DocketNumber: No. 12-FM-1949
Judges: Easterly, Farrell, Glickman
Filed Date: 10/2/2014
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/26/2024
J.O. appeals the Superior Court’s denial of his petition for a civil protection order (CPO) against O.E. We conclude the trial judge failed to provide a sufficiently clear explanation for his decision and may have relied improperly on O.E.’s testimony about his sexual orientation. Accordingly, we vacate and remand this case to the Superior Court for the judge to reconsider J.O.’s petition.
Appellant J.O. lived in the basement room of a house in the District that he shared with several others. In the summer of 2012, appellee O.E. rented a room on the second floor. Not long after O.E. moved in, on August 23, 2012, J.O. filed a petition in Superior Court for a CPO, in which he alleged that O.E. had harassed, stalked, threatened, and made repeated sexual advances towards him. The court issued a two-week temporary protection order requiring O.E. to vacate the residence and remain at least 100 feet away from J.O., and thereafter held a hearing on the petition at which both J.O. and O.E. testified.
J.O. testified to three incidents of sexual harassment and assault, all allegedly occurring in early August. Specifically, J.O. claimed that O.E. had exposed himself, propositioned J.O. for sex, physically assaulted him with his hand and genitalia, and threatened him with “trouble” in connection with J.O.’s supposed status as an undocumented immigrant if he did not yield to O.E.’s sexual advances. O.E. adamantly denied the alleged incidents and claimed that J.O.’s accusations were fabrications designed to get him evicted from the house because J.O. jealously suspected him of romantically pursuing one of their housemates. In addition, O.E. repeatedly and vehemently insisted that he was heterosexual.
In an oral ruling delivered from the bench, the trial judge found that J.O. had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that O.E. had committed an intra-family offense. The judge explained that both witnesses had “testified with a lot of strength of character, with a disposition of resolve that they are both correct.” “[Jjudging from the demeanor of each of the parties,” the judge added, he had “major difficulties” finding that the evidence weighed in favor of either side. Ultimately, though, in light of “the strength of character and the demeanor” of each witness and their conflicting testimony, the judge declared the evidence in equipoise— “equally balanced in the mind of the finder of fact.”
In discussing O.E.’s testimony, the judge paid particular attention to his having “steadfastly put [on] a very strong defense that he is not gay.” The court found this “not irrelevant from the perspective that while he’s telling the Court that he does not have a homosexual orientation. And since he doesn’t have a homosexual orientation, he is not going to approach [J.O.] for sex.” Elaborating on O.E.’s insistence that he was “not oriented towards homosexuality,” the judge stated: “Now obviously I cannot say what does a homosexual look like. No such thing exists. It is an orientation in the person and he has strongly, steadfastly, with great conviction, indicated that he’s not so oriented.”
J.O. moved for reconsideration, arguing that O.E.’s purported heterosexuality was irrelevant to the question of whether O.E. had sexually assaulted J.O., and also that O.E.’s testimony as to his sexual orientation constituted inadmissible propensity evidence.
II.
Under the Intrafamily Offenses Act,
We review the denial of a petition for a CPO for abuse of discretion.
As the trial judge seemed to recognize, J.O.’s testimony, if credited, established that O.E. committed intrafamily offenses that would justify a CPO. The reasons the judge nevertheless denied the petition are unclear. It is quite easy to understand the judge’s rulings the way appellant does — as crediting O.E.’s testimony that he is not homosexual and accepting and relying on the syllogism that (in the judge’s words) “since he doesn’t have a homosexual orientation, he is not going to approach [J.O.] for sex.” This rationale is problematic, however, even assuming that O.E.’s testimony was ad
However, despite the judge’s considerable emphasis on O.E.’s purported heterosexuality, and the judge’s failure on reconsideration to deny that it was a material factor in his decision, he did cite other factors as well: “the strength of the character and the demeanor” of each party, and (perhaps somewhat inconsistently) “credibility concerns” unrelated to O.E.’s sexual orientation. Regrettably, the judge did not clarify further the basis of his ruling. But — granting the judge the benefit of the doubt — we think the judge may have found O.E.’s denial of the charges against him to be credible, and the evidence in equipoise, not because of O.E.’s asserted heterosexuality, but rather based on the apparent sincerity of O.E.’s protestations and his overall credibility, combined with the fact that J.O.’s testimony was uncorroborated.
In the end, the judge’s explanations of his ruling are too cryptic and opaque for us to understand his rationale. But because there is a real possibility the judge
So ordered.
. Alternatively, if the judge disagreed with those propositions, J.O. asked the judge to reopen the hearing on his CPO petition so that he could present evidence of O.E.'s "homosexual and abusive nature."
. The order did not acknowledge or address J.O.’s alternative request to reopen the hearing to take additional evidence.
. The judge did not identify his “credibility concerns” in his order. In his initial ruling from the bench, he mentioned only two, seemingly peripheral, "credibility issues.” The first was J.O.’s confusion as to when during the summer he first met O.E. "He didn’t have complete clarity of mind,” the judge commented. The second was O.E.'s inability to explain why he left the home in which he had been living for more than three years to rent a room at J.O.’s house. The judge found that "Mr. [O.E.] is just not clear as to why he rented there.”
. D.C.Code§ 16-1001 et seq. (2012 Repl.).
. Id. § 16-1001(12).
. Id. § 16-1001(6); see also Shewarega v. Yegzaw, 947 A.2d 47, 52 (D.C.2008).
. See A.R. v. F.C., 33 A.3d 403, 404-05 (D.C.2011).
. D.C.Code § 16-1005(c); see also Cruz-Foster v. Foster, 597 A.2d 927, 930 & n. 3 (D.C.1991) (holding that a CPO petitioner has "the burden of showing good cause by a preponderance of the evidence”).
. See Murphy v. Okeke, 951 A.2d 783, 789 (D.C.2008).
. See id.; Johnson v. United States, 398 A.2d 354, 365 (D.C.1979).
. Mercer v. United States, 724 A.2d 1176, 1185 (D.C.1999).
. Cruz-Foster, 597 A.2d at 932.
. The usual common law rule in civil cases, succinctly codified in Federal Rule of Evidence 404(a), is that "[e]vidence of a person's character or character trait is not admissible to prove that on a particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the character or trait." See Kenneth S. Broun et al., McCormick on Evidence § 188 (7th ed.2013). But see District of Columbia v. Thompson, 570 A.2d 277, 299 (D.C.1990), vacated in part on other grounds, 593 A.2d 621 (D.C.1991) (allowing, as an exception to the general rule, “evidence of the peaceful or violent character of the parties in civil assault cases in which mutual assault is alleged in order to help prove who was the aggressor”).
. See, e.g., Men & Sexual Trauma, National Center for PTSD, Dep't of Veterans Affairs, Jan. 3, 2014, http://www.ptsd.va.gov/public/ types/violence/men-sexual-trauma.asp (last visited Aug. 14, 2014) ("Despite popular belief that only gay men would sexually assault men or boys, most male perpetrators identify themselves as heterosexuals and often have consensual sexual relationships with women.”); Elizabeth J. Kramer, When Men Are Victims: Applying Rape Shield Laws to Male Same-Sex Rape, 73 N.Y.U. L.Rev. 293, 315 (1998) ("Neither the victims nor the perpetrators of same-sex rape are necessarily homosexual. Studies indicate that victims of same-sex rape are often heterosexual, as are same-sex rapists. Furthermore, like opposite-sex rapists, same-sex rapists are more interested in their dominance over their victim than in the 'sexual' aspect of the assault. Male same-sex rapists are thus often indifferent to the gender of the person they rape.”) (footnotes omitted); Bennett Capers, Real Rape Too, 99 Cal. L.Rev. 1259, 1274 n. 92 (2011) ("As with prison rape, most men who sexually assault other men outside of prisons appear to identify as heterosexual.”) (citation omitted).
. D.C.Code § 22-3001(9) (defining sexual contact).
. By the same token, we would consider evidence that O.E. was in fact homosexual to be equally unilluminating.
. Cruz-Foster v. Foster, 597 A.2d 927, 932 (D.C.1991) (vacating and remanding the denial of a CPO extension where we were uncertain whether the judge took into account the universe of relevant facts).
. See id. ("Since any CPO which may be entered will look to the future, the judge is of course authorized to conduct further proceedings to determine whether there have been any developments since she last heard the case which would affect [the CPO petitioner's] right to relief.”).