Court Opinion

ID: 6345519
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-31 19:02:40.595389+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:16.852570
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
  UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
                  AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

                                     IN THE
              ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
                                 DIVISION ONE

                               In re the Matter of:

                               BYRON MURPHY,
                               Petitioner/Appellant,

                                         v.

                         ALEJANDRA RODRIGUEZ,
                            Respondent/Appellee.

                            No. 1 CA-CV 21-0383 FC
                              FILED 5-31-2022

            Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
                           No. FC2019-002947
                The Honorable Margaret LaBianca, Judge

                                   AFFIRMED

                                    COUNSEL

kdlaw, PC, Scottsdale
By Kiilu Davis, Sally M. Colton
Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant

Best Law Firm, Scottsdale
By Alexus C. Mamood, Tali Collins, Nicholas Cote
Counsel for Respondent/Appellee
                        MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                         Decision of the Court

                      MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge David D. Weinzweig delivered the decision of the Court,
in which Judge Brian Y. Furuya and Judge Jennifer M. Perkins joined.

W E I N Z W E I G, Judge:

¶1           Byron Murphy (“Father”) appeals from the superior court’s
award of child support and attorney fees in favor of Alejandra Rodriguez
(“Mother”). We affirm.

             FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2          Father and Mother share one child (“Child”), born in
February 2017. The couple met in high school and never married or lived
together. Father left Arizona to attend the University of Washington.
Mother remained here and gave birth to Child. She became a waitress,
earning wages of $4,100 per month, and shared a loft in her parents’ home
with Child.

¶3            The relationship ended in January 2019. Three months later,
Father was drafted by the Arizona Cardinals, signing a four-year contract
for nearly $8 million ($160,000 per month), and receiving a signing bonus
of nearly $4 million. Father then petitioned the superior court for paternity,
legal decision-making, parenting time and child support. At that time,
Father also began to make voluntary child support payments to Mother of
$1,300 per month.

¶4            The parties agreed on joint legal decision-making and equal
parenting time. They could not agree, however, on child support or
attorney fees. Given the parents’ combined monthly gross income, which
exceeded $20,000, the Arizona Child Support Guidelines pegged the
presumptive Basic Child Support Obligation at $829 per month for one
child. Mother sought an upward deviation to $15,000 per month. Father
offered $1,500 per month, plus 100 percent of uncovered healthcare
expenses and half the extracurricular and daycare expenses.

¶5           And so, the superior court held a one-day trial on that issue,
during which it heard testimony from the parties and their two expert
witnesses. The court then found an upward deviation was appropriate and

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                         MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                          Decision of the Court

ordered Father to pay $6,500 per month in child support, plus Child’s
healthcare expenses, agreed-upon extracurricular activities and school
tuition. The court also ordered Father to pay retroactive child support to
Mother in the amount of $64,400, along with $47,532 in attorney fees. Father
appealed. We have jurisdiction. See A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(1).

                               DISCUSSION

      I.     Child Support

¶6          Father argues the superior court’s upward deviation was not
supported by competent evidence, and Mother did not differentiate her
needs and expenses from Child’s.

¶7            We affirm an award of child support unless it is “devoid of
competent evidence.” Nia v. Nia, 242 Ariz. 419, 422, ¶ 7 (App. 2017). We
accept the superior court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous,
but draw our own legal conclusions from those facts. Nash v. Nash, 232 Ariz.
473, 476, ¶ 5 (App. 2013). We interpret statutes and the Child Support
Guidelines de novo. See Milinovich v. Womack, 236 Ariz. 612, 615, ¶ 7 (App.
2015).

¶8             Parents owe “a duty of support to a child,” and may be
ordered “to pay an amount reasonable and necessary for support of the
child.” See A.R.S. § 25-320 (A). The legislature directed our supreme court
to “establish guidelines for determining the amount of child support” and
“criteria for deviation from them on all relevant factors,” including:

       (1) the financial resources and needs of the child, (2) the
       financial resources and needs of the custodial parent, (3) the
       standard of living the child would have enjoyed if the child
       lived in an intact home with both parents to the extent it is
       economically feasible considering the resources of each
       parent and each parent’s need to maintain a home and to
       provide support for the child when the child is with that
       parent, (4) the physical and emotional condition of the child,
       and the child’s educational needs, (5) the financial resources
       and needs of the noncustodial parent, and (6) the medical
       support plan for the child.

A.R.S. § 25-320(D).

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                        MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                         Decision of the Court

¶9            To that end, the supreme court adopted the Arizona Child
Support Guidelines in 2015, providing a framework to determine the
amount of child support “consistent with the reasonable needs of children
and the ability of parents to pay.” A.R.S. § 25-320 app. (“Guidelines”) §
1(B). The Guidelines were amended in 2018 and 2022. Id. The 2018
Guidelines, which control here, explain that the “total child support
amount approximates the amount that would have been spent on the
children if the parents and children were living together,” and “[e]ach
parent contributes his or her proportionate share of the total child support
amount.” Guidelines (Background).

¶10           The Guidelines supply a chart to determine a presumptive
child support award based on the parents’ combined monthly income. See
Guidelines § 3. “As the parents’ combined gross income increases, so does
the presumptive Basic Child Support Obligation.” Nash, 232 Ariz. at
476, ¶ 8. When, as here, the combined income is $20,000 or more per month,
the presumptive child support award is $829.12 per month. See Guidelines
§§ 2(G)(2), 8. Arizona courts must order this presumptive child support
amount unless “application of the guidelines would be inappropriate or
unjust in a particular case.” See A.R.S. § 25-320(D); Guidelines § 20(A). A
parent who seeks an upward deviation from the presumptive award bears
the burden to prove a deviation is proper:

      The party seeking a sum greater than [the] presumptive
      amount shall bear the burden of proof to establish that a
      higher amount is in the best interests of the children, taking
      into account such factors as the standard of living the children
      would have enjoyed if the parents and children were living
      together, the needs of the children in excess of the
      presumptive amount, consideration of any significant
      disparity in the respective percentages of gross income for
      each party and any other factors which, on a case by case
      basis, demonstrate that the increased amount is appropriate.

Guidelines § 8.
                              Burden of Proof

¶11          As a threshold issue, Father argues the superior court
erroneously placed the burden on him to rebut the need for an upward
deviation. Although the court might have confused the issue in remarks
from the bench, its child support order identified the proper burden: “The
proponent of an upward deviation bears the burden of showing that some
upward deviation is in the best interest of the child.” Cf. Woodford v.

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                         MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                          Decision of the Court

Visciotti, 537 U.S. 19, 24 (2002) (“[R]eadiness to attribute error [based on
imprecise statements of the burden of proof when court cites correct burden
in its order] is inconsistent with the presumption that state courts know and
follow the law.”).

                                Record Evidence

¶12           Father next argues the record lacked competent evidence to
support the court’s upward deviation of child support. Before turning to
the award, however, we emphasize that Father never asked the court to
issue findings of fact and conclusions of law under Arizona Rule of Family
Law Procedure 82(a)(1), and we thus assume the court “found every
controverted fact necessary to sustain the judgment.” See Femiano v. Maust,
248 Ariz. 613, 616, ¶ 12 (App. 2020) (citation omitted).

¶13         Even so, the record includes evidence to support the child
support award. As the court explained:

       The evidence warrants an upward deviation to $6,500 per
       month in current child support, which reflects Mother
       spending approximately $3,000 to $4000 in monthly housing
       costs, $500 to $1,000 in monthly childcare costs, $1,150 in
       monthly vehicle costs and $1500 in monthly costs for the
       child’s activities, toys, clothes, vacations, eating at restaurants
       and other miscellaneous expenditures, as well as paying her
       other expenses.

¶14           We examine each monthly expense in turn.

¶15             Housing costs ($3,000 to $4,000). Mother offered evidence of
the costs and expenses for her to acquire and maintain a home consistent
with the standard of living Child would have enjoyed if he “lived in an
intact home with both parents.” See A.R.S. § 25-320(D)(3). Mother and
Child were living in her parents’ house in a doorless loft bedroom. Mother
testified that she wanted to provide Child with “the best life on both sides,”
and she emphasized that acquiring a home would benefit the child. She
presented market prices for potential homes, and her expert testified about
a range of housing prices.

¶16         Father counters that the evidence was speculative because
Mother never actually paid for housing. But the Guidelines do not require

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                        MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                         Decision of the Court

proof of historical costs and expenses for children to share reasonably in
their parents’ success. See Nash, 232 Ariz. at 480, ¶¶ 26-27.

¶17          Vehicle costs ($1,150). Mother’s expert testified that Mother
had to replace her old car after a car accident. Mother presented evidence,
including bank statements and her affidavit of financial information
(“AFI”), and verified the cost to lease a reliable vehicle for transporting
Child.

¶18            Miscellaneous expenditures ($1,500). As part of a catch-all
category, the court identified “activities, toys, clothes, vacations, [and]
eating at restaurants.” The amount of child support awarded was
supported by evidence including bank statements, AFIs and expert
testimony on these childcare expenses. But the court also included a
general reference to Mother’s “other expenses,” which were never
identified or itemized. This label is ambiguous and leaves room for
speculative error. Even so, we can affirm because the record supports
$1,500 per month for the appropriate child expenses alone. See Nia, 242
Ariz. at 422, ¶ 7 (appeals court may uphold a child support award “for any
reason supported by the record”).

¶19           Childcare costs ($500 to $1,000). Father argues the court had
no factual basis to award Mother this monthly amount for childcare costs
because the maternal grandmother watched Child, which presumably
means that Mother had no childcare costs. But the record includes
reasonable evidence on this point. Mother’s expert testified, based on
actual prior childcare costs, that full-time childcare would cost $1,300 per
month, and the court heard evidence that Father had been consistently
paying $800 per month to Mother for childcare, even when Child was not
enrolled. Nor does this court reweigh evidence or regauge credibility on
appeal. Lehn v. Al-Thanayyan, 246 Ariz. 277, 284, ¶ 20 (App. 2019). The court
did not abuse its discretion.

                             Separate Expenses

¶20           Father contends that the upward deviation should be
reversed because Mother failed to differentiate her own needs and expenses
from Child’s, but the superior court awarded $6,500, less than half the
amount she requested ($15,000), and we assume the court’s reduced award
accounted for any conflated or improper costs. See Fuentes v. Fuentes, 209
Ariz. 51, 55–56, ¶¶ 17–18 (App. 2004) (“Although the trial court’s signed
minute entry does not specifically detail [Father]’s financial situation, the

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                        MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                         Decision of the Court

foregoing evidence is presumed to have been fully considered by the court
prior to issuing its decision.”).

¶21           Mother’s failure to distinguish “every penny” of Child’s
expenses from her own does not compel the superior court to deny an
upward deviation entirely. Cf. Nash, 232 Ariz. at 478, ¶ 18 (mother’s failure
to “prove every penny” of an upward deviation did not mean she is entitled
to no deviation at all).

                        Longevity of Father’s Income

¶22           Father also emphasized the short-lived careers of “many
professional football players,” which sometimes end “after a short time due
to physical injuries.” To that point, however, we remind the parties that
they can move for modification should their circumstances change. See
A.R.S. § 25-327(A); Guidelines § 24(A) (“[E]ither parent . . . may ask the
court to modify a child support order upon a showing of a substantial and
continuing change of circumstances.”).

      II.    Attorney Fees

¶23           And last, Father contests the award of attorney fees to Mother
under A.R.S. § 25-324. We review attorney fee awards for an abuse of
discretion. See Lehn, 246 Ariz. at 286, ¶ 29.

¶24           The superior court may award attorney fees to a party under
§ 25-324 based on the financial resources of both parties, and the
reasonableness of their positions. In awarding Mother one-half of her
attorney fees here, the court found a substantial disparity of financial
resources, and that “Father acted unreasonably in the litigation by
maintaining the position that Arizona law does not support an upward
deviation in this case; and by delayed engagement through several aspects
of the litigation, including discovery, mediation and settlement
correspondence.”

¶25            The court erred when it found Father “acted unreasonably in
the litigation” by opposing an upward deviation. Arizona law requires the
courts to order the presumptive child support award set forth in the
Guidelines. See A.R.S. § 25-320(D); Guidelines § 20(A). Mother bore the
burden to prove an upward deviation was appropriate and the “higher
amount [was] in the best interests of the children.” See Nash, 232 Ariz. at
478, ¶ 16; Guidelines § 8.

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                        MURPHY v. RODRIGUEZ
                         Decision of the Court

¶26           Father did not act unreasonably by exercising his statutory
rights, and holding Mother to her burden of proof. See Routen v. West, 142
F.3d 1434, 1440 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“[A] presumption affords a party, for
whose benefit the presumption runs, the luxury of not having to produce
specific evidence to establish the point at issue.”).

¶27           Even so, we still affirm because this error was harmless. For
one, the record shows an enormous disparity in income between the
parties. See Myrick v. Maloney, 235 Ariz. 491, 494, ¶ 9 (App. 2014) (financial
disparity is one non-exclusive factor courts must consider when awarding
fees under § 25-324). And the court found Father to be unreasonable for
other permissible reasons, including Father’s conduct during discovery and
mediation. See id. (reasonableness is a second factor under the current
statute).
                              CONCLUSION

¶28          We affirm. In our discretion, we award Mother her
reasonable fees and costs incurred on appeal, contingent on compliance
with ARCAP 21. See Magee v. Magee, 206 Ariz. 589, 593, ¶ 22 (App. 2004).

                          AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
                          FILED: AA

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