Allyah Jasem Salim Ayesh v. Jonathan M. Bullis ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                                          FILED
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION 11
    2015 JUAN 16 ;   i 8 : 30
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGT
    VA SL 1PNGTON
    DIVISION II
    ALLYAH JASEM SALIM AYESH,                                                   No. 46004 -1 - II
    Respondent,
    v.
    JONATHAN MICHAEL BULLIS,                                       UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellant.
    LEE, J. — Jonathan M. Bullis appeals the domestic violence protection order issued against
    him, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support the order' s issuance. Because substantial
    evidence supports the superior court commissioner' s findings that Bullis placed the victim in fear
    of imminent physical harm and that domestic violence occurred, we affirm the one -year protection
    order.
    FACTS
    Bullis and Allyah Ayesh were involved in a romantic relationship from July 2012 until
    December 2013. 1 After the two had an argument in Bullis' apartment on December 1, 2013, Bullis
    knocked their Christmas tree down. As Ayesh prepared to leave the apartment, she looked over at
    Bullis and saw him huddled with a gun to his head. The two struggled for the gun, and Ayesh took
    it from Bullis. Ayesh then took two additional firearms from the apartment and went to stay with
    her sister.
    1
    Contrary to the allegation in Ayesh' s appellate brief, the declaration containing this information
    was part of the record   below. Report   of   Proceedings ( RP)   at   6, 32 -33, 98, 120.
    No. 46004 -1 - II
    On the night of December 8, Bullis sent Ayesh approximately 150 text messages in which
    he threatened to harm himself. She replied with a single text on December 9, asking Bullis to stop
    contacting her because their relationship was over. Approximately 30 minutes later, he drove over
    to her   sister' s   house    and    demanded his firearms.           He refused to leave despite repeated requests
    from Ayesh' s        sister and     brother -in -law,   so   Ayesh   called   911.     Bullis was taken to the hospital for
    a mental     health    evaluation and released.              On the evening of December 10, the information on
    Ayesh' s cell phone was erased.
    On December 11, Ayesh filed a petition seeking a protection order against Bullis. Ayesh
    alleged in the petition that she ended her relationship with Bullis after he threatened suicide by
    putting a gun to his head, and that she had feared for her life while the two struggled for the gun.
    She added that after she received an excessive number of texts from Bullis, she asked him to stop
    contacting her,       whereupon        he   came   to her    residence and refused          to leave.   Ayesh also stated that
    the information on her phone had been accessed and erased without her permission. Finally, she
    noted that Bullis had thrown the Christmas tree, downloaded a tracking device on her phone, and
    threatened to break the glasses on her face.
    The commissioner issued temporary protection orders until the petition could be heard. At
    the hearing, Ayesh testified that she felt threatened for her own safety during the struggle for the
    gun, explaining that the gun once was pointed at her abdomen. Ayesh also testified that the number
    of   texts   from Bullis      made     her " very   afraid"    and   that   her fear   of   Bullis   was   ongoing.   Report of
    Proceedings ( RP)        at   15.     Her sister testified that Ayesh was terrified when she came to stay on
    December 1 and that the subsequent texts also upset her. She added that Ayesh was still afraid of
    Bullis.
    No. 46004 -1 - II
    Bullis testified that he knocked the Christmas tree over in frustration and acknowledged
    that he      and     Ayesh had    struggled over   his firearm.   He denied threatening Ayesh but admitted
    sending her approximately 150 texts with " extreme language" in an attempt to get her attention.
    Clerk'   s   Papers    at   31. He also testified that the mental health professionals who evaluated him did
    not find that he presented a danger to anyone. Bullis denied erasing the contents of Ayesh' s phone,
    and his mother testified that she had possession of Bullis' phone when the information on Ayesh' s
    phone was erased.
    After each party presented closing argument, the commissioner outlined the allegations in
    the petition. The commissioner found that Ayesh' s allegations about Bullis' phone tracking and
    his threat to break her          glasses were unfounded.       The commissioner then found that although the
    parties disagreed about the details surrounding the struggle over the firearm, they agreed that such
    a struggle had occurred:
    What is clear and what has been proven by preponderance of the evidence is that
    there   was a struggle. .   What is clear from the admissions of Mr. Bullis is that it
    involved a firearm, again something that I must be aware of in terms of increasing
    danger during an argument. Firearms simply should not be a part of an argument.
    And it is clear that you broke a Christmas tree.
    RP at 120. The commissioner then turned to a discussion of the text messages:
    The text messages that were described actually repeatedly by counsel as
    childish, I don' t believe that is the correct word for the nature of these text
    messages.    I believe the correct word for these text messages is frightening,
    disturbing, suicidal. They continued even after there was a request to stop. They
    were excessive. They were battering. You testified today that they were to elicit a
    response, any response.
    RP at 120 -121.
    3
    No. 46004 -1 - II
    Although Ayesh had not been able to establish that Bullis erased the contents of her cell
    phone,   the   commissioner     found that this     event explained          why   she   filed the   petition: "   She is getting
    more and more scared. There are text messages, and then her phone gets erased completely around
    midnight.      That   explains      why   she   came    in   on   the   date that     she   came     in."   RP     at   121.   The
    commissioner addressed Bullis in concluding as follows:
    T] he actions that you took were absolutely frightening, threatening, intimidating,
    and   though there    is   no overt    threat to   kill her,   no   intent   on your part—      and I believe
    you when      you testify that     you   had   no   intent to   cause     her to fear for her life. You
    did cause her to fear for her life with your actions by bringing a firearm into an
    argument, by breaking the Christmas tree, by bombarding her with a barrage of text
    messages that vacillate from romantic to frightening to suicidal. That is domestic
    violence.
    RP at 122. The commissioner entered a one -year domestic violence protection order. Bullis now
    appeals, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support the commissioner' s finding that his
    actions constituted domestic violence.
    ANALYSIS
    We review the findings supporting a protection order for substantial evidence, and we
    review   the decision to issue       a   protection    order   for    abuse of     discretion. Scott v. Trans -Sys., Inc.,
    
    148 Wash. 2d 701
    , 707 -08, 
    64 P.3d 1
    ( 2003);                 Hecker v. Cortinas, 
    110 Wash. App. 865
    , 869, 
    43 P.3d 50
    ( 2002). " Substantial evidence is evidence that is sufficient to persuade a fair -minded person of
    the truth   of the asserted premise."       Snyder v. Haynes, 
    152 Wash. App. 774
    , 779, 
    217 P.3d 787
    ( 2009).
    A court abuses its discretion when its decision is " manifestly unreasonable, or based on untenable
    grounds."      Mayer   v.   Sto Indus., Inc., 
    156 Wash. 2d 677
    , 684, 
    132 P.3d 115
    ( 2006). We defer to the
    trier of fact on the persuasiveness of the evidence, witness credibility, and conflicting testimony:
    State v. Ainslie, 
    103 Wash. App. 1
    , 6, 
    11 P.3d 318
    ( 2000).
    4
    No. 46004 -1 - I1
    Chapter 26. 50 RCW authorizes the issuance of a protection order if the party seeking it
    alleges "   the   existence of        domestic    violence and ... [   declares] the specific facts and circumstances
    from    which relief          is   sought."    RCW 26. 50. 030( 1);      Hecker, 110 Wn.         App.   at   869.   Domestic
    violence       includes "      the infliction of fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury or assault,
    between        family   or    household     members."       RCW 26. 50. 010( 1)(     a).   Because an order for protection
    is   a civil   remedy, it      must    be   supported
    by   a preponderance of     the evidence.     Reese v. Stroh, 
    128 Wash. 2d 300
    , 312, 
    907 P.2d 282
    ( 1995);                   City of Tacoma v. State, 
    117 Wash. 2d 348
    , 351 -52, 
    816 P.2d 7
    ( 1991).      This standard required the commissioner to find that it was more likely than not that
    domestic violence occurred. Freeman v. Freeman, 
    169 Wash. 2d 664
    , 673, 
    239 P.3d 557
    ( 2010).
    Bullis argues that the evidence was insufficient to show that he placed Ayesh in fear of
    imminent physical harm and that the commissioner erred in finding the existence of domestic
    violence.       He maintains that he never attempted to injure Ayesh during their struggle over his
    firearm. Bullis also contends that he knocked the Christmas tree over in fatigue and frustration
    but not in an attempt to harm Ayesh. He argues further that although the texts he sent may have
    constituted harassment, they did not show that he placed Ayesh in fear of imminent physical harm.
    Bullis argues further that the commissioner erred in disregarding the medical and psychiatric
    findings that he presented no danger to Ayesh.
    The fact that Bullis was released after his mental health evaluation does not demonstrate
    that he did not place Ayesh in fear of physical harm. Both Ayesh and her sister testified that Bullis'
    actions made           Ayesh       fear for her   own personal      safety.   The credibility of these witnesses is not
    reviewable        by   this   court.   Spence     v.   Kaminski, 103 Wn.      App.   325, 333, 
    12 P.3d 1030
    ( 2000).
    No. 46004 -1 - II
    In addition to considering the testimony from Ayesh and her sister, the commissioner
    reviewed    Bullis'   many text   messages and   described them       as   frightening   and   disturbing. 2 Other
    evidence showed that Bullis came to Ayesh' s residence after she asked him to stop contacting her
    and would not leave when told to do so. As the trial court observed, Bullis succeeded in placing
    Ayesh in fear for her      physical   safety   whether     he intended to     or not.    We conclude that the
    commissioner' s findings that Bullis placed Ayesh in fear of imminent harm and engaged in
    domestic violence are supported by a preponderance of the evidence and affirm the protection
    order.
    We affirm.
    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.
    We concur:
    2
    Exhibit 2,   which contained   these messages,   is   not part of the appellate record.