MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be FILED
regarded as precedent or cited before any Jun 21 2017, 9:15 am
court except for the purpose of establishing
CLERK
the defense of res judicata, collateral Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
estoppel, or the law of the case. and Tax Court
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
Steven Knecht
Vonderheide & Knecht, P.C.
Lafayette, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
B.P., June 21, 2017
Appellant-Respondent, Court of Appeals Case No.
12A02-1702-PO-317
v. Appeal from the Clinton Superior
Court
J.E.S., by Child’s Next Friend The Honorable Justin Hunter,
S.S., Judge
Appellee-Petitioner Trial Court Cause No.
12D01-1611-PO-793
Baker, Judge.
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[1] B.P. appeals the protective order issued by the trial court, which prevents him
from directly or indirectly contacting thirteen-year-old J.S., posting about her
on social media, or encouraging anyone else to communicate with her on his
behalf. B.P. contends that the trial court’s findings are insufficient and that the
evidence is insufficient to support the order. Concluding that the findings and
the evidence are not insufficient, we affirm.
Facts
[2] J.S. was born to S.S. (Mother) in (approximately) 2003. Mother was unmarried
at the time of J.S.’s birth, and paternity has never been established. In 2012,
Mother’s husband legally adopted J.S. After the adoption occurred, B.P., who
believes he is J.S.’s biological father, attempted to have the adoption set aside.
He was unsuccessful. He also filed a paternity action after the adoption was
final—that action was dismissed.
[3] Beginning sometime in 2012, B.P. began a course of conduct designed to
publicly claim a status as J.S.’s father. In 2012, he approached Mother and her
children in a Wal-Mart and began “scream[ing]” and “yell[ing]” at her. Tr. p.
38. Also beginning in 2012, B.P. began driving by Mother’s house, up to and
including the summer of 2016. Id. at 39. In March 2013, he went to a softball
game in which J.S. was playing. J.S. was in the field and he yelled to her, “I’m
your real dad. I’m your father.” Id. at 34. She became distraught, started
crying, and had to leave the game. She looked “panicked” and “scared.” Id. at
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35. Since that time, J.S. has almost totally withdrawn from all organized
sports.
[4] B.P. has a public Facebook account. Since 2013, he has posted multiple times a
week about J.S. Id. at 13 (B.P. testifying that he posts about J.S. “probably
everyday almost”). The following is a small sample of his nearly daily posts:
“love my daughter, she is more of me than her mother allows her to
know and see . . . .” Appellant’s App. Vol. 2. p. 14.
“love my daughter, I hope she has this urge to want to get to know me
instead of taking the false truth her mother has raised her on when it
comes to me . . . .” Id.
“. . . I will not stop until I take my last breath or until you [Mother]
decide that the route you have been going down leads to nowhere but
heartache and disappointment for our daughter . . . .” Id. at 11.
“[S.S:] You can act like a cockroach when the lights turn on whenever I
am around but it still doesn’t change the fact that I am [J.S.’s] father . . . .
anyone who is friends with her and I can share this so she can see!” Id.
“love my daughter, I will never give up on wanting to get to know you
and for you to actually get to know me . . . .” Id. at 13.
“happy birthday to my beautiful daughter, she is my greatest creation,”
with a photograph of J.S. at a school field trip that B.P. did not attend;
Mother did not send him that photograph. Tr. Ex. 2.
(Punctuation, spelling, and grammar original.) J.S. was “very aware” of B.P.’s
constant Facebook messages about her, as her friends at school and other
people frequently brought it up to her.1 Tr. p. 36. In fact, she felt as though she
1
Mother did not permit J.S. to have a Facebook account. Mother has a Facebook account, but has blocked
B.P. and several other individuals associated with B.P. from accessing her profile.
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was “constantly having to defend herself.” Id. at 48. Around Thanksgiving
2016, J.S. asked Mother if B.P. had posted anything about her that day, and
when Mother checked and replied affirmatively, J.S. asked to see it. After
reading it, “[s]he sat there for a second just looked down at it and she got up
and left the table. She’s in the bathroom crying. Bawling and asking why.
And I mean I just I hugged her and did the best that I could to comfort her.”
Id. at 36.
[5] In November 2016, B.P. sent J.S. a message on Snapchat. Once she realized
who he was, she asked him to leave her alone. B.P. responded, and J.S. then
sent him the following message:
your brother and you are creepy so stay out of my life and take
down that white [board] in the [barber] shop[2] and stop telling
landen and my other friends that your my dad bc you are
obviously nothing to me and I am scared most of my time of you,
you’re the main reason why I quit softball bc you scare me the
living crap when you showed up at one of my game I can’t go
anywhere or be free bc [you] have to stalk me and guess what
F*CK OFF”
Tr. Ex. 3 (punctuation, grammar, and spelling original). After that exchange,
J.S. was “upset, crying, tearful, angry” and “asking why why why do why do I
have to go through this every day. Why can’t he just leave me alone. . . . [I]t’s
changed her a lot. She’s more withdrawn. Won’t really talk as much. Doesn’t
2
B.P.’s brother owns a barber shop. The record does not reveal the contents of the white board in the barber
shop to which J.S. referred in this message.
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ask to go out as much.” Tr. p. 31. J.S. described her reaction to the interaction
as follows:
I was panicking. Didn’t know what to do. . . . I told him that he
needed to leave me alone. I went that I didn’t want nothing to
do with him. That he was never there for me ever. A date even
when the day I was born. And my mother’s told me that before.
He just kind of scares me.
Id. at 69-70.
[6] Throughout the years, Mother has asked B.P. to stop communicating or
attempting to communicate with J.S. “[m]ultiple times. I’ve asked him to leave
her alone. She doesn’t want anything to do with him. . . . It doesn’t matter
what I say or what I ask. He continues to do it.” Id. at 32.
[7] As a result of B.P.’s constant barrage of social media posts about J.S. and
Mother, Mother has “totally had to change the way I . . . do things now.” Id. at
37. Whereas in prior years, Mother had a Facebook account and would often
post pictures of her children to her account, “I don’t do that anymore.
Especially of [J.S.] . . . Because every time I post something of her somehow or
some way he ends up with it.” Id.
[8] Mother also testified that B.P.’s behavior “scares” her:
. . . I don’t know what . . . he’s gonna do. . . . I could be
anywhere and when I’m by myself when I have my children with
me and I mean I tried with all to avoid him at all costs. I try not
to go to places that I think he might be. Or you know when I got
into the Wal-Mart I’m always scanning the parking lot looking
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for vehicles that I’ve known him to drive. And so if he’s there
I’m not gonna go in.
Id. at 38. She further stated, “I just get a really sick feeling whenever I’m in
somewhere and . . . he’s there cause I . . . just don’t know what he’s gonna do.
It’s just . . . scarey [sic] just because everything that’s happened over the last
four years.” Id. at 39.
[9] And as for J.S., Mother “can’t ever get her to do sports anymore. We used to
sign her up for all sorts of sports and she . . . won’t do them. She refuses. . . .
And that’s not like her. . . .” Id. at 37-38. J.S. “won’t go out of the house.
Because she’s afraid that she’s gonna run into him. She won’t go to sporting
events. She won’t even go to a basketball game with her friends because she’s
afraid that he’s gonna be there.” Id. at 49. J.S. testified that she is scared:
J.S.: I have been scared most of my life of him. I haven’t
been able to speak what is on my mind. And that
day [the day that J.S. sent him the Snapchat
message] . . . I just wrote what was ever on my
mind. Just told just to tell him how I felt. So he
would understand to leave me alone. And I didn’t
want anything to do with him.
***
Attorney: Okay. So are you generally aware that [B.P.]
regularly um puts items about you on social media?
J.S.: Yes.
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Attorney: Okay. And how does that make you feel?
J.S.: Really scared that I’m put out there on social media.
And that everybody will intentionally come up to
me and like say something about him to me. Like
my friends at school. It doesn’t really make me feel
all that good about myself.
Id. at 73.
[10] B.P. agreed that it is “possible” that “a little girl could reasonably be scared by
[B.P.’s] daily communication about her[.]” Id. at 61. And while he stated that
many of his Facebook posts are an attempt to express his thoughts to the world,
he also acknowledged that some of his posts are designed to communicate
directly with her: “I’m basically letting her know what I feel and the thoughts
that I have.” Id. at 63.
[11] On November 17, 2016, Mother, on behalf of J.S., filed a petition for a
protective order against B.P. On November 18, 2016, the trial court issued an
ex parte protective order. B.P. requested a hearing, which was held on January
3, 2017. A final protective order was granted on January 10, 2017, and
prohibits B.P. from the following conduct: (1) threatening to commit or
committing acts of stalking against J.S. and Mother; (2) harassing, annoying,
telephoning, contacting, or directly or indirectly communicating with J.S.; (3)
being near J.S.’s school or home; (4) communicating with J.S. through any
social media; (5) communicating any information regarding J.S. on any social
media platform; and (6) encouraging anyone to communicate with J.S. on his
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behalf and/or post any information to any social media platform regarding J.S.
B.P. now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
I. Findings
[12] B.P. first argues that the trial court’s findings are insufficient to support its
judgment. He directs our attention to Hanauer v. Hanauer, 981 N.E.2d 147, 148
(Ind. Ct. App. 2013), in which this Court held that “[p]rotective orders are in
the nature of injunctions. Therefore, in granting a protective order the trial
court must sua sponte make special findings of fact and conclusions thereon.”
(Internal citations omitted.) According to B.P., the trial court’s findings in this
case did not meet this standard.
[13] The trial court’s findings read as follows:
a. [B.P.] filed a timely Request for Hearing pursuant to
Indiana Code section 34/26/5/10(a); and/or,
b. N/A
c. [J.S.] was present at the hearing and [B.P.] was present.
d. This order does protect an intimate partner or child.
e. [B.P.] had notice and an opportunity to be heard.
f. [B.P.] represents a credible threat to the safety of [J.S.] or a
member of [J.S.’s] household.
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g. [J.S.] has shown, by a preponderance of the evidence, that
stalking has occurred sufficient to justify the issuance of
this Order.
h. [B.P.] does not agree to the Issuance of the Order for
Protection.
i. The following relief is necessary to bring about a cessation
of the violence or the threat of violence.
Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 p. 31.
[14] In Hanauer, the trial court’s findings were virtually identical to the trial court’s
findings in this case:
the trial court found that “domestic or family violence, [or]
stalking[ ] . . . occurred sufficient to justify the issuance of [the
Protective Order].” The court further found that Husband
“represents a credible threat to the safety of [Wife] . . . or a
member of . . . [Wife’s] household.” And, with these findings,
the court concluded that Wife was a victim of domestic violence
and entitled to the issuance of a protective order.
981 N.E.2d at 149 (internal citations omitted). This Court then noted that
“[o]ur review of the record supports these findings and conclusions. Therefore,
we find no error in the issuance of a protective order.” Id. at 149-50. Another
panel of this Court later considered Hanauer, observing that “even though
findings are required to grant a petition for a protective order, the findings need
not be extensive. In Hanauer, the trial court’s ‘findings’ were not extensive but
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were adequate for appellate review of the trial court’s decision . . . .” Costello v.
Zollman, 51 N.E.3d 361, 365 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016), trans. denied.
[15] In the case before us, as in Hanauer, the trial court’s findings were not extensive.
As aptly put by the Costello Court, however, the findings are adequate for
appellate review of the trial court’s decision. Therefore, we decline to reverse
for this reason.
II. Sufficiency
[16] Next, B.P. contends that the evidence supporting the protective order is
insufficient. We apply a two-tiered standard of review to cases in which the
trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions thereon. Hanauer, 981
N.E.2d at 149. First, we determine whether the evidence supports the findings,
and second, whether the findings support the order. Id. We will reverse only
where there is no evidence supporting the findings or the findings fail to support
the order. Id. We will not reweigh the evidence and will consider only the
evidence favorable to the order. Id.
[17] Indiana Code section 34-26-5-2(b) provides that a parent may file a petition for
an order of protection on behalf of a child against a person who has committed
stalking. “Stalk” means “a knowing or an intentional course of conduct
involving repeated or continuing harassment of another person that would
cause a reasonable person to feel terrorized, frightened, intimidated, or
threatened and that actually causes the victim to feel terrorized, frightened,
intimidated, or threatened.” Ind. Code § 35-45-10-1. “Harassment” means
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“conduct directed toward a victim that includes but is not limited to repeated or
continuing impermissible contact that would cause a reasonable person to suffer
emotional distress and that actually causes the victim to suffer emotional
distress.” I.C. § 35-45-10-2. For a trial court to issue a protective order, the
petitioner must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that stalking has
occurred.3 C.V. v. C.R., 64 N.E.3d 850, 853 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016).
[18] In this case, J.S. was approximately nine years old when B.P.’s course of
conduct began, and approximately thirteen years old at the time of the
protective order hearing. Over the course of those four years, this young girl
and her family had to cope with the following incidents:
In 2012, B.P. approached Mother and her children in a Wal-Mart and
began screaming and yelling at her.
Also in 2012, B.P. began to drive by Mother’s house, up to and including
the summer of 2016.
B.P. attended one of J.S.’s softball games and yelled to her as she was
playing on the field, “I’m your real dad. I’m your father.” Tr. p. 34.
He has been posting on his public Facebook account nearly every day for
three years about J.S. When he posts, nearly four hundred people who
live in Clinton County—where J.S. also lives and goes to school—see his
posts in their Facebook news feeds. Id. at 64.
As a result of B.P.’s constant Facebook posts, J.S. “constantly ha[d] to
defend herself” when friends and others brought the issue up to her. Id.
at 48.
In November 2016, B.P. sent J.S. a message on Snapchat. Once she
realized who he was, she asked him to leave her alone. He responded,
3
There are, of course, other ways to prove that a protective order is warranted, but stalking is the only way
that is relevant to this case.
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and then she sent him a strongly worded message telling him that “I am
scared most of my time of you” and “you’re the main reason why I quit
softball” because “[you] have to stalk me[.]” Tr. Ex. 3.
After the times in which B.P. contacted J.S., or she saw one of his Facebook
posts about her, she would become “upset, crying, tearful, angry,” tr. p. 31, and
feel “panicked” and “scared,” id. at 35. As a result of B.P.’s conduct, J.S. has
stopped playing organized sports, is reluctant to leave the house, and has
become withdrawn and generally changed her behavior. Id. at 31, 37-38, 49.
Mother is also frightened, explaining that she tries “to avoid him at all costs,”
and when she goes to Wal-Mart, “I’m always scanning the parking lot looking
for vehicles that I’ve known him to drive.” Id. at 38. Over the years, Mother
has asked B.P. to stop communicating or attempting to communicate with J.S.
multiple times. But “[i]t doesn’t matter what I say or what I ask. He continues
to do it.” Id. at 32.
[19] For a protective order to be warranted, there must be sufficient evidence
supporting the trial court’s finding that B.P. committed stalking against J.S. and
her family. Our review of the record supports the following conclusions:
(1) B.P. acted knowingly or intentionally; (2) B.P.’s conduct directed toward
J.S. included repeated or continuing impermissible4 contact; (3) that contact
would cause a reasonable person—in this case, a reasonable minor child—to
4
B.P. is an adult repeatedly contacting and posting about on social media a young girl with whom he has no
legal relationship. Her mother demanded that he stop; he refused. The contact was unquestionably
impermissible.
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suffer emotional distress; (4) that contact actually caused J.S. to suffer
emotional distress; (5) the repeated and continuing harassment would cause a
reasonable person—in this case, a reasonable minor child—to feel frightened,
intimidated, or threatened; and (6) the repeated and continuing harassment
actually did cause J.S. to feel frightened, intimidated, or threatened.
[20] Some of B.P.’s conduct was in the nature of direct communication—accosting
Mother at Wal-Mart, yelling at J.S. during her softball game, and contacting
J.S. through Snapchat. Some of B.P.’s conduct was in the nature of indirect
communication—nearly daily Facebook posts about J.S., which he knew would
be seen by nearly four hundred people who live, work, and go to school in J.S.’s
community, and some of which he specifically intended to be read by her. In
either case, the trial court did not err by finding that his conduct amounted to
stalking or by issuing the protective order. B.P.’s arguments to the contrary
amount to a request that we reweigh the evidence and second-guess the trial
court’s assessment of witness credibility—a request we decline.
[21] The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Barnes, J., and Crone, J., concur.
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