In re Heotis v. Colorado Department of Education

2016 COA 6
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 2016
Docket14CA2374
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 COA 6 (In re Heotis v. Colorado Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Heotis v. Colorado Department of Education, 2016 COA 6 (Colo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2016 COA 06

Court of Appeals No. 14CA2374
Boulder County District Court No. 13CV30085
Honorable Judith L. Labuda, Judge


In the Matter of the Petition of

Sharman Heotis, a/k/a Sharman Petersen,

Petitioner-Appellant,

v.

Colorado Department of Education,

Respondent-Appellee.


APPEAL DISMISSED

Division VI
Opinion by JUDGE BERNARD
Terry and Dunn, JJ., concur

Announced January 14, 2016


Kris A. Gomez, Brooke M. Copass, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellant

Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General, Jonathan P. Fero, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Sarah H. Pennington, Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Respondent-Appellee

¶1         A district court magistrate denied the request of petitioner, Sharman Heotis, who is also known as Sharman Petersen, to seal the record of a criminal case in which she had been the defendant. Ms. Heotis is a teacher, and respondent, the Colorado Department of Education, denied her request to renew her teaching certificate in 2014 because of the criminal case.

¶2         The teacher appealed the magistrate’s order to the district court. The court affirmed the magistrate’s order on different grounds. The teacher then filed this appeal. We dismiss it because we conclude that we do not have jurisdiction over it.

I. Background

¶3         In 2009, as part of a plea disposition resulting in a deferred judgment, the teacher pled guilty to a misdemeanor. She complied with all the required conditions, so, in 2011, the court allowed her to withdraw her guilty plea and dismissed the criminal case.

¶4         Based on the teacher’s involvement in the criminal case, the Department of Education’s board, in a default process, revoked her teaching license in 2011. She learned of the board’s decision when she tried to renew her license in 2012. Since that time, the teacher and the Department have been engaged in a series of proceedings. The teacher wants the Department to renew her license; the Department does not want to do so.

¶5         In mid-January 2013, the teacher filed a petition to seal the records in the criminal case. She filed the petition in the district court, and the Department opposed her request. A magistrate presided over the hearing on the petition.

¶6         The magistrate ruled against the teacher. She appealed to the district court. The district court adopted the magistrate’s order.

¶7         The teacher appealed to this court. The division issued its opinion in mid-2014. The division remanded the case “to the district court with directions to remand to the magistrate” so that the magistrate could resolve four questions. In the Matter of the Petition of Heotis, slip op. at 7 (Colo. App. No. 13CA1270, May 15, 2014)(not published pursuant to C.A.R. 35(f))(Heotis I). The division then stated that, after the magistrate had issued an order resolving those questions, “either party may petition for review by the district court, and file an appeal from the district court’s order, as appropriate.” Id. at 8

¶8         The magistrate issued a second order in September 2014. The order again denied the teacher’s request to seal the records in the criminal case. She sought the district court’s review. The district court modified the magistrate’s order, and it also denied the teacher’s request, although on different grounds.

¶9         The teacher appealed the district court’s decision. So this is the second appeal in this case.

II. Analysis

A. Authority of Magistrates and Appeals from Their Orders

¶10         The authority of district court magistrates, such as the one who entered the orders in this case, to preside over particular cases is set forth in the Colorado Rules for Magistrates. These rules distinguish between cases that a magistrate can hear only with the consent of the parties and cases that a magistrate can hear without the parties’ consent. C.R.M. 6.

¶11         As far as civil cases are concerned, C.R.M. 6(c)(1)(A)–(G) list seven specific situations in which magistrates can hear cases without consent. These situations range, for example, from “[c]onduct[ing] settlement conferences,” C.R.M. 6(c)(1)(A); to “[c]onducting hearings as a master pursuant to C.R.C.P. 53,” C.R.M. 6(c)(1)(D); to “[a]ny other function authorized by statute,” C.R.M. 6(c)(1)(G).

¶12         C.R.M. 6(c)(2) discusses cases in which consent is necessary. It states that “[a] magistrate may perform any function in a civil case except that a magistrate may not preside over jury trials.”

¶13         C.R.M. 3(f)(1)(A) sets forth three ways in which a “a party is deemed to have consented to a proceeding before a magistrate . . . .” One of them is pertinent here: when a “party has been provided notice of the referral, setting, or hearing of a proceeding before a magistrate” and the party does not “file a written objection within 14 days of such notice . . . .” C.R.M. 3(f)(1)(A)(ii).

¶14         C.R.M 7 sets forth the procedures for appealing orders that magistrates have entered. There is an important difference between a case that the magistrate has heard with the parties’ consent and a case that the magistrate heard without their consent.

¶15         C.R.M. 7(a) addresses “[o]rders . . . entered when consent is not necessary.” In such cases, a party may seek review by filing a petition in the district court. C.R.M. 7(a)(5). Once a district court has entered its order, a party may appeal to this court. C.R.M. 7(a)(11).

¶16         The rules are different if consent is necessary for the magistrate to act. C.R.M. 7(b). In such circumstances, a party who wants to appeal a magistrate’s order does not follow the process described by C.R.M. 7(a). Instead, the party skips district court review and appeals “pursuant to the Colorado Rules of Appellate Procedure [to the court of appeals] in the same manner as an order or judgment of a district court.” C.R.M. 7(b). In such cases, magistrates “shall include in any order . . . a written notice that the order . . . was issued with consent, and that any appeal must be taken pursuant to Rule 7(b).” Id.

B. The Appeals in This Case

¶17         The teacher’s request to seal the records in the criminal case relied on then-applicable section 24-72-308. Ch. 272, sec. 16, § 24-72-308, 2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1432; Ch. 289, sec. 7, § 24-72­308, 2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1542-43; Ch. 336, secs. 9-10, § 24-72­308, 2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1959. (We note that the legislature amended and relocated this section in 2014. See Ch. 317, sec. 3, § 24-72-702, 2014 Colo. Sess. Laws 1378. This amendment does not affect our analysis, and we refer to section 24-72-308 in the opinion for ease of reference.) Although the request concerned records in a criminal case, proceedings under this statute are civil cases. Gasper v. Gunter, 851 P.2d 912, 916 n.5 (Colo. 1993); People v. D.K.B.,

Related

In re Heotis v. Colorado Department of Education
2016 COA 6 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 COA 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-heotis-v-colorado-department-of-education-coloctapp-2016.