Nagorka v. Nagorka , 2018 Ohio 5269 ( 2018 )


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  • [Cite as Nagorka v. Nagorka, 
    2018-Ohio-5269
    .]
    STATE OF OHIO                   )                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    )ss:                 NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF LORAIN                )
    NICHOLAS NAGORKA                                     C.A. Nos.     17CA011221
    17CA011222
    Appellee
    v.
    APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT
    SHEILA NAGORKA                                       ENTERED IN THE
    COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
    Appellant                                    COUNTY OF LORAIN, OHIO
    CASE Nos. 17DV083344
    17DV083349
    DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
    Dated: December 28, 2018
    CARR, Judge.
    {¶1}    Appellant, Sheila Nagorka (“Wife”), appeals from judgments of the Lorain
    County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, granting the petition filed by her
    estranged husband, Nicholas Nagorka (“Husband”), for a civil protection order against her and,
    in a separate case, denying her petition for a civil protection order against Husband. This Court
    affirms both judgments.
    I.
    {¶2}    Although the parties dispute many facts pertaining to the conflicts in their
    relationship, only the evidence pertaining to alleged domestic violence is relevant here.
    Following two days of arguing, an alleged incident of domestic violence, and Wife leaving the
    marital home, Husband filed a petition for a domestic violence civil protection order against
    Wife. His petition focused primarily on an incident that occurred a few months earlier, after the
    2
    couple had been drinking at a bar. He alleged that Wife was driving them home and threatened
    to kill him, drove at an excessive rate of speed, and ultimately crashed the truck into a ditch.
    Husband also alleged that Wife had exhibited an ongoing pattern of violence, threats, and erratic
    behavior toward him.
    {¶3}    Later that day, Wife filed a separate petition for a domestic violence civil
    protection order against Husband. She alleged that, two days earlier, Husband had threatened to
    beat her, which forced her to lock herself in the bathroom and later in her truck to protect herself.
    Wife later filed a complaint for divorce against Husband, which is still pending in the trial court.
    {¶4}    A contested hearing was held before a magistrate on both parties’ petitions for
    civil protection orders. The evidence at the hearing focused on two alleged incidents of domestic
    violence: the truck crash that happened a few months earlier, and an argument that occurred two
    days before the parties filed their petitions.
    {¶5}    The magistrate decided that Husband’s evidence was more credible, that he
    should be granted a protection order against Wife, and that Wife’s petition should be denied.
    Wife filed objections to the magistrate’s decision in each case. Although the trial court sustained
    Wife’s objections insofar as she disputed one of the magistrate’s factual findings, it overruled her
    objections to the magistrate’s ultimate decisions to grant Husband’s petition for a domestic
    violence civil protection order and to deny hers. Wife’s separate appeals from each judgment
    were consolidated for review. She raises three assignments of error, which will be addressed
    jointly because they are intertwined.
    II.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY GRANTING [HUSBAND’S] CPO PETITION
    BECAUSE THE EVIDENCE WAS INSUFFICIENT.
    3
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY GRANTING [HUSBAND’S] CPO PETITION
    BECAUSE IT WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE
    EVIDENCE.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR III
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY DENYING [WIFE’S] CPO PETITION.
    {¶6}    Wife’s first assignment of error is that the trial court erred in granting Husband a
    civil protection order against her under former R.C. 3113.31(D)(1) because his evidence was
    legally insufficient to demonstrate that she had attempted to cause or recklessly caused physical
    injury to Husband or that she placed him in fear of serious imminent physical harm. Former
    R.C. 3113.31(A)(1)(a) and (b). Her second and third assignments of error challenge the trial
    court’s determinations that Husband’s evidence was more credible than hers and that he should
    be granted a civil protection order but she should not.
    {¶7}    Although the parties presented disputed evidence about the motivations behind
    their marital discord and alleged attempts by each of them to intermeddle in the other’s cell
    phone call and text history and social media accounts, the only evidence pertaining to violence
    and/or threats of violence between them involved two incidents: (1) when Wife drove and
    crashed Husband’s truck a few months earlier, and (2) an argument between the parties that
    occurred two days before each filed for a protection order against the other.
    {¶8}    As to the first incident, Husband testified that, a few months earlier, he and Wife
    had been out drinking, got into an argument and, while Wife was driving Husband’s truck, she
    asked him if he wanted to die. For a prolonged period of time, Wife drove the truck at speeds in
    excess of 90 miles per hour, ran stop signs, narrowly missed hitting a tree on the passenger side,
    locked up the brakes, and ultimately crashed the vehicle sideways in a ditch. Husband and Wife
    4
    were able to walk from the truck, but Husband testified that he was surprised that Wife did not
    crash the vehicle sooner than she did. They did not call authorities or receive emergency
    medical assistance, but both got a ride and went home. Husband explained that, before going to
    bed that night, Wife had threatened to kill him in his sleep if he told anyone about the incident.
    {¶9}    The next day, law enforcement authorities came to the home to ask about the
    truck that had been found in the ditch, which was registered in Husband’s name. Wife falsely
    told them that she had been driving the truck but that Husband was not with her, apparently to
    coincide with what Husband had told them. She was later charged with an offense for operating
    the vehicle while intoxicated, which was ultimately reduced to a lesser charge.
    {¶10} Wife failed to present any evidence to dispute Husband’s account of her
    intoxicated and erratic driving and threats to kill Husband during and after the truck incident.
    Her only defense against that evidence was that the incident was too long ago to form the basis
    of Husband’s alleged fear that she posed a threat of imminent harm to him.
    {¶11} Prior incidents of domestic violence are relevant to determining whether the
    petitioner’s fears were reasonable. See, e.g., Williams v. Hupp, 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 10 MA
    112, 
    2011-Ohio-3403
    , ¶ 31. In fact, “[t]he reasonableness of the fear should be determined with
    reference to the history between the petitioner and the respondent.” Gatt v. Gatt, 9th Dist.
    Medina No. 3217-M, 
    2002 WL 570389
     * 2 (Apr. 17, 2002). “[W]hether an occurrence of
    domestic violence is recent enough to warrant a civil protection order is a matter committed to
    the sound discretion of the trial court.” Murral v. Thomson, 4th Dist. Hocking No. 03CA8,
    
    2004-Ohio-432
    , at ¶ 10 (upholding a civil protection order based on an incident that occurred
    more than one year earlier).
    5
    {¶12} In this case, in addition to the truck incident from three months earlier, there was
    evidence of current domestic violence perpetrated by Wife. See Solomon v. Solomon, 
    157 Ohio App.3d 807
    , 
    2004-Ohio-2486
    , ¶ 23 (7th Dist.). Although Wife now asserts that Husband had not
    mentioned the more recent incident in his petition, she raised no objection to his testimony at the
    hearing, nor did she object to the magistrate’s decision on that basis. Moreover, Wife explicitly
    raised the couple’s recent weekend argument as the sole basis for seeking a protection order
    against Husband.
    {¶13} Wife testified that Husband had grabbed her by the throat and threatened to beat
    her, so she locked herself in her truck and spent the night there armed with saw blades because
    she feared for her safety. Although Wife presented evidence of text messages between her and
    her son that night, the substance of the texts did not corroborate her testimony that Husband had
    put his hands around her throat or threatened to beat her.
    {¶14} Husband testified he did not touch or threaten Wife, but that it was Wife who had
    been violent with him by twice striking him in the face near the eye. He testified that, after
    striking him, Wife told the children that Husband had hit her and then stormed out of the house
    to sit in her truck for several hours. Husband’s cousin, who had been in the couple’s home at the
    time, testified at the hearing and fully supported Husband’s account of what had happened. He
    testified that Husband had not touched or threatened Wife but that the two had been arguing and
    Wife twice struck Husband in the face with a closed hand and then stormed out of the house to
    sit in her truck.
    {¶15} Although this Court confines its review to the actions of the trial court in
    overruling Husband’s objections and adopting the magistrate’s decision, we also are
    mindful of the fact that “as the trier of fact, the magistrate was best able to view the
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    witnesses and observe their demeanor, gestures and voice inflections, and use these
    observations in weighing the credibility of the proferred testimony.” (Internal quotations
    omitted). Truax v. Regal, 9th Dist. Summit No. 20902, 
    2002-Ohio-4867
    , ¶ 26. The
    magistrate chose to believe Husband’s account instead of Wife’s. 
    Id.
     Wife has failed to
    demonstrate that the trial court erred in overruling her objections to the sufficiency or
    weight of the evidence or in adopting the magistrate’s decision to grant Husband’s
    petition for a domestic violence civil protection order and to deny hers.                 Wife’s
    assignments of error are overruled.
    III.
    {¶16} Wife’s assignments of error are overruled. The judgment of the Lorain County
    Court of common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, is affirmed.
    Judgment affirmed.
    There were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common
    Pleas, County of Lorain, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of
    this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
    Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of
    judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the
    period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(C). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is
    instructed to mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the
    mailing in the docket, pursuant to App.R. 30.
    7
    Costs taxed to Appellant.
    DONNA J. CARR
    FOR THE COURT
    TEODOSIO, P. J.
    CALLAHAN, J.
    CONCUR.
    APPEARANCES:
    STEPHEN P. HANUDEL, Attorneyat Law, for Appellant.
    JAMES J. SMITH, Attorney at Law, for Appellee.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17CA011221, 17CA011222

Citation Numbers: 2018 Ohio 5269

Judges: Carr

Filed Date: 12/28/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021