Therapist R.D. believed she was being stalked and harassed by P.M., a former patient.
After the restraining order's one-year term expired at the end of May 2010, however, P.M.'s harassment resumed—or so R.D. believed. She was confronted by P.M. at her local market in a manner she considered threatening; she found dozens of consumer-review Web sites posted with P.M.'s messages attacking her personal and professional conduct; flyers with disparaging messages were posted and reposted by P.M. at the entrance to her office building, on nearby cars, and in front of her son's elementary school; and she learned that P.M. had begun undertaking volunteer activities at her children's elementary and middle schools.
Taking these events to indicate that P.M. had resumed her harassment, R.D. sought a renewal of the civil harassment restraining order. The court granted the second restraining order on October 22, 2010, finding that the first order
P.M. appeals from the second order, contending that as a matter of law the material facts do not support a finding of harassment, and that the injunction unconstitutionally restricts her freedom of speech. We affirm.
R.D. is a licensed clinical social worker with a psychotherapy practice in Culver City, California. P.M. had been R.D.'s patient for three or more years, until R.D. terminated the therapy on October 31, 2008. R.D. ended the therapy because P.M. had become increasingly hostile toward her, had screamed obscenities at her, had refused to leave her office, had obtained her home phone number and used it to call her home repeatedly, and had threatened to stalk her and to "`hang around your car.'"
After the therapy ended, R.D. believed she was being stalked and threatened by P.M. She believed that P.M. followed her to her son's school and to his baseball practice; that P.M. began volunteering at her children's schools; and that P.M. had made false reports about her to a local police detective.
About six weeks after R.D. ended the therapy, P.M. confronted R.D. in a stairwell of her office building, begging her to resume the therapy (which R.D. refused to do). In late January 2009, P.M. telephoned R.D. a number of times, threatening to file a "`client abandonment'" complaint with R.D.'s licensing board unless R.D. took her back as a client.
In mid-February 2009, a police detective advised R.D. that P.M. had told him she works with Culver City schools, and that R.D. had had a sexual relationship with her at her apartment. Soon afterward, R.D. began to find numerous postings on consumer-related Internet sites, which she attributed to P.M., accusing R.D. of being "`unstable'" and "`abusive.'" And in mid-March she was told by the representative of a debt collection agency that P.M. had given R.D.'s name regarding an outstanding hospital bill.
In early April 2009, R.D. saw P.M. at R.D.'s son's baseball practice at a local park, and immediately afterward she received (but did not answer) two cell phone calls from P.M. That night she received an e-mail from P.M. that she characterized as harassing, through her listing on a profession-related Internet site. Early the next week she learned that P.M. had attended a luncheon at R.D.'s daughter's middle school the previous week, at which a group of students of which her daughter was a member had been introduced (although it turned out that her daughter had not attended the luncheon). Later that month she learned that P.M. was involved in a media project with her daughter's next-door friend.
At the beginning of May 2009, R.D. found numerous new derogatory postings about her on various Internet sites, which she believed had been posted by P.M.
R.D. believed that P.M. had a "history of problem drinking, losing her temper, and intense rage." She expressed her fear that these behaviors would escalate into violence. On May 8, 2009, she filed a request for "orders to stop harassment."
After the restraining order's one-year term expired in June 2010, however, R.D. believed that P.M.'s harassment of her resumed. On September 20, 2010, she filed a second civil harassment restraining order request. The second request noted the first restraining order, based on P.M.'s "history of following me, appearing at my children's schools, sending harassing emails, making false accusations and defaming me on the internet."
R.D. testified at the hearing that she made her second request for a restraining order due to concerns for her safety based at least in part on "things that [she] learned" while treating P.M. as her therapist. As the most recent example of harassment, she cited an incident that had taken place the previous day: P.M. had approached R.D. in a Trader Joe's market where she regularly shopped; P.M. had offered to remove her Internet postings about R.D. if R.D. would apologize to her; P.M. had then followed her to the check stand and stared at her in what seemed to her to be a threatening manner; and R.D. was then too upset to continue, but instead reported to the cashier that P.M. was bothering her and "ran out" without purchasing her groceries.
In addition, R.D. testified, after the first restraining order had expired P.M. had distributed flyers at her office building on nine occasions over a period of seven days, and apparently had also distributed flyers at her son's school.
On October 22, 2010, the court (David J. Cowan, Temporary J.) issued its "restraining order after hearing to stop harassment," on the mandatory Judicial Council form. The order requires P.M. to stay at least 100 yards away from R.D. and members of her immediate family, their home, workplaces, vehicles, and schools. And it specifies acts of personal conduct that P.M. must not do to R.D. or to members of her immediate family, including harassing, attacking, threatening, assaulting, or stalking them, destroying their personal property, keeping them under surveillance, or blocking their movements.
On December 21, 2010, P.M. filed her appeal from the trial court's October 22, 2010 entry of the second restraining order. The order is appealable as an appeal from an order granting an injunction. (§ 904.1, subd. (a)(6).) The notice of appeal was timely filed within 60 days of its entry. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a)(1).)
Conventional wisdom tells us that time heals all wounds. Maybe so. But the trial court concluded that one year was not enough, and that more time will be required before the wounds exposed in this case will cease to fester and their effects can be expected to fade.
P.M.'s appeal contends that the second restraining order was unjustified and unconstitutional because the facts do not constitute civil harassment as a matter of law and her distribution of flyers disparaging R.D. was constitutionally protected. We find no merit in these arguments.
P.M. argues that because the evidence is in all important respects undisputed and the only disputed facts are immaterial, her appeal raises only questions of law that are governed by a de novo standard of review. R.D. contends that restraining orders based on section 527.6 are reviewed to determine whether substantial evidence supports their factual bases, and that in this case substantial evidence fully supports the challenged order.
Both parties are in some respects right. The appropriate test on appeal is whether the findings (express and implied) that support the trial court's entry of the restraining order are justified by substantial evidence in the record. (Bookout v. Nielsen (2007) 155 Cal.App.4th 1131, 1137-1138 [67 Cal.Rptr.3d 2] [injunctions under § 527.6 are reviewed to determine whether factual findings are supported by substantial evidence; trial court's determination of controverted facts will not be disturbed on appeal].)
P.M. argues that the record contains no evidence of assault, battery, or stalking after the first restraining order was issued in June 2009; "the only conduct at issue," she argues, is her distribution of flyers in R.D.'s office building and on nearby cars, which did not involve stalking. This conduct, she argues, cannot be found to constitute a credible threat of violence, or to lack any legitimate purpose.
The trial court's evaluation of the evidence was not so circumscribed, however. The court had before it evidence—indeed, an unchallenged determination—that as of June 2009 P.M. had been engaged in a willful course of harassment that would cause a reasonable person to suffer emotional distress and that in fact caused R.D. to suffer substantial distress. Because P.M.'s harassment of R.D. had stopped during the first restraining order's one-year term, however, without more, the trial court could not justifiably conclude in October 2010 that the harassment would continue.
But there was more. From the evidence, the court could conclude that after the first restraining order had expired P.M. had again targeted R.D. for harassment. Accepting every inference favoring the judgment, the evidence showed that P.M. had come to the market at which R.D. regularly shopped in order to confront R.D. in a threatening manner; that she had come to R.D.'s son's school to distribute flyers in order to continue her harassment and stalking of R.D. and her family; and that she had on many occasions come in and around R.D.'s office building in a successful effort to alarm R.D. and to put her in fear for her safety.
The evidence before the court showed that P.M. not only had a record of past harassment of R.D., but also a history of angry outbursts and erratic behavior and a remaining obsessive focus on R.D.'s termination of her professional relationship with P.M. two years earlier.
The challenged order restrains P.M. from harassing or stalking R.D. or her family members, and requires P.M. to stay at least 100 yards away from them. P.M. contends that the order impermissibly infringes her constitutional freedom of speech rights, because her distribution of flyers about R.D. addresses a matter of public concern, and because the order constitutes an overbroad content-based prior restraint that burdens her speech more than is necessary to prevent the harassment.
To the extent the order limits P.M.'s speech, it does so without reference to the content of her speech. The restraining order does not prevent P.M. from expressing her opinions about R.D. in any one of many different ways; she is merely prohibited from expressing her message in close proximity to R.D. and her family.
The order does not mention or explicitly prohibit P.M. from engaging in any particular form of speech with respect to R.D.—including the sorts of speech about which R.D. had complained in her restraining order requests.
In this case, the speech that the challenged restraining order infringes upon is P.M.'s speech (to R.D. and her family, and perhaps to others in flyers she would distribute) having to do with her opinions about R.D., with only slight apparent relationship to any issue of public interest.
Still, the restraining order's incidental infringement of P.M.'s speech can be justified only to the extent that it is no broader or more restrictive than is necessary to prevent P.M.'s harassment of R.D. (Madsen v. Women's Health Center, supra, 512 U.S. at pp. 765-766; DVD Copy Control Assn. v. Bunner, supra, 31 Cal.4th at pp. 882-883.) P.M. argues that the restraining order in this case breaches that limitation (relying primarily on cases that involve restrictions on picketing and public demonstrations about subjects of public importance). She suggests that the court "could have," for example, "limited [P.M.] to distributing flyers during non-business hours or on the weekend, when [R.D.] would not be at her office."
In her reply brief P.M. argues (for the first time) that Balboa Island Village Inn, Inc. v. Lemen (2007) 40 Cal.4th 1141 [57 Cal.Rptr.3d 320, 156 P.3d 339], precludes the trial court's order in this case. In that case the defendant had
Here, too, the injunction is unnecessarily overbroad, P.M. argues, because it "is not tailored to minimize its impact on [her] speech," by (for example) "limiting [P.M.] to distributing fliers [only] during non-business hours or on the weekend . . . ." But in the trial court P.M. offered neither evidence that the scope of the injunction's restrictions on her freedom of expression are unnecessarily overbroad, nor any suggestion that lesser restrictions might be sufficient to accomplish the injunction's legitimate purposes. While she now volunteers that her distribution of flyers in and near R.D.'s office building could reasonably be restricted to evenings and weekends, she made no such suggestion in the trial court, and she offers no citation to evidence showing that such a restriction would accomplish the injunction's purpose of preventing intentionally harassing encounters with R.D. The evidence in the trial court was that R.D.'s use of her office was not necessarily restricted to weekday hours, and that she would "go to and from my building at night, and the fliers would come at night, and I was worried that [P.M.] was in the vicinity."
In light of this evidence, the absence of any grounds for adopting alternative restrictions that would have limited R.D.'s use of her office, and P.M.'s failure to suggest or identify the existence of any other less restrictive alternatives that the court could have imposed to prevent the threatened harassment, the trial court acted within its discretion.
The trial court was faced with conflicting accounts of the parties' actions and intentions, as is often the case. One party saw a clear pattern of intentional harassment, reasonably leading her to fear for her safety; the other party interpreted the events differently, claiming that her conduct showed nothing of the sort. The court chose to credit the evidence showing an intentional pattern of harassment, as it was entitled to do. Faced with the pattern of harassment that had justified the earlier one-year injunction, and with the resumption of the harassment shortly after the one-year hiatus, the
The order is affirmed. Respondent to receive her costs on appeal.
Mallano, P. J., and Johnson, J., concurred.