Florida District Courts of Appeal, 2017

Bernetta Ashford-Cooper v. Dwell Lakey Ruff Aka Dwell L. Ruff

Bernetta Ashford-Cooper v. Dwell Lakey Ruff Aka Dwell L. Ruff
Florida District Courts of Appeal · Decided December 13, 2017 · Per Curiam, Thomas, Wetherell, Winsor
230 So. 3d 1283 (Southern Reporter, Third Series)

Bernetta Ashford-Cooper v. Dwell Lakey Ruff Aka Dwell L. Ruff

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Appellant seeks review of the stalking injunction entered against her at the request of her husband’s girlfriend, Appel-lee. 1 We agree with Appellant that the evidence was insufficient to support the injunction because, among other things, there was no evidence that the repeated calls and texts Appellant made to Appellee to try to get in touch with her husband caused Appellee—or would cause a reasonable person in Appellee’s position—substantial emotional distress. See § 784.048(1)(a), (2), Fla. Stat. (2016); Leach v. Kersey, 162 So.3d 1104, 1106 (Fla. 2d DCA 2015) (reversing stalking injunction against wife who contacted husband’s mistress because “the evidence does not show that these contacts would cause a reasonable person in [the mistressj’s circumstances to suffer substantial emotional distress” since “[a] reasonable woman who had an eighteen-month affair with another woman’s husband might well expect to hear the scorn of an angry wife.”) (internal citation omitted). Accordingly, we reverse the injunction.

REVERSED.

B.L. THOMAS, C.J, and WETHERELL and WINSOR, JJ., CONCUR.
1

. Although the injunction has expired on its own terms, ''[t]his case is not moot ... because collateral legal consequences flowing from such an injunction outlast the injunction itself.” Murphy v. Reynolds, 55 So.3d 716, 716 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011).

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