Jay v. Jay - Domestic Violence Order Affirmation
Summary
The North Carolina Supreme Court affirmed a lower court's domestic violence protective order in the case of Jay v. Jay. The court found that the trial court's fact-finding, which incorporated a written statement by the plaintiff, complied with procedural rules.
What changed
The North Carolina Supreme Court, in Jay v. Jay, has affirmed a domestic violence protective order previously issued by a lower court. The appeal centered on the trial court's method of fact-finding, specifically its incorporation by reference of the plaintiff's written statement. The Supreme Court held that this method, when combined with the consideration of testimony from both parties, satisfied the requirements of Rule 52 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.
This decision clarifies procedural expectations for domestic violence protective order cases in North Carolina. While the ruling affirms the validity of the order, it reinforces the importance of detailed findings by trial courts for meaningful appellate review. Legal professionals involved in similar cases should ensure that fact-finding processes are sufficiently documented, even when incorporating external statements, to withstand appellate scrutiny.
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by Justice Allison Riggs](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10811793/jay-v-jay/#o1)
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March 20, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Jay v. Jay
Supreme Court of North Carolina
- Citations: None known
Docket Number: 97A25
Syllabus
Whether the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court's order issuing a domestic violence protective order.
Combined Opinion
by Justice Allison Riggs
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. 97A25
Filed 20 March 2026
YANLI JAY
v.
GARY WAYNE JAY
Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) (2023) from a divided panel of the
Court of Appeals, 298 N.C. App. 50 (2025), affirming an order entered on 17 August
2023 by Judge James T. Hill in District Court, Durham County. This matter was
calendared for argument in the Supreme Court on 18 September 2025 but determined
on the record and briefs without oral argument pursuant to Rule 30(f) of the North
Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
No brief filed for plaintiff-appellee.
Matthew C. Suczynski for defendant-appellant.
RIGGS, Justice.
It is well-established that trial courts sitting without a jury are required to
make appropriately detailed findings. See Coble v. Coble, 300 N.C. 708, 712 (1980);
N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 52(a) (2025). Meeting that requirement ensures that trial
courts substantively address litigants’ issues and allows for meaningful appellate
review. Coble, 300 N.C. at 712. In this appeal from a domestic violence protective
order, Gary Wayne Jay (Mr. Jay) challenges the sufficiency of the trial court’s
JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
incorporation-by-reference approach to factfinding. The Court of Appeals held that
there was competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact and order
because the trial court relied on the written statement Yanli Jay (Mrs. Jay) attached
to her initial complaint and because it considered both parties’ testimony at trial. Jay
v. Jay, 298 N.C. App. 50, 55 (2025). Based on the dissent below, Mr. Jay’s appeal to
this Court centers on the form of the findings. The dissenting judge reasoned that
the trial court failed to specifically find the necessary facts under Rule 52 because it
referred to Mrs. Jay’s written statement of allegations as its findings rather than
explicitly documenting the facts itself. Id. at 63 (Carpenter, J., dissenting).
The trial court was able to assess the credibility of Mrs. Jay’s written
statement through hearing the parties’ testimony. Therefore, we hold that the trial
court’s factfinding in this matter complied with Rule 52 and we affirm the Court of
Appeals’ judgment holding that there was competent evidence to support the trial
court’s findings of fact and order.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Mr. Jay and Mrs. Jay were married on 15 April 2016 and separated around
August 2022. On 7 June 2023, Mrs. Jay filed an unverified complaint and motion for
a domestic violence protective order (DVPO) against Mr. Jay in the District Court,
Durham County. In a written statement accompanying her complaint, Mrs. Jay
alleged various instances of sexual abuse and other allegations against Mr. Jay that
had occurred in the months leading up to the filing of her complaint and motion.
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
On the same date Mrs. Jay filed her complaint, the trial court granted Mrs.
Jay an ex parte DVPO effective until 14 June 2023. In the additional findings section
of the ex parte DVPO, the judge handwrote “violent sexual contact. Repeatedly
isolated [Mrs. Jay]. English not her [first] language. [Mr. Jay] has caused physical
injury to [Mrs. Jay].”
After several continuances, the trial court held a hearing on 17 August 2023 to
consider Mrs. Jay’s motion for a one-year DVPO. Mrs. Jay testified that on 28 March
2023, she expressed her unwillingness to engage in sexual intercourse with Mr. Jay.
She testified that Mr. Jay told her to take off her clothes, said he was going to have
sex with her, and that, “at the time, he was very violent.” Mrs. Jay testified that Mr.
Jay caused her serious injury.
Mrs. Jay also testified that on 9 May 2023, Mr. Jay called her to try to have
sex with her and that she refused him. Mrs. Jay stated that Mr. Jay texted her after
she did not answer his call. She testified that she ultimately told him “I can’t” and
that Mr. Jay responded by telling her, “This is my home. I can come back whenever I
can.”1 This prompted Mrs. Jay to contact her attorney and file for a protective order.
Mrs. Jay was also questioned about various allegations that she included in
the written statement submitted with her complaint. Mrs. Jay’s counsel asked Mrs.
Jay to expand on her written allegation that Mr. Jay told her the parties “would
1 Because the record reflects that the parties separated around August 2022, Mr. Jay
and Mrs. Jay were not living together at the time the 9 May 2023 incident occurred.
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
become enemies.” Mrs. Jay testified that Mr. Jay told her they “would become
enemies” when she expressed that she wanted to go to court. She further testified
that his words made her feel afraid. Her counsel also asked her to expand on her
allegation that Mr. Jay called her “moron, stupid, idiot.” Mrs. Jay testified that Mr.
Jay rarely used her name and instead always called her an “idiot” and referred to her
with insults including “moron, bullshit, stupid, full of baloney.” Mrs. Jay also
testified that she felt physically and emotionally mistreated by Mr. Jay and provided
examples like having to massage Mr. Jay’s back every night and that Mr. Jay often
spoke to her with disrespect.
Mr. Jay also testified at the hearing. He stated that he had never sexually
assaulted or physically hurt Mrs. Jay. He testified that the “[l]ast two years of the
marriage were essentially nil.” Mr. Jay further testified that he had wanted to
resume their relationship, so he contacted Mrs. Jay in March 2023 and met with her
several times that year.
After hearing from both parties, the trial court found by the greater weight of
the evidence that Mrs. Jay had proven her case and therefore met the standard
required to grant the DVPO. The presiding judge noted on the record that he had a
copy of the written statement Mrs. Jay submitted with her complaint. He said he
“marked up” and “Xed out” the facts alleged in Mrs. Jay’s written statement, and that
he would include the marked-up copy as additional factual findings in the DVPO.
The trial court entered the one-year DVPO, effective until 17 August 2024. In
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
the additional findings section of the DVPO, the trial court described Mr. Jay’s
conduct as follows: “Violent sexual contact. [Mr. Jay] has caused physical injury to
[Mrs. Jay]. Exhibit A is attached for further findings of fact by the court.” The judge
handwrote “Exhibit A” across the top of a copy of Mrs. Jay’s written statement, and
consistent with the judge’s statement on the record that he “marked up” and “Xed
out” sections of the statement, several lines and whole paragraphs were struck.
Based on the judge’s signature at the end of the DVPO, it appears that the judge
wrote his initials beside each line and paragraph he struck. The judge entered the
DVPO concluding that, based on the facts, Mr. Jay committed acts of domestic
violence against Mrs. Jay and there was danger of serious and immediate injury to
her. Shortly after the entry of the DVPO, Mr. Jay filed a Rule 60 motion to set the
DVPO aside. The trial court considered the motion on 15 September 2023 and denied
it. Mr. Jay filed a notice of appeal the same day.
On appeal, Mr. Jay argued that there was insufficient evidence to support the
findings of fact made by the trial court. Jay, 298 N.C. App. at 53. The Court of
Appeals issued its opinion in a divided decision on 5 March 2025, holding that there
was competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact supporting entry
of the DVPO. Id. at 55.
The majority held that the trial court did not err by incorporating Mrs. Jay’s
written statement by reference into the DVPO’s findings of fact. Id. at 54–55. The
majority noted that the trial court was presented with documentary evidence to
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
support its findings and heard testimony from both sides. Id. at 54. Thus, the
majority concluded that the findings were supported by competent evidence because
the trial court “had ample opportunity to consider the credibility of both parties.” Id.
at 55. The majority therefore deferred to the trial court’s credibility and factfinding
conclusions. Id. at 55.
In dissent, Judge Carpenter argued that, by implicitly approving the trial
court’s incorporation of Mrs. Jay’s statement into its findings of fact, the majority
“incentiviz[es] behavior that violates the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.”
Id. at 56 (Carpenter, J., dissenting). The dissent agreed with the majority “that the
evidence, viewed in isolation, could have supported findings identifying the basis for
an act of domestic violence.” Id. Notwithstanding that acknowledgment, the dissent
argued that the trial court’s purported findings were insufficient under Rule 52
because the trial court adopted Mrs. Jay’s written statement instead of making its
own findings. Id. at 56–57; see also N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 52(a)(1) (“In all actions
tried upon the facts without a jury . . . the court shall find the facts specially and state
separately its conclusions of law thereon and direct the entry of the appropriate
judgment.”). While the dissent acknowledged that the trial court engaged with the
written statement by striking certain sentences and paragraphs, the dissent
concluded that those amendments were only evidence of a “cursory review” and “were
not sufficient to demonstrate the process of logical reasoning required by Rule 52.”
Id. at 62 (Carpenter, J., dissenting).
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
The dissent also questioned whether it was permissible for trial courts to
incorporate by reference allegations from an unverified complaint, as occurred here.
Id. at 56, 59–61. The dissent emphasized that Mrs. Jay’s written statement here was
unverified, thus “lacking any guarantee of reliability and trustworthiness.” Id. at 61.
Ultimately, the dissent would have vacated the one-year DVPO and remanded for
additional findings. Id. at 63.
Mr. Jay appealed pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) based on the dissent’s
argument that the trial court improperly issued the DVPO because of its factfinding
method. See N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) (2023). He asked this Court to examine whether
the trial court improperly delegated its factfinding duty by incorporating Mrs. Jay’s
unverified, typed statement into the DVPO as support for its conclusion that Mr. Jay
committed domestic violence.
II. Standard of Review
Because DVPO proceedings are matters where the trial court sits without a
jury, to review the issuance of a DVPO, the standard of review on appeal is whether
there was competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact and whether
its conclusions of law were proper in light of such facts. State v. Williams, 362 N.C.
628, 632 (2008). Where there is competent evidence to support the trial court’s
findings of fact, those findings are binding on appeal. Id. Factfinding in these
matters must comply with Rule 52 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.
See, e.g., Williams v. Cabrera, 298 N.C. App. 611, 615 (2025) (“The issuance of a one-
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
year DVPO [requires trial courts] to comply with Rule 52.”). Interpreting the Rules
of Civil Procedure is a matter of statutory interpretation and thus a question of law
reviewed de novo. See In re E.D.H., 381 N.C. 395, 398 (2022).
III. Analysis
The Court of Appeals held that competent evidence supported the trial court’s
findings, Jay, 298 N.C. App. at 55, and the dissent conceded that competent evidence
was presented that “could have supported findings identifying the basis for an act of
domestic violence,” id. at 56 (Carpenter, J., dissenting). Thus, the issue at the heart
of this matter is simply the proper form of the trial court’s findings—whether the trial
court’s findings in the DVPO were sufficient under Rule 52 of the North Carolina
Rules of Civil Procedure.
“In all actions tried upon the facts without a jury or with an advisory jury, the
court shall find the facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon
and direct the entry of the appropriate judgment.” N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 52(a) (2025).
The purpose of Rule 52 is to ensure that the findings of specific facts are sufficient to
allow a reviewing court to determine whether the judgment, and the underlying legal
conclusions, reflect the appropriate application of law. See Coble, 300 N.C. at 714
(“Evidence must support findings; findings must support conclusions; conclusions
must support the judgment.”).
[W]hile Rule 52(a) does not require a recitation of the
evidentiary and subsidiary facts required to prove the
ultimate facts, it does require specific findings of the
ultimate facts established by the evidence, admissions and
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
stipulations which are determinative of the questions
involved in the action and essential to support the
conclusions of law reached.
Quick v. Quick, 305 N.C. 446, 452 (1982). Ultimate facts “establish the plaintiff’s
cause of action or the defendant’s defense” and are the middle ground between
evidentiary facts and conclusions of law. Woodard v. Mordecai, 234 N.C. 463, 470,
472 (1951).
This Court has stated that trial courts may, as a general matter, incorporate
documents and recitations in their orders, subject to certain constraints. Compare In
re H.B., 384 N.C. 484, 486 (2023) (holding that the incorporation of a party’s exhibit
into a termination of parental rights order was proper factfinding where the trial
court also found that the exhibit was “credible and reliable”), with In re A.E., 379 N.C.
177, 185 (2021) (holding that the trial court’s incorporation of “mere recitations of
testimony” as findings in its termination order was improper factfinding where there
were no indications that the trial court had evaluated the credibility of the
testimony).
Although other statutes govern factfinding requirements for juvenile court
proceedings such as In re H.B., our doctrine in that area illuminates what qualifies
as sufficient factfinding under Rule 52.2 In In re K.R.C., this Court stated that if
2 Juvenile court proceedings governed by Chapter 7B of the General Statues of North
Carolina often involve the application of Rule 52:
The Juvenile Code provides that adjudication orders “shall
contain appropriate findings of fact and conclusions of law.”
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
evidentiary findings “are untethered to any ultimate facts which undergird an
adjudication pursuant to [the relevant statute] or to any particularized conclusions
of law which would otherwise explain the trial court’s reasoning[,]” then meaningful
appellate review cannot occur. In re K.R.C., 374 N.C. 849, 861 (2020). We have also
stated that “the trial court may not rely solely on prior court orders and reports but
must receive some oral testimony at the hearing and make an independent
determination regarding the evidence presented.” In re T.N.H., 372 N.C. 403, 410
(2019). Finally, we have stated that a “mere recitation” by a trial court is not a proper
evidentiary finding standing alone but may be transformed into a proper evidentiary
finding when a trial court makes a credibility determination about the recited
evidence. In re H.B., 384 N.C. at 490.
Mr. Jay argues that the issuance of the DVPO was improper due to the trial
court’s method of factfinding in this matter. He claims that the trial court’s findings
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-807(b). Rule 52 of our rules of civil
procedure mandates the trial court make findings of “facts
specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon. . . .”
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 52. “[T]he trial court’s factual
findings must be more than a recitation of allegations. They
must be the specific ultimate facts . . . sufficient for the appellate
court to determine that the judgment is adequately supported by
competent evidence.” In re Anderson, 151 N.C. App. 94, 97
(2002).
In re H.P., 278 N.C. App. 195, 202 (2021); see also In re K.R.C., 374 N.C. 849, 856 (2020) (“We
have previously held that N.C.G.S. § 7B-1109(e) ‘places a duty on the trial court as the
adjudicator of the evidence’ which is equivalent to the duty imposed by Rule 52(a)(1) of the
North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.” (footnote omitted) (quoting In re T.N.H., 372 N.C.
403, 407 (2019))).
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Opinion of the Court
should not be considered findings at all, given the trial court’s reliance on the written
statement of allegations Mrs. Jay filed with her unverified complaint. We disagree.
Because the record reflects that the trial court considered Mrs. Jay’s written
statement in conjunction with her testimony from the DVPO hearing to evaluate the
statement’s credibility and meaningfully altered the statement to reflect the trial
court’s thinking, the trial court’s findings and its issuance of the DVPO were not
improper. We hold that the trial court sufficiently engaged with the factfinding
process and did not violate Rule 52.
Although the trial court’s explicit written findings are not long or
extraordinarily detailed, they are material to the resolution of the dispute and
therefore are ultimate facts essential to support the trial court’s conclusions of law.
After hearing testimony from both parties, the trial court made the ultimate findings
of fact required by Rule 52(a): “Violent sexual contact. [Mr. Jay] has caused physical
injury to [Mrs. Jay]. Exhibit A is attached as further findings of fact by the court.” As
indicated in the DVPO, the trial court concluded that “[t]he defendant has committed
acts of domestic violence against the plaintiff” and “[t]here is danger of serious and
immediate injury to the plaintiff.” Thus, as a preliminary matter, the trial court did
find ultimate facts that support its conclusions of law in issuing the DVPO.
The trial court’s incorporation-by-reference approach of including Mrs. Jay’s
written statement as additional findings of fact, with the judge’s alterations to that
statement, did not violate Rule 52. The trial court did not indiscriminately credit
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
Mrs. Jay’s unverified written statement. Rather, the trial court judge struck through
specific lines and whole paragraphs in Mrs. Jay’s statement while adopting others as
findings. Furthermore, he signed off on each amendment by initialing beside each
portion struck. The trial court did not “rely solely” on Mrs. Jay’s written statement,
nor did the Court disregard our instructions to avoid “mere recitations.” See In re
T.N.H., 372 N.C. at 410; In re H.B., 384 N.C. at 490. Instead, Mrs. Jay’s sworn
testimony at the one-year DVPO hearing bolstered her unverified allegations in her
written statement and contributed to the trial court’s opportunity to assess
credibility.
For example, in her written statement, Mrs. Jay detailed incidents that
occurred on 28 March 2023 and 9 May 2023, and Mrs. Jay provided testimony
regarding both of those incidents at the DVPO hearing. Mrs. Jay also alleged in her
statement that Mr. Jay would say various insults to her, and she testified similarly
at the DVPO hearing. In the factual findings, those sections were not struck from
her statement by the trial court judge.
In sum, in comparing the testimony at the hearing to the trial court judge’s
marked-up copy of Mrs. Jay’s written statement, the trial court judge struck portions
of her written statement that were not corroborated by the parties’ testimonies and
left intact the portions that were corroborated. We acknowledge that the trial court
judge did not expressly state in the DVPO whether he found Mrs. Jay’s written
statement credible. Even so, we are satisfied based on how the testimony and the
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JAY V. JAY
Opinion of the Court
marked-up copy match up that there are adequate assurances here that the trial
court assessed the credibility of Mrs. Jay’s written allegations. The trial court judge
thus sufficiently engaged with the written statement and transformed what would
otherwise be improper “mere recitations” into proper evidentiary findings under Rule
- See In re H.B., 384 N.C. at 490.3
Mr. Jay challenged the sufficiency of the trial court’s factfinding and did not
argue on appeal to this Court that the findings were unsupported by competent
evidence. Because we hold that the trial court’s findings were sufficient in form and
find no merit in Mr. Jay’s arguments, the trial court’s findings are binding on this
Court and support the trial court’s issuance of the one-year DVPO.
IV. Conclusion
In sum, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment affirming the trial court’s
order issuing the DVPO in this matter and conclude that the trial court did not
improperly delegate its factfinding obligations in violation of Rule 52.
AFFIRMED.
3We reiterate the caution we expressed previously in a similar matter where we
determined that the trial court’s incorporation by reference of a party’s exhibit was proper
because the trial court indicated it made credibility determinations:
We stress that our holding today is not an endorsement of this
sort of fact finding. . . . [T]he better practice always will be to
make specific, express findings in the written order about what
the trial court determined the facts to be, rather than
referencing evidence in record and stating that the referenced
evidence is credible.
In re H.B., 384 N.C. 484, 490–91 (2023).
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