In the Marriage of: Jarrid Daniel DeGolier v. Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron, ...

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 9, 2026
Docketa250309
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Marriage of: Jarrid Daniel DeGolier v. Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron, ... (In the Marriage of: Jarrid Daniel DeGolier v. Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron, ...) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Marriage of: Jarrid Daniel DeGolier v. Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron, ..., (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A25-0309

In the Marriage of:

Jarrid Daniel DeGolier, petitioner, Respondent,

vs.

Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron, Appellant.

Filed March 9, 2026 Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded Bratvold, Judge

Anoka County District Court File No. 02-FA-22-427

Whitney K. Sevilla, Tressler Law, LLC, Edina, Minnesota (for respondent)

Jessica Jean Baron, Anoka, Minnesota (pro se appellant)

Considered and decided by Cochran, Presiding Judge; Bratvold, Judge; and

Schmidt, Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

BRATVOLD, Judge

This appeal challenges the district court’s denial of appellant’s postdissolution

motions. Appellant argues that the district court erred by denying her motions as untimely

under Minnesota Statutes section 518.145 (2024) based on the district court’s conclusion that appellant filed the motions more than one year after the judgment and decree. We

affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

FACTS

Appellant Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron and respondent Jarrid Daniel DeGolier were

married in 1997. DeGolier filed for dissolution of their marriage in March 2022. Baron and

DeGolier had one child who was still a minor at the time of dissolution (daughter).

Daughter turned 18 years old in 2024.

In August 2023, the district court held a trial over disputed issues—legal and

physical custody, child support, parenting time, division of marital property, and spousal

maintenance. In a written decision, the district court awarded the parties joint legal custody

over daughter and awarded Baron sole physical custody. DeGolier was obligated to pay

$470 per month in child support, the marital property was divided, and both parties were

denied spousal maintenance. On November 16, 2023, the district court entered its judgment

and decree.

Baron moved for amended findings and order and sought increased child support;

one-half of DeGolier’s retirement account; amendments to the district court’s findings on

the parties’ assets, expenses, income, and budget; an award of spousal maintenance; an

offset to the equalizer payment Baron owed DeGolier; and a name change. After a hearing

in February 2024, the district court filed an amended-findings order on March 13, 2024,

granting Baron’s motion to change her name and denying all other motions.

On November 22, 2024, Baron’s attorney withdrew from representation, and Baron

represented herself in subsequent proceedings. On November 27, 2024, Baron moved the

2 district court to “[e]nforce established child support to be paid in full and include 2022 and

2023, adjust[ed] to reflect [DeGolier’s] income” from 2022 through 2024 including

“medical and extra-curricular payments that have not been paid.” Baron’s motion also

sought to “[e]stablish spousal maintenance” and “address back child support owed from

2022 and 2023.” On the same day, Baron separately moved to modify child support and

award spousal maintenance.

On December 9, 2024, Baron again moved to modify child support and award

spousal maintenance. Along with this motion, Baron submitted an affidavit and eight

handwritten pages, each titled “Decree Flaws Supporting in Motion to Modify Child

Support and Spousal Maintenance.” That same day, Baron separately moved to use

DeGolier’s “bank statements provided to support and set child support income along with

pay stubs.” Baron alleged that DeGolier’s “taxes are incorrect and do not reflect deposits,”

and she repeated requests made in her November 27 motion. Also on December 9, Baron

moved for contempt proceedings against DeGolier for failure to pay child support.

On January 17, 2025, Baron moved the district court for discovery, requesting that

DeGolier “show the court evidence of schedule C write offs of self-employment on 2023

taxes” and include “proof of claimed vehicle ownership,” “proofs of vehicle expenses,”

and “proof of where and who continuous direct electronic deposits to [DeGolier’s] bank

account are from and what they are for.”

On the same day, Baron filed a response to a motion for attorney fees and costs

made by DeGolier, citing section 518.145, subdivision 2, and alleging, among other things,

that DeGolier provided false information to the district court regarding his income during

3 the dissolution proceedings. Baron also asserted that daughter’s “disability certification

from the state . . . was not officially finalized” and her own spinal-stenosis diagnosis “was

not verified via MRI and Orthopedic” doctor until after the final dissolution hearing.

Baron filed another motion on January 21, 2025, again citing section 518.145,

subdivision 2, “requesting relief and justice” in her favor based on “proofs of [DeGolier]

lying in court [about] his income and assets” and alleging that DeGolier and his attorney

“created fraud and hid [DeGolier’s] income.” Baron also requested “some spousal

maintenance or benefit . . . due to [a] new finding of severe spinal stenosis.” And Baron

asked the district court to “grant [her] a true and correct real address for” DeGolier.

On January 23, 2025, Baron filed in district court a summary of all of her

outstanding motions, stating that she was seeking (1) payment of DeGolier’s past-due child

support; (2) payment of DeGolier’s past-due share of medical and hockey expenses related

to daughter; (3) modification of child support based on DeGolier’s income as documented

by deposits to his bank account; (4) payment for damage to the home security system

installed in the Duluth home awarded to DeGolier in the judgment and decree;

(5) reimbursement of property taxes that Baron paid in 2022 and 2023; (6) an award of half

of DeGolier’s retirement account; and (7) an award of spousal maintenance. In a separate

motion filed on the same day, Baron argued that she was entitled to reopen the judgment

and decree under section 518.145, subdivision 2.

4 On January 27, 2025, and after a hearing, the district court filed an order denying

Baron’s motions. In the order, the district court summarized the pending motions. 1 The

district court also identified Baron’s requests as seeking payment of DeGolier’s “past due

child support”; payment of DeGolier’s “past due share of medical and hockey expenses”;

modification of child-support payment amounts “based off” DeGolier’s “bank statements

[and] deposits”; payment for the home security system that was damaged when DeGolier

accessed the Duluth home; reimbursement of property taxes Baron paid in 2022 and 2023;

an award of half of DeGolier’s retirement account; and an award of spousal maintenance

because DeGolier “can afford spousal maintenance.”

The district court determined that Baron’s “various motions effectively ask the

Court to reopen” the parties’ judgment and decree and “reverse its findings on child support

and spousal maintenance.” The district court also stated, quoting section 518.145,

subdivision 2, that “[s]uch motions must be made within a reasonable time and ‘not more

than one year after the judgment and decree . . . was entered or taken.’” The district court

concluded that “the appropriate action for [Baron] to take, based on the contents of her

motions and the time elapsed since entry of the [judgment and decree], would have been

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In the Marriage of: Jarrid Daniel DeGolier v. Jessica Jean DeGolier Baron, ..., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-marriage-of-jarrid-daniel-degolier-v-jessica-jean-degolier-baron-minnctapp-2026.