Darrin v. Miller ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 1/28/19; Modified and Certified for Partial Pub. 2/21/19 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    JUDE DARRIN,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    A155089
    v.
    SANDRA J. MILLER,                                              (Lake County
    Super. Ct. No. CV418475)
    Defendant and Respondent.
    Jude Darrin, age 81, petitioned for a restraining order under the Elder Abuse and
    Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (Elder Abuse Act, Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15600 et
    seq.), alleging that her next-door neighbor, Sandra Miller, subjected her to ongoing abuse
    and harassment.1 The trial court dismissed the petition, concluding that because the two
    women were simply neighbors, there was no special relationship between them to give
    Darrin standing under the Elder Abuse Act. We shall reverse. The plain language of the
    Elder Abuse Act authorizes a trial court to issue a restraining order against any individual
    who has engaged in abusive conduct, as defined by statute, toward a person age 65 or
    older regardless of the relationship between the alleged abuser and victim. (§§ 15610.07,
    subd. (a)(1); 15657.03.)
    1
    Statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise
    stated.
    1
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Darrin filed a Request for Elder or Dependent Adult Abuse Restraining Orders on
    Judicial Council form EA-100, alleging that Miller and Miller’s boyfriend harassed and
    intimidated her by taunting her, threatening her, twice removing a wire boundary fence
    between the properties, and trespassing onto her property where they destroyed a hedge
    and defaced and damaged a barrier fence. Darrin claimed they made harassing and
    threatening demands to her, her spouse, and her grandson; they let their dogs menace her
    unchecked; and the boyfriend ordered the dogs to “kill” her. Because of the ongoing
    harassment and the partial destruction of the barrier fence that Darrin had erected to
    protect herself, Darrin suffered from fear and anxiety.
    Darrin asked the trial court to impose the standard “Personal Conduct Orders” pre-
    printed on the Judicial Council form that would, among other things, keep Miller from
    contacting her, destroying her property, harassing her, or disturbing her peace. She also
    sought orders requiring Miller to stay at least 5 yards away from her, and prohibiting
    Miller from further vandalizing or stealing her or her spouse’s property. The trial court
    issued a temporary restraining order under the Elder Abuse Act and scheduled a hearing
    on the petition.
    The hearing began with an opening statement, in which Darrin’s counsel outlined
    her case: Miller engaged in “vicious behavior” toward the 81-year-old Darrin, including
    calling her names; Miller had her boyfriend destroy Darrin’s property, including a fence
    that Darrin had erected to protect herself from Miller, the boyfriend, and the goings-on at
    Miller’s property.
    Miller then moved for nonsuit under Code of Civil Procedure section 581c,
    arguing that Darrin had no standing to seek an order against her under the Elder Abuse
    Act because Miller had no care or custody arrangement with Darrin, and no control over
    Darrin’s real or personal property. Darrin responded that the Elder Abuse Act applies
    even in the absence of any relationship between abuser and victim. The trial court agreed
    with Miller, granted her motion, vacated the temporary restraining order, and dismissed
    the petition on the merits. Darrin timely appealed.
    2
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Legal Principles
    1.      Elder Abuse Act Protective Orders
    Under the Elder Abuse Act, an “elder” is “any person residing in this state, 65
    years of age or older.” (§ 15610.27.) As relevant here, elder abuse includes “[p]hysical
    abuse, neglect, abandonment, isolation, abduction, or other treatment [of an elder] with
    resulting physical harm or pain or mental suffering.” (§ 15610.07, subd. (a)(1).2)
    “Mental suffering” is defined as “fear, agitation, confusion, severe depression, or other
    forms of serious emotional distress that is brought about by forms of intimidating
    behavior, threats, harassment, or by deceptive acts performed or false or misleading
    statements made with malicious intent to agitate, confuse, frighten, or cause severe
    depression or serious emotional distress of the elder or dependent adult.” (§ 15610.53.)
    An elder who has suffered abuse may petition the superior court for an order
    “enjoining a party from abusing, intimidating, . . . threatening, . . . harassing, . . . or
    disturbing the peace of, the petitioner.” (§ 15657.03, subds. (a)(1), (b)(4)(A).) The
    petitioner has the burden to prove a past act of elder abuse by preponderance of the
    evidence. (Bookout v. Nielsen (2007) 
    155 Cal. App. 4th 1131
    , 1139-1140 (Bookout).)
    2.      Nonsuit Motions
    “In ruling on a motion for nonsuit following plaintiff’s opening statement in a
    nonjury trial, ‘the trial court is required to “assume that all relevant evidence” offered by
    the plaintiff is true, “and all reasonable inferences or doubts [are] to be resolved in [the]
    plaintiff’s favor. [Citation.]” . . . ’ (Lingenfelter v. County of Fresno (2007) 
    154 Cal. App. 4th 198
    , 204.)” (Cooper v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. (2009) 
    177 Cal. App. 4th 876
    , 891.) “ ‘ “The standard of review for a nonsuit after [the] conclusion of
    2
    Section 15610.07, subdivision (a), states, “ ‘Abuse of an elder or a dependent
    adult’ means any of the following: [¶] (1) Physical abuse, neglect, abandonment,
    isolation, abduction, or other treatment with resulting physical harm or pain or mental
    suffering. [¶] (2) The deprivation by a care custodian of goods or services that are
    necessary to avoid physical harm or mental suffering. [¶] (3) Financial abuse, as defined
    in Section 15610.30.”
    3
    the opening statement is well settled. Both the trial court in its initial decision and the
    appellate court on review of that decision must accept all facts asserted in the opening
    statement as true and must indulge every legitimate inference which may be drawn from
    those facts. [Citations.] A nonsuit at this early stage of the proceedings is disfavored.
    [Citation.] It can only be upheld on appeal if, after accepting all the asserted facts as true
    and indulging every legitimate inference in favor of the plaintiff, it can be said those facts
    and inferences lead inexorably to the conclusion plaintiff cannot establish an essential
    element of its cause of action . . . . [Citations.]” [Citation.]’ ([Galanek v. Wismar (1999)
    
    68 Cal. App. 4th 1417
    ,] 1424.)” (Cooper at pp. 891-892.) In our review, we consider only
    the grounds for nonsuit that the moving party raised in the trial court. (Marvin v. Adams
    (1990) 
    224 Cal. App. 3d 956
    , 960 (Marvin).)
    B.     Analysis
    The Elder Abuse Act defines “abuse” broadly, including not only physical abuse,
    neglect, abandonment, isolation or abduction of a person age 65 or older, but also “other
    treatment,” if that treatment results in “physical harm or pain or mental suffering” to the
    elder. (§ 15610.07, subd. (a)(1).) In her opening statement, Darrin claimed she would
    prove that Miller directed “vicious behavior” toward her and destroyed her personal
    property, including a fence that Darrin had built to protect herself. From those
    statements, we can infer that Darrin may be able to prove that Miller subjected her to
    “treatment” that caused her to experience the “serious emotional distress that is brought
    about by . . . intimidating behavior [or] harassment” that constitutes “[m]ental suffering”
    under section 15610.53. (§ 15610.07, subd. (a)(1).) Accordingly, the question before us
    is a narrow one of statutory interpretation: Can this “other treatment” constitute abuse
    under section 15610.07, subdivision (a)(1) in the absence of a special relationship
    between the abuser and the victim, such as a caretaking or custodial relationship? As she
    did below, Darrin relies on the plain language of the Elder Abuse Act and on cases
    interpreting it to argue that the answer is yes. We agree with her.
    “In interpreting a statute, we begin with its text, as statutory language typically is
    the best and most reliable indicator of the Legislature’s intended purpose. [Citations.]
    4
    We consider the ordinary meaning of the language in question as well as the text of
    related provisions, terms used in other parts of the statute, and the structure of the
    statutory scheme.” (Larkin v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2015) 
    62 Cal. 4th 152
    , 157-
    158.) Our role “is simply to ascertain and declare what is in terms or in substance
    contained therein, not to insert what has been omitted, or to omit what has been inserted;
    and where there are several provisions or particulars, such a construction is, if possible, to
    be adopted as will give effect to all.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1858.)
    The trial court was clearly incorrect in its interpretation of the Elder Abuse Act.
    Nothing in the text of section 15610.07, subdivision (a)(1), or elsewhere in the Elder
    Abuse Act requires a special relationship between abuser and victim where the alleged
    abuse is “other treatment.” In this respect, “other treatment” is similar to “[p]hysical
    abuse,” which is defined in section 15610.63 without reference to relationships between
    the elder and alleged abuser. By contrast, other types of abuse in section 15610.07,
    subdivision (a)(1), require a relationship. Thus “[a]bandonment” is “the desertion or
    willful forsaking of an elder . . . by anyone having care or custody of that person under
    circumstances in which a reasonable person would continue to provide care and custody”
    (§ 15610.05, italics added), and “[n]eglect” is “[t]he negligent failure of any person
    having the care or custody of an elder or a dependent adult to exercise that degree of care
    that a reasonable person in a like position would exercise.” (§ 15610.57, subd. (a)(1),
    italics added.) When the Legislature intended special relationships be required for claims
    of elder abuse, it specified what those relationships were.3 It did not do that for the
    provision at issue here.
    Darrin cites three cases that are consistent with our understanding of the Elder
    Abuse Act, though they do not address the precise issue before us. They are: Gordon B.
    v. Gomez (2018) 22 Cal.App.5th, 92, 94-95, where an elder abuse restraining order was
    issued against a neighbor who allegedly harassed a 75-year-old; Bookout, supra, 155
    3
    And we see this elsewhere in section 15610.07: under subdivision (a)(2), an
    alternate definition of abuse is “The deprivation by a care custodian of goods or services
    that are necessary to avoid physical harm or mental suffering.” (Italics added.)
    5
    Cal.App.4th at pages 1134-1137, where an elder abuse restraining order was issued to
    protect a 78-year-old from a 70-year-old, and where the two had lived together for a few
    months but had no caretaking relationship; and Gdowski v. Gdowski (2009) 
    175 Cal. App. 4th 128
    , 131, where an elder abuse restraining order was issued against the 83-
    year-old petitioner’s daughter and there was no indication that the daughter lived with or
    had any caretaking responsibility for the father.
    In her respondent’s brief, Miller jettisons the argument she made in the trial court.
    Now she asserts that the trial court correctly dismissed the case because Darrin’s
    allegations and her counsel’s opening statement were “non-specific.” We give this
    assertion no credit. First, it appears in the “Conclusion” of her appellate brief,
    unsupported by argument or legal authority or even any heading summarizing the point,
    all required by the Rules of Court. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B).) Second, it
    mischaracterizes the record. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(C).) Miller’s argument
    before the trial court was that Darrin had no standing under the Elder Abuse Act because
    there was no special relationship between Darrin and Miller, and that was the basis of the
    court’s ruling.4 On appeal, Miller cannot raise an argument for nonsuit that she did not
    raise in the trial court.5 
    (Marvin, supra
    , 224 Cal.App.3d at p. 960.)
    4
    In her argument at the trial court, Miller’s counsel stated that Darrin failed “to
    identify facts and circumstances sufficient to support the issuance of a request for an
    elder abuse restraining order.” Context makes clear that counsel’s statement referred
    solely to Darrin’s failure to identify a special relationship between Darrin and Miller.
    5
    Because we do not address Miller’s new claim, we need not reach Darrin’s reply
    argument that that Code of Civil Procedure section 581c does not authorize the trial court
    to grant a motion for nonsuit in a hearing on an Elder Abuse Act protective order. Darrin
    concedes that if the Elder Abuse Act required a special relationship between abuser and
    victim, the trial court could deny a petition immediately upon an admission that no such
    relationship existed. But she argues that it would have been improper for the court to
    dismiss the petition for lack of specific evidence before allowing Darrin to actually
    present her evidence, because she had already provided the trial court “reasonable proof”
    of past abuse, as reflected by the trial court’s issuance of a temporary restraining order.
    (§ 15657.03, subds. (c) & (e).) Regardless of how Miller styled her motion and the trial
    court styled its order, we have before us a judgment that dismissed an action as a matter
    of law for lack of standing, and we review it as such.
    6
    We also do not address Miller’s suggestion that this appeal is mooted by a civil
    harassment action that Darrin subsequently filed against Miller. This assertion,
    mentioned in a sentence in the “Statement of the Case” in Miller’s brief on appeal, does
    not rise to the level of appellate argument.6 (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B).)
    In sum, we conclude that under section 15610.07, subdivision (a)(1), “treatment”
    that is neither physical abuse, neglect, abandonment, isolation nor abduction, can
    constitute elder abuse if the treatment results in “physical harm or pain or mental
    suffering” even if the alleged abuser has no responsibility to care for the elder and no
    control of the elder’s property. Accordingly, the trial court erred in dismissing Darrin’s
    petition on the basis of Miller’s claim that Darrin lacked standing: the court should have
    given Darrin the opportunity to present her evidence. We express no opinion on the
    merits of Darrin’s claims.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment of the trial court is vacated. The matter is remanded to the trial
    court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Appellant shall recover her
    costs on appeal.
    6
    Miller requests we take judicial notice of two documents Darrin filed in the trial
    court in her civil harassment case against Miller, and a reporter’s transcript of an oral
    ruling in that case. The materials are irrelevant to the matter before us, and therefore we
    deny the request.
    7
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    _________________________
    Stewart, J.
    A155089, Darrin v. Miller
    8
    Filed 2/21/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    JUDE DARRIN,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                  A155089
    (Lake County
    v.                                                Super. Ct. No. CV418475)
    SANDRA J. MILLER,                                 ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    AND CERTIFYING OPINION FOR
    Defendant and Respondent.                 PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    BY THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on January 28, 2019, be modified as
    follows: On page 6, the text of Footnote 5 is replaced with, “Because we do not address
    Miller’s new claim, we need not reach Darrin’s reply argument that Code of Civil
    Procedure section 581c does not authorize the trial court to grant a motion for nonsuit in a
    hearing on an Elder Abuse Act protective order. Regardless of how Miller styled her
    motion and the trial court styled its order, we have before us a judgment that dismissed an
    action as a matter of law for lack of standing, and we review it as such.”
    The modification does not change the judgment.
    The opinion filed herein on January 28, 2019, was not certified for publication in
    the Official Reports. For good cause and pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules
    8.1105(b) and 8.1110, it now appears that the opinion, as modified, should be published
    in the Official Reports, with the exception of section A.2 of the “Discussion,” and it is so
    ordered.
    Dated:_______________________                     ____________________________ P.J.
    1
    Trial Court: Lake County Superior Court
    Trial Judge: Hon. Robert L. Crone
    Schinner & Shain, LLP, Reed E. Harvey, Agustin R. Piña; Anna Gregorian, for Plaintiff
    and Appellant
    Ewing & Associates, Andre M. Ross, for Defendant and Respondent
    A155089, Darrin v. Miller
    2
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A155089

Filed Date: 2/21/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/22/2019