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Marriage of McCale
23CA1562
| Colo. Ct. App. | Aug 22, 2024
|
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Opinion Summary

Facts

  1. Elizabeth C. Walton initiated a forcible entry and detainer (FED) action against her daughter, Cynthia Brooks, regarding their competing rights to possess property in Naturita. [lines="6-8"]
  2. The district court ruled in favor of Walton, granting her possession and subsequently awarding her costs and attorney fees. [lines="13"]
  3. Walton claimed entitlement to attorney fees based on C.R.S. § 13-40-123, which necessitates a reciprocal attorney fees provision in a residential rental agreement for recovery. [lines="17-22"]
  4. Walton did not produce any rental agreement containing a fee-shifting provision between herself and Brooks. [lines="23"]
  5. Brooks appealed the order, challenging the awarded costs and attorney fees. [lines="4"]

Issues

  1. Whether the district court erred in awarding Walton attorney fees under C.R.S. § 13-40-123 without a provision in a rental agreement allowing for such recovery. [lines="66"]
  2. Whether Brooks's reliance on the Schuler case was appropriate given the factual differences in the scenarios. [lines="37-39"]

Holdings

  1. The court reversed the award of attorney fees to Walton, determining that she could not recover such fees absent a rental agreement provision. [lines="70"]
  2. The court affirmed the award of costs, as Walton was recognized as the prevailing party. [lines="70"]

OPINION

23CA1562 Marriage of McCale 08-22-2024
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 23CA1562
El Paso County District Court No. 22DR30262
Honorable David Prince, Judge
In re the Marriage of
Allyson Ann McCale,
Appellant,
and
Donald Richard McCale, III,
Appellee.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART,
AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
Division VII
Opinion by JUDGE TOW
Gomez and Kuhn, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced August 22, 2024
The Drexler Law Group, LLC, Matthew B. Drexler, Teresa A. Drexler, Colorado
Springs, Colorado; Drexler Law, LLC, Regina T. Drexler, Denver, Colorado, for
Appellant
Harrison Family Law, PC, Bridgette D. Harrison, Colorado Springs, Colorado,
for Appellee
1
¶ 1 In this dissolution of marriage proceeding involving Allyson
Ann McCale (mother) and Donald Richard McCale, III (father),
mother appeals the maintenance, child support, property division,
and life insurance portions of the district court’s permanent orders.
She also seeks disqualification of the district court judge. We affirm
the judgment in part and reverse it in part, and we remand the case
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Background
¶ 2 After a hearing, the district court dissolved the parties’
marriage of nearly three decades and entered permanent orders.
After imputing potential income to mother, the district court
awarded mother maintenance of $5,000 per month for twelve
months, followed by $4,000 per month for twenty-four months, and
then $3,000 per month until father retires or mother remarries.
The court also required father to pay a monthly child support
obligation of $1,053 because mother was the primary caretaker for
the parties’ son, who has disabilities and will need care for life. The
district court declined mother’s request, however, to require father
to pay the child support payments into a special needs trust.
2
Finally, the court’s permanent orders noted that “the parties agreed
on an obligation of [father] to maintain life insurance” but did not
specify how much life insurance father was required to hold.
¶ 3 Mother then filed a motion for post-trial relief under
C.R.C.P 59, asking the district court to specify that father must
maintain $850,000 in life insurance with mother as the beneficiary.
The court denied the motion, reasoning that the parties “did not
present a dispute relating to the [life] insurance policy at [the
permanent orders hearing] for resolution” and that mother did not
cite any evidence from the record which would justify her request.
II. Timeliness of Appeal
¶ 4 As a preliminary matter, we reject father’s argument that
mother’s appeal is untimely because she filed her notice of appeal
more than forty-nine days after the district court’s permanent
orders. See C.A.R. 4(a)(1) (requiring notice of appeal to be filed
within forty-nine days after entry of judgment). Under C.A.R.
4(a)(3), once a party files a timely Rule 59 motion, the deadline for
filing a notice of appeal is terminated, and the deadline resets once
the district court disposes of the Rule 59 motion. Mother filed her
3
notice of appeal on September 7, 2023, which was less than forty-
nine days after the district court denied her timely filed Rule 59
motion on August 1, 2023. Her appeal, therefore, is timely.
III. Shirking Requirement
¶ 5 Mother argues that the district court’s marital property
division, maintenance award, and child support award were
improper because they improperly relied on an imputation of her
potential income. Specifically, mother contends the district court
was required to find that she was shirking a financial obligation
under People v. Martinez, 70 P.3d 474 (Colo. 2003), before it could
impute her potential income. We agree that the district court
improperly imputed potential income to mother. But we note that
this implicates only the maintenance and child support awards and
not the division of marital property.
A. Preservation and Standard of Review
¶ 6 We reject father’s argument that mother did not preserve her
arguments for appeal because she did not raise them in her Rule 59
motion. To preserve an issue for appeal all that is required is that
“the issue be brought to the attention of the trial court and that the
court be given an opportunity to rule on it.” Berra v. Springer &
4
Steinberg, P.C., 251 P.3d 567, 570 (Colo. App. 2010). Mother raised
these issues in the joint trial management certificate (JTMC), and
they are therefore preserved.
¶ 7 There is no requirement that mother needed to raise the
issues again in her Rule 59 motion to preserve them for appeal.
Father cites Furer v. Allied Steel Co., 483 P.2d 212, 213 (Colo.
1971), for the proposition that “[u]nless an allegation of error is
brought before the trial court in a new trial motion, [an appellate
court] will not consider that allegation on writ of error.” However,
Furor is over fifty years old and addresses language that has since
been amended. Rule 59(b) now clearly states that a motion for
post-trial relief “shall not be a condition precedent to appeal or
cross-appeal, nor shall filing of such motion limit the issues that
may be raised on appeal.” Mother was not required to raise the
issues again in her Rule 59 motion to preserve them. Accordingly,
we reach the merits of mother’s appeal.
¶ 8 We review the district court’s orders on maintenance, child
support, and division of marital property for an abuse of discretion,
and we will not disturb the court’s decision unless it is shown to be
5
manifestly arbitrary, unfair, or unreasonable or based on a
misapplication of the law. In re Marriage of Collins, 2023 COA
116M, ¶¶ 19, 37 (reviewing property division and child support
orders for abuse of discretion); In re Marriage of Medeiros, 2023
COA 42M, ¶¶ 28, 58 (reviewing maintenance order for abuse of
discretion).
B. Analysis
¶ 9 When considering a maintenance or child support request, the
court must make findings of, among other things, the parties’
incomes and financial resources. § 14-10-114(3)(a)(I), C.R.S. 2024
(outlining maintenance factors); § 14-10-115(2)(b)(II), (V), C.R.S.
2024 (outlining child support factors). If a party is voluntarily
underemployed, then maintenance and child support shall be
calculated based on a determination of potential income.
§ 14-10-114(8)(c)(IV); § 14-10-115(5)(b)(I).
1
¶ 10 However, before a court can impute a party’s potential income,
it must determine that the party is voluntarily underemployed,
1
This requirement is subject to exceptions, none of which are
applicable here. See § 14-10-114(8)(c)(IV)-(V), C.R.S. 2024.
6
meaning the party is shirking a financial obligation “by
unreasonably foregoing higher paying employment that [they] could
obtain.” Martinez, 70 P.3d at 476. Either parent might forgo higher
paying employment to manipulate a court-ordered support payment
and, thus, be considered voluntarily underemployed, regardless of
whether the parent is the obligor or obligee of the court order. See
In re Marriage of Connerton, 260 P.3d 62, 64, 66 (Colo. App. 2010)
(imputing income to mother who was obligee of child support order).
Moreover, although Martinez analyzed the imputation of potential
income for determining child support under section 14-10-115, the
same analysis applies when imputing income for determining
spousal maintenance under section 14-10-114.
2
In re Marriage of
Young, 2021 COA 96, ¶ 22 (“Though Martinez was a child support
case, the analysis of voluntary underemployment is the same in a
maintenance case.” (quoting In re Marriage of Wright, 2020 COA 11,
¶ 21 n.3)).
2
Father does not dispute that a shirking analysis is required before
imputing potential income to the obligee of a maintenance order
under section 14-10-114.
7
¶ 11 The district court failed to find that mother shirked a financial
obligation and was voluntarily underemployed. In its permanent
orders, the district court said, “Both parties agree that some degree
of income should be imputed to [mother] above her actual
earnings.” However, in the JTMC, mother expressly argued that “[i]t
would be an abuse of discretion to find that mother was voluntarily
underemployed.” Instead, mother asserted that the court should
use her actual income based on a three-year average.
¶ 12 Further, the record is unclear on whether mother shirked any
financial obligations. At the permanent orders hearing, mother
testified that she was self-employed as a part-time certified public
accountant. However, mother said she had an autoimmune attack
in 2021, and ever since her hands have been impaired. Because of
these health issues and having to care for the parties’ son, mother
said she could not work full time. Father also agreed that mother
could not work full time, but he suggested that she could currently
work more hours than she had been working during the last years
of their marriage. Most of the testimony at the permanent orders
hearing went toward how many hours mother could work, but there
8
was little to no development on whether mother was voluntarily
working fewer hours in order to shirk a financial obligation — or, in
other words, whether mother was voluntarily working fewer hours
in order to receive a higher child support award. Thus, on remand,
the district court must determine whether mother was shirking a
financial obligation before it can impute any potential income to
her.
¶ 13 Because the district court’s maintenance and child support
awards were based on mother’s imputed potential income, which
was improperly determined, we reverse those portions of the
permanent orders.
¶ 14 However, we reject mother’s argument that the improper
income imputation also renders the property division erroneous.
First, we note that the parties stipulated to much of the marital
property division in the JTMC. And, to the extent they did not,
their disagreements were not centered around the parties’ economic
circumstances. Second, marital property is divided before
maintenance or child support are determined because determining
those awards requires an understanding of the parties’ financial
9
resources, which include the apportioned marital property. In re
Marriage of de Koning, 2016 CO 2, ¶¶ 21-22. While reevaluating a
property division may require reevaluating maintenance, the need
for reevaluation does not necessarily work in both directions. Cf. id.
at ¶ 26 (holding revaluation of attorney fees award did not require
court to reexamine parties’ financial resources). Thus, although the
imputation of potential income resulted in erroneous maintenance
and child support awards, that does not require the court to
redivide the marital property.
¶ 15 Additionally, mother challenges the district court’s refusal to
order father to pay child support into a special needs trust.
However, the parties’ briefs do not develop any arguments regarding
the programs the child was eligible for, the special needs trust
requirements for those programs under state and federal law, or
how those might interact with section 14-10-117, C.R.S. 2024
(outlining payments of child support). Because we reverse the child
support award and remand for further proceedings, we decline to
consider that issue and, instead, allow the district court to consider
it on remand. See Am. Fam. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Am. Nat’l Prop. & Cas.
10
Co., 2015 COA 135, ¶ 42 (declining to consider undeveloped
argument).
IV. Life Insurance
¶ 16 Mother also argues that the district court erred by denying
mother’s Rule 59 motion, which requested the district court to
specify the amount of life insurance father is required to hold with
mother as the beneficiary. However, we conclude this issue is
unpreserved.
¶ 17 “Ordinarily, raising a new issue for the first time in a [Rule 59]
motion is insufficient to preserve that issue for appeal.” In re
Marriage of Lohman, 2015 COA 134, ¶ 22. In the JTMC, mother
“request[ed] [father] maintain life insurance with [mother] as the
beneficiary in order to secure any financial obligations to [mother]
until such time as those obligations are fulfilled.” Mother did not
request any specific amount of life insurance or say anything more
on the matter, either in the JTMC or at the permanent orders
hearing. And father, in the JTMC, expressly agreed to hold a life
insurance policy for $250,000 for the next eight years. Accordingly,
11
the district court noted that the parties agreed on father’s obligation
to hold life insurance.
¶ 18 Mother’s Rule 59 motion then requested that father hold a life
insurance policy of $850,000. However, as the district court noted,
this amount was not raised in the JTMC or at the final orders
hearing. Thus, the issue is unpreserved, and we do not consider it.
V. Judicial Bias
¶ 19 Next, mother contends that the district court judge who
presided over the permanent orders hearing was biased and should
be disqualified. Her argument focuses on the judge’s comments
about her request to have father pay child support into a special
needs trust. The judge called mother’s request a “scheme” to
“manipulate income” and “launder[ing].” However, we do not
believe these comments rise to the level of bias.
¶ 20 In addressing this issue, we do not consider whether the
district court erred by denying mother’s motion for recusal, which
was filed after her notice of appeal. Instead, we consider whether
mother’s judicial bias arguments disqualify the particular judge
from presiding over the matter on remand and whether the district
12
court’s orders require vacatur. See Black v. Black, 2020 COA 64M,
¶ 131 (declining to disqualify judge on remand).
¶ 21 For a bias claim to be viable, “a judge must show ‘deep-seated
favoritism or antagonism that would make fair judgment
impossible.’” People in Interest of A.P., 2022 CO 24, ¶ 31 (quoting
Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555 (1994)). However,
“judicial remarks during the course of a trial that are critical or
disapproving of, or even hostile to, counsel, the parties, or their
cases, ordinarily do not support a bias or partiality challenge.” Id.
(alteration omitted) (quoting Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555). And
“‘[e]xpressions of impatience, dissatisfaction, annoyance, and even
anger, that are within the bounds of what imperfect [people], even
after having been confirmed as . . . judges, sometimes display’ don’t
establish bias or partiality.” Id. (alterations in original) (quoting
Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555-56).
¶ 22 The judge’s comments were expressions of dissatisfaction that
do not rise to the level of bias. While his comments may have been
misguided, given that Colorado law permits special needs trusts
under certain circumstances — see, e.g., § 15-14-412.8, C.R.S.
13
2024 — they do not suggest that he had an antagonistic opinion of
mother. Rather, his comments exhibited dismay at what he
believed to be an impermissible manipulation of income. See A.P.,
¶ 31. We, therefore, reject mother’s argument that the permanent
orders were issued by a biased judge and are therefore void.
VI. Attorney Fees
¶ 23 Finally, both parties request attorney fees incurred in this
appeal.
¶ 24 Mother requests attorney fees under C.A.R. 38(b) and section
14-10-119, C.R.S. 2024. Rule 38(b) allows attorney fees to be
awarded for frivolous appeals and defense. Father’s briefs on
appeal were not frivolous. Indeed, we affirmed multiple aspects of
the district court’s orders. However, section 14-10-119 does allow a
court to award attorney fees “from time to time, after considering
the financial resources of both parties.” Whether an attorney fees
award is warranted thus depends on the parties’ financial
resources, and because we remand the issue of mother’s income to
be determined by the district court, any attorney fees award should
be determined on remand. See de Koning, ¶ 27.
14
¶ 25 Father asks that we award him attorney fees “[s]hould [we]
agree with [his] initial request” for dismissal based on a
determination that mother failed to preserve her arguments and
that her appeal is untimely. For the reasons stated above, we do
not agree with him. Thus, he is not entitled to an award of attorney
fees.
VII. Disposition
¶ 26 We affirm the judgment in part and reverse it in part, and we
remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
JUDGE GOMEZ and JUDGE KUHN concur.

Case Details

Case Name: Marriage of McCale
Court Name: Colorado Court of Appeals
Date Published: Aug 22, 2024
Docket Number: 23CA1562
Court Abbreviation: Colo. Ct. App.
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