Builta, Jr. v. Guzman

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 2024
Docket23-FM-0359 & 23-FM-0379
StatusPublished

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Builta, Jr. v. Guzman, (D.C. 2024).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

Nos. 23-FM-0359 & 23-FM-0379

RUSSELL BUILTA, JR., APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE,

V.

SANDRA GUZMÁN, APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT.

Appeals from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2015-DRB-002856) (Hon. Deborah J. Israel, Trial Judge) (Argued March 5, 2024 Decided October 3, 2024) Ronald A. Colbert for appellant/cross-appellee.

Rebekah Sullivan for appellee/cross-appellant. Before BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Chief Judge, DEAHL, Associate Judge, and GLICKMAN, Senior Judge.

GLICKMAN, Senior Judge: Russell Builta, Jr. (appellant/cross-appellee) and

Sandra Guzmán (appellee/cross-appellant) appeal the Superior Court’s rulings on

their motions to amend the child support and child custody arrangements in the order

granting their divorce. The parties raise two principal issues: first, they challenge

the Superior Court’s modification of Mr. Builta’s child support obligation, which

was in part based on increases in his and Ms. Guzmán’s incomes and calculated via 2

an extrapolation of the child support guideline. Second, Mr. Builta and Ms. Guzmán

challenge changes the trial court made or declined to make concerning their custody

arrangements over their child, E.A. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and

reverse in part, and remand to the Superior Court for reconsideration of its child

support order and further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

I. Factual Background

Mr. Builta and Ms. Guzmán have one child, E.A., who was born in 2014. In

2015, Ms. Guzmán sought legal separation from Mr. Builta in the Superior Court,

requesting among other things, child support and sole legal and primary physical

custody of E.A. Mr. Builta responded with a counterclaim for absolute divorce and

sought joint legal and physical custody of E.A. In 2016, while these matters were

still pending, the court issued a support order requiring Mr. Builta to pay Ms.

Guzmán $1,736 per month in child support.

In June 2018, the court issued its Final Order awarding Mr. Builta an absolute

divorce from Ms. Guzmán. The Final Order obligated him to continue paying

$1,736 per month in child support and awarded both parties joint legal custody of

E.A. with tie-breaking authority vested in Mr. Builta. Between themselves, Mr.

Builta and Ms. Guzmán also agreed that they would share joint physical custody of

E.A. “on an equal (50/50) basis” pursuant to a specified schedule. In accordance 3

with the parties’ wishes, the court incorporated, but did not merge, this Consent

Agreement Regarding Physical Custody in its Final Order. Finally, the court

retained jurisdiction to enforce the Final Order’s terms and resolve any disputes

arising under the order. 1

Beginning in June 2019, one year after the trial court entered the Final Order,

Mr. Builta filed a series of motions to modify his child support obligation and the

custody arrangements. First, he sought a change to the custodial exchange day under

the parties’ Consent Agreement and “additional safeguards” to his legal custody

tie-breaking authority. 2 Then, in September 2019, he requested a court order

prohibiting Ms. Guzmán from visiting E.A.’s school during his scheduled time. In

April 2020, Mr. Builta sought a reduction in his child support obligation because

Ms. Guzmán’s salary had significantly increased. And finally, in December 2021,

Mr. Builta filed an emergency motion to hold Ms. Guzmán in contempt for taking

E.A. on a three-week Christmas vacation to Puerto Rico and not transitioning him

during that period to Mr. Builta’s care, allegedly in violation of the schedule

mandated by the Consent Agreement.

1 Ms. Guzmán noted an appeal from the Final Order, which this court dismissed in 2019. 2 Mr. Builta originally requested sole physical custody but changed his request for relief at trial. 4

Ms. Guzmán also moved to modify the custody arrangements. She sought

sole legal and physical custody of E.A. based on what she contended were substantial

and material changes in circumstances—in particular, Mr. Builta’s planned move

(with his new wife and their two dependent children) to Severna Park, Maryland and

his alleged pattern of abusing his tie-breaking authority.

In September 2022, after three days of hearings, the Superior Court issued a

Second Trial Order to resolve all pending motions. In March 2023, after each party

moved the court to amend that order, the court granted Mr. Builta’s motion in part

and denied Ms. Guzmán’s motion. The amended Second Trial Order reduced Mr.

Builta’s child support obligation from $1,736 to $1,644 per month. It also

maintained the parties’ joint legal and physical custody of E.A., as the court found

that neither party had proven a substantial and material change in circumstances

justifying any alteration to the custody arrangements. Despite this, to address some

of the issues that had caused difficulties between Mr. Builta and Ms. Guzmán, the

court made certain changes to the 2018 Final Order that, in its view, did not amount

to significant modifications. These included changing the day specified in the

Consent Agreement for the parties to transfer physical custody of E.A. from

Wednesday to Monday, requiring the parties to notify each other in advance of

long-distance travel with E.A., and limiting the parties’ presence at E.A.’s school

during non-custodial times. Finally, the court found that Ms. Guzmán “did act in 5

contempt of the Court’s First Trial Order” (i.e., the Consent Agreement incorporated

in the Final Order) when she did not return E.A. to Mr. Builta for three weeks, but it

declined to sanction her for that violation.

Before us now are the parties’ appeals of these rulings.

II. The Modification of Mr. Builta’s Child Support Obligation

A. The Statutory Guideline

In the District of Columbia, the Child Support Guideline (“Guideline”), D.C.

Code § 16-916.01, governs the computation and modification of court-ordered child

support.3 The Guideline “set[s] forth an equitable approach to child support in which

both parents share responsibility for the support of the child.” 4 A court must

presumptively rely on the Guideline for calculating child support unless doing so

would be “unjust or inappropriate.”5

Section 16-916.01(q)(1) establishes the procedure a court must presumptively

follow to calculate child support under the circumstances present here—that is,

where the child spends 35% or more of the year with each parent, thereby raising a

3 D.C. Code §16-916.01(a). 4 Id. § 16-916.01(c)(1). 5 Id. § 16-916.01(p). 6

presumption that the parents share physical custody and where neither parent rebuts

that presumption. 6 Under this procedure, the court makes a preliminary

determination of the parents’ “basic child support obligation,” relying on the

Schedule of Basic Child Support Obligations in the Guideline’s appendix (Appendix

I). 7 It uses this figure as a starting point upon which to calculate the parents’ final

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