                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                            AT NASHVILLE
                                August 23, 2011 Session

        BERCHIE MARIE WISER, v. RAYMOND WINFRED WISER

                   Appeal from the Circuit Court for Smith County
                       No. 6754B     Hon. Clara Byrd, Judge


                No. M2010-02222-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 7, 2011




The husband and wife had separated, and the wife then filed for an Order of Protection
against the husband, which was granted by the Trial Court. The wife then filed a Complaint
for divorce, which was ultimately granted and in the final divorce decree the Trial Court
incorporated the Marital Dissolution Agreement which contained a mutual restraining order
which restrained the parties from coming about, harassing or threatening or assaulting each
other. Subsequently, the wife filed a motion in this case to extend the Order of Protection,
and after an evidentiary hearing, the Trial Court extended the Order of Protection for five
years, as allowed by statute. The husband appealed, and on appeal argues that the divorce
decree, voided the Order of Protection. We hold that the Trial Judge acted in accordance
with the statute in extending the Order of Protection, and the divorce decree did not remove
jurisdiction from the Trial Court to issue the extended Order of Protection.


  Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed.


H ERSCHEL P ICKENS F RANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL
S WINEY, J., and J OHN W. MCC LARTY, J., joined.


Richard L. Dugger, Shelbyville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Raymond Wiser.

Jamie D. Winkler, Carthage, Tennessee, for the appellee, Berchie Marie Wiser.
                                          OPINION

                                         Background

       This case originated with the filing of a Petition for Order of Protection by the wife
against the husband on March 10, 2008. The Petition alleged that the parties were current
spouses but were separated, and that on March 7, 2008, the wife had agreed to meet the
husband for dinner but she was unable to go due to bad weather, and attempted to call the
husband and left messages to let him know. She averred that the husband came to her home
that evening, banged on her door, and when she went to the door he accused her of standing
him up, cursed and screamed at her, and that she went outside and he struck her in the face.
Her neighbor called the police, and he was arrested, and he threatened to kill her, himself,
her family, and the police officers. An Order of Protection was issued that day.

      Subsequently, the wife filed a Complaint for Absolute Divorce, stating that the parties
had been separated since 2007, and had no children. A temporary injunction was issued
which ordered the parties to refrain from threatening/harassing one another, etc.

       While the divorce was pending, the wife filed a Motion to Extend the Order of
Protection, stating there had been prior assaults and threats, that a divorce was pending. An
extended Order of Protection issued, which extended the order of protection for one year,
until May 15, 2010.

        Subsequently, the parties reached an agreement and executed a Marriage Dissolution
Agreement, which was incorporated into the Agreed Final Decree on September 23, 2009.
The MDA contains a mutual restraining order, which states that the “parties are permanently
restrained from coming about, harassing, threatening, assaulting, or abusing the other party”.

        Subsequently, the wife filed another Motion to Extend the Order of Protection, stating
that the husband had threatened her. An Extension was granted for one year, reciting that the
husband failed to appear at the hearing. The husband then filed a Motion to Set Aside
Extension of Order of Protection, stating that he didn’t receive proper notice.

       A hearing was then held on extending the Order of Protection on September 21, 2010.
At the hearing, the wife testified that the original Order of Protection was granted to her after
the husband came to her house and yelled at her, threatened to kill her, and kept putting his
hand in his pocket (where she feared he might have a gun). She testified that when she lived
with the husband, he had numerous guns in the home. The wife testified the husband took
karate and was very strong, and that he had hit her in the past, and did so again on the
evening in March that precipitated the Order of Protection. She reiterated the husband had

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threatened to kill members of her family, and that his threats to her and others caused her to
fear for her safety. She testified that she went to counseling with the husband at the VA, and
that he threatened to kill her in front of the counselor.

        She said she still feared for her safety, and that the husband had sent a letter for her
through her attorney in August 2009, which was while the Order of Protection was in force.
The letter was in his handwriting, signed by him, and she testified that the letter stated “our
lives together are over. You victimized me. You are not innocent. If you go on this way,
both of us will live to regret it.”

         The wife testified the husband had also contacted her by having his 14 year old
granddaughter call her in June 2010, and that she could hear the husband in the background
telling the child what to say. She testified that she could hear the husband saying that he
wanted the wife to meet him at the courthouse in Murfreesboro to pick the grandchild up, and
she told the grandchild no, she was not meeting him anywhere. She testified that she was
still in fear for her physical safety, and that she worried continuously that the husband would
just show up at her house at any time or that she would go home and find her house
destroyed.

       The husband testified, and stated that he gave the letter for the wife to his attorney,
and that his attorney gave it to the wife’s attorney. He denied that he was present when the
granddaughter called the wife to reschedule their meeting, and that he was in ill health and
had been advised that he only had about two years to live. Further, he admitted that he had
been in the psychiatric ward in 2008 or in 2009, and had been there since that time as well.

       The Trial Court found the husband had violated the Order of Protection by having
indirect contact with the wife via the letter and the call from his granddaughter, and that an
extension of five years was warranted. The Court issued an Extended Order of Protection
that day, which lists the letter and phone call as violations of the Order of Protection, and
which lists the bases of prior physical assaults, threats, immediate history of psychiatric
treatment, and threats of suicide.

       The husband appealed the Trial Court's extension of the Order. The issues presented
are:

       1.     Whether the Trial Court’s approval of the mutual restraining order contained
              in the MDA served to vacate the previous Order of Protection, rendering the
              subsequent extension of the Order of Protection null and void?

       2.     Whether the wife should get an award of fees on appeal?

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                                                Discussion

        The husband argues that, by entering a mutual restraining order as a part of the
parties’ MDA, the Court effectively vacated the previously-entered Order of Protection,
because the restraining order contradicts the Order of Protection. Relying on a Texas case 1 ,
the husband argues that when a court enters an order that contradicts an earlier order on the
same subject matter, the latter order operates to implicitly vacate the earlier order. As the
husband states, the order of protection and restraining order have some differences, but these
differences do not establish that the restraining order vacated the Order of Protection. The
restraining order is consistent in part with the Order of Protection in that it prohibits the
husband from “coming about, harassing, threatening, assaulting, or abusing” the wife, and
then mutually restrains the wife from doing the same to the husband. Accordingly, the two
orders are not inconsistent, rather, the Order of Protection affords the wife additional
protection from the husband.

        Orders of Protection are governed by Tenn. Code Ann. §36-3-601 et seq., which states
that victims of domestic abuse (defined as those who have been abused or threatened with
abuse, stalked, sexually assaulted, etc.) can seek relief by filing a petition for an Order of
Protection. The statute provides that an Order of Protection can prohibit any contact between
the abuser and victim, direct or indirect, prohibit stalking, set financial support, seize
firearms from the respondent, direct the abuser to attend counseling, etc. Tenn. Code Ann.
§36-3-606. Most importantly, the statute provides that if the respondent violates the Order
of Protection, he/she can be arrested immediately, with or without a warrant. Tenn. Code
Ann. §36-3-611. The respondent will typically be assessed a ten day sentence for each
violation of the Order of Protection. See Cable v. Clemmons, 36 S.W.3d 39 (Tenn. 2001).

       The statute sets forth that the legislative purpose behind Orders of Protection is to
“recognize the seriousness of domestic abuse as a crime and to assure that the law provides
a victim of domestic abuse with enhanced protection from domestic abuse.” Tenn. Code
Ann. §36-3-618. Orders of Protection provide greater protection for victims of domestic
abuse than would a basic restraining order, even though both can prohibit the abusive
behavior.

        We have previously held that once an Ex Parte Order of Protection has been entered,
the trial court, after hearing, has only two options: 1) to dissolve the OP, or 2) to extend the
Order of Protection. See Tenn. Code Ann. §36-3-605; Carr v. Allen, 2011 WL 578752


        1
          Poston Feed Mill Co., v. Leyna, 438 S.W.2d 366-369, (Tx. Civ.App. 1969) for the proposition that
if the Trial Court enters an order that contradicts or is materially inconsistent with an earlier order dealing
with the same subject matter, the latter order operates to implicitly vacate the prior order.

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(Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 16, 2011); Merriman v. Merriman, 2010 WL 3767116 (Tenn. Ct. App.
Sep. 28, 2010). Entering a mutual restraining order is not an option for the trial court, and
has been held to be reversible error. Id. In this record, the mutual restraining order entered
in the divorce case did not and could not modify or vacate the Order of Protection, and
nothing in the Divorce Decree indicates that Decree nullified the Order of Protection.

        As appellee points out, the trial courts regularly issue mutual preliminary injunctions
at the beginning of divorce cases, as was done in this case, which prohibit the parties from
harassing or threatening one another. The Order of Protection statute provides that if a
complaint for divorce is filed, the Order of Protection remains in effect until it is modified
or dissolved, and a petitioner is not prohibited from requesting relief pursuant to the Order
of Protection statute as part of a divorce action. Tenn. Code Ann. §36-3-603. The legislature
recognized and intended that Orders of Protection can co-exist with other injunctive relief
granted pursuant to a divorce.

       Appellant was not able to show that the Trial Court intended nor had the power to
vacate the prior Order of Protection by issuing a mutual restraining order. The same trial
Judge issued both orders, and obviously was aware when issuing the mutual restraining order
that an Order of Protection was in place. Moreover, she knew at the time the Order of
Protection was extended that there was a mutual restraining order in the MDA, because
appellant’s attorney pointed out that fact.

       In the subsequent hearing, the Trial Court found that the Order of Protection had been
violated by the husband, and that a five year extension was warranted. The Trial Court found
sufficient grounds for extending the Order of Protection, which is supported by the evidence,
and we affirm the Judgment of the Trial Court.2

       On appeal, the wife seeks an award of her fees and costs incurred in defending this
appeal, pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. §36-3-617(a)(1), which provides:

        Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, no domestic abuse victim, stalking
        victim or sexual assault victim shall be required to bear the costs, including any court
        costs, filing fees, litigation taxes or any other costs associated with the filing,
        issuance, registration, service, dismissal or nonsuit, appeal or enforcement of an ex
        parte order of protection, order of protection, or a petition for either such order,


        2
          We note that the appellant never raised this argument regarding "an implied vacation" of the Order
of Protection at trial, but did argue that the Order of Protection should not be extended because the mutual
restraining order was sufficient. As such, he could not raise it for the first time on appeal. Fayne v. Vincent,
301 S.W.3d 162 (Tenn. 2009).

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       whether issued inside or outside the state.

Since the Trial Court issued the Order of Protection, finding “abuse” as defined by the
statute, and since we have upheld the issuance of said Order of Protection on appeal, the wife
is entitled to an award of attorney’s fees and costs incurred in defending this appeal. See
Land v. Casteel, 2011 WL 808784 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 8, 2011); Brown v. Vaughn, 2010
WL 3767123 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sep. 28, 2010).

       We affirm the Judgment of the Trial Court and remand for the Trial Court to establish
a reasonable award of attorney's fees to the wife against the appellant for fees and costs
incurred on this appeal.

       The cost of the appeal is assessed to Raymond Winfred Wiser.




                                                     _________________________________
                                                     HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J.




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