The court did
    not find this reasoning to be sound. The court instead found
    credible Garrison’s averments and testimony that she still
    feared for her safety and the safety of everyone in her house-
    hold. It found that renewal of the protection order for another
    year was necessary to prevent future harm.
    The court did not err in ultimately determining that renewal
    was justified. We observe that the cases from other jurisdic-
    tions Otto relies on in asserting the evidence was insufficient
    to support the 1-year renewal involve facts that are very dif-
    ferent from the case at bar. In Vance v. Iowa Dist. Court for
    Floyd County, 29 the court reversed a 5-year extension of a
    civil no-contact order after noting the order did not involve
    domestic abuse, sexual harassment, or any violence, threat of
    violence, or the physical safety of any family member, and
    there was no evidence the respondent had failed to comply
    with it. In S.H. v. D.W., 30 the court held that a 2-year extension
    of a 2-year protective order against the former husband was
    unwarranted when it had originally been based on a singular
    uncontested act of assault occurring when the petitioner col-
    lected her belongings from the marital home while divorce
    proceedings were pending and the parties had since gone their
    separate ways.
    In contrast, the underlying abuse here was serious, it occurred
    relatively recently, the parties continue to experience serious
    conflict, and the renewal period is for only 1 year. Although
    our review of domestic abuse protection orders is de novo, we
    give deference to the circumstances that the trial judge heard
    and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the
    29
    Vance v. Iowa Dist. Court for Floyd County, 
    907 N.W.2d 473
     (Iowa 2018).
    30
    S.H. v. D.W., 
    139 N.E.3d 214
     (Ind. 2020).
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    GARRISON v. OTTO
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    311 Neb. 94
    facts rather than another. 31 Giving deference to the fact that the
    district court heard and observed the witnesses and accepted
    one version of the facts rather than another, we find it did not
    err in determining that the likelihood of future harm justified a
    1-year renewal of the domestic abuse protection order.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the
    district court in case No. S-21-641.
    Appeal in No. S-21-478 dismissed.
    Judgment in No. S-21-641 affirmed.
    31
    See Maria A. on behalf of Leslie G. v. Oscar G., supra note 12.