No. 03CA0235.Colorado Court of Appeals.
March 25, 2004.
City and County of Denver District Court No. 90DR1098, Honorable Joseph E. Meyer, III, Judge.
Salvador A. Rivera (father) appeals from the district court order adopting the order of the magistrate that Benita R. Quintana, now known as Benita R. Thompson (mother), pay child support arrearages. We affirm.
ORDER AFFIRMED.
Page 465
Kurtz Peckham, Thomas R. Cincotta, Denver, Colorado, for Appellant.
No Appearance for Appellee.
Division A.
Opinion by CHIEF JUDGE DAVIDSON.
[1] In 1996, the magistrate approved the parties’ stipulation providing for father’s primary custody of the children and mother’s parenting time and payment of child support in the amount of $617 per month. When mother’s wages were garnished in 2001, she filed a pro se motion requesting a hearing “to establish a correct and accurate time period for the child support obligation and to determine who is responsible to pay support to whom.” She alleged that adjustments were necessary because the parties reconciled and lived together for periods of time and that one child now lived with her. Father asserted that mother owed arrearages of $28,000 and $9000 in interest. [2] Noting that the testimony was conflicting, the magistrate found that the parties resided together with the children from December 1996 through March 1998, and therefore no child support was due from mother for this period. The magistrate found that one child lived with mother from March 1998 until January 1999, but until his emancipation in June 2001, he resided in both parties’ homes and that “it is impossible to determine when he lived with each [p]arty specifically.” A second, older child spent “significant time” with mother. The magistrate therefore concluded that because she “cannot mathematically determine the child support owed . . . the sum of $10,000 is appropriate based on the equities presented.”Page 466
[3] Father requested district court review, asserting that the sum of $10,000 was arbitrary, the findings were clearly erroneous, and the magistrate erred in failing to award interest. Noting that no transcript of the hearing was submitted, the district court “assume[d] that the factual findings made by the magistrate are supported by competent evidence.” Accordingly, the court adopted the magistrate’s order. I.
[4] Father contends first that the district court erred in assuming that his failure to file a transcript warranted the conclusion that the magistrate’s findings were supported by the evidence. We disagree.
(Colo.App. 1984). Thus, we hold that a party seeking review of a magistrate’s order shoulders the burden of providing a record justifying the rejection or modification of that order. Absent such a record, the district court may presume the regularity of the magistrate’s proceedings. [8] Here, the district court did not have the transcript of the hearing before the magistrate and, therefore, correctly determined that it must assume that the magistrate’s factual findings were supported by the evidence.
II.
[9] Father also contends that, even if the district court could assume the magistrate’s order is supported by the evidence, the district court still erred in adopting the order. He asserts that the district court could not decrease mother’s child support obligation retroactively in determining arrearages. Again, we disagree.
Page 467
[12] Accordingly, the district court could adopt the magistrate’s grant of equitable relief. The magistrate, citing Jacobs, properly exercised the discretion to grant such relief. And contrary to father’s argument, there is no indication that the magistrate modified child support under § 14-10-122(5), C.R.S. 2003, because the findings and pleadings indicate that the issues included whether and when the change in physical care occurred. See In re Marriage of Emerson, 77 P.3d 923 (Colo.App. 2003) (discussing modification of child support when a mutually agreed change of physical care occurs). [13] In a related contention, father asserts that the district court erred in adopting the magistrate’s order because the magistrate improperly shifted the burden of proof to father. However, inasmuch as father’s support for this argument comes from the transcript, we cannot review this contention. See Bd. of Med. Exam’rs v. Duhon, supra. [14] The order is affirmed. [15] JUDGE CRISWELL[*] and JUDGE PLANK[*] concur.