23CA0495 Peo In Interest of OP 07-03-2024
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 23CA0495
El Paso County District Court No. 21JV106
Honorable Lin Billings Vela, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Appellee,
In the Interest of O.P., a Child,
and Concerning K.P.,
Appellant,
and
Z.L.,
Appellee.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division IV
Opinion by JUDGE JOHNSON
Navarro and Pawar, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced July 3, 2024
Kenneth Hodges, County Attorney, Robert W. Kern Jr., Chief Deputy County
Attorney, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Appellee The People of the State of
Colorado
Josi McCauley, Guardian Ad Litem
The Morgan Law Office, Kristofr P. Morgan, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for
Appellant K.P.
Just Law Group, LLC, John F. Poor, Denver, Colorado, for Appellee Z.L.
1
¶ 1 In this dependency and neglect case, the district court was
asked to determine the paternity of O.P. (the child) as it relates to
K.P., the child’s biological father, and Z.L., the petitioner of the
paternity action. Another man, J.H., did not assert a paternity
claim, but he was awarded protective supervised custody of the
child following the paternity adjudication. K.P. appeals the district
court’s judgment that determined Z.L. to be the child’s legal father
under the Colorado Uniform Parentage Act (UPA). We affirm.
I. Background
¶ 2 The child was born in Arkansas in September 2015. Although
S.L. (mother) was married to but separated from J.H at the time of
the child’s birth, mother was in a relationship with K.P. It is
undisputed that K.P. is the child’s biological father, as biological
test results indicate a 99.99% DNA match between him and the
child. And it is also undisputed that K.P.’s name is on the birth
certificate.
1
1
Because the birth certificate is not in the record, the parties do
not dispute that K.P.’s name is on the document, and the district
court found that his name is on the document, we presume that
this fact is supported by the record. See People v. Duran, 2015 COA
141, ¶ 21 (“Without an adequate record on appeal, we must
presume that the court’s order was correct.”).
2
¶ 3 K.P., the child, and mother remained in Arkansas for
approximately one year. The three then moved to California, where
they lived for approximately ten months. Mother and K.P. then split
up and each moved separately to Colorado.
¶ 4 In Colorado, mother began dating Z.L. in June 2017. In
December 2017, Z.L. moved in with mother and started to take care
of the child. Z.L. and mother married in December 2019 and
remained together until September 2022, when they separated and
Z.L. moved out.
2
¶ 5 Mother and the child came to the attention of the El Paso
County Department of Human Services (the Department) in
November 2020 because of mother’s drug and alcohol abuse and
her violent mistreatment of her children when intoxicated.
3
At first,
the Department instituted a safety plan that required Z.L. to
supervise mother with the child (and O.P.’s siblings). But the
Department was dissatisfied with Z.L.’s compliance with the safety
2
The record does not indicate when mother and J.H. were divorced.
3
In addition to O.P., mother has three children with J.H., all of
whom are older than O.P. Although the other children were part of
the dependency and neglect action, only O.P.’s paternity is at issue
in this appeal.
3
plan as he continued to leave the children alone with mother when
she drank.
¶ 6 As a result, the Department filed a petition in dependency or
neglect in February 2021. The petition named Z.L. as a special
respondent and K.P. as the biological father. The child was
adjudicated dependent and neglected as to mother in March 2021.
The Department did not serve K.P. with the petition until September
2021.
¶ 7 Once K.P. was served, he wanted the child to be returned to
his care. K.P. requested reintegration therapy so that he could
rebuild his relationship with the child.
¶ 8 In April 2022, Z.L. filed a motion in the dependency and
neglect action requesting a determination that he was the child’s
legal father. Z.L. argued that he was the child’s psychological
father, as the child referred to him as “Dad,” he held the child out
as his own, he had been in the child’s life for about five years, he
was the only father the child had known, and it would be
detrimental to the child to sever the relationship since “there is a
clear bond and attachment to [Z.L.].” At the time Z.L. filed his
paternity claim, the child was placed with Z.L.’s parents.
4
¶ 9 K.P. contested Z.L.’s paternity claim, arguing that mother
alienated him from child, the child and K.P. had bonded during
reintegration therapy, K.P. is the biological father, and K.P. cared
for the child “as an involved Father from her birth through
approximately her second year.” K.P. also argued that he has
cleared his active warrants and had stable employment and
housing.
¶ 10 A one-day paternity hearing was held in December 2022 with
the parties submitting written closing arguments. The Department
did not take a position on the paternity claims. The district court
found that both K.P. and Z.L. had established paternity
presumptions and that neither had rebutted the other man’s
presumption. Then, applying the UPA factors, the court found the
best interests of the child weighed in favor of adjudicating Z.L. the
child’s legal father.
4
¶ 11 K.P. appeals, contending that the district court erred in its
paternity adjudication because (1) it failed to consider the
significance of his name listed on the child’s birth certificate, and he
4
J.H. did not assert a paternity claim over the child although he
maintained custody of the child’s three half-siblings.
5
should have also had the paternity presumption in section 19-4-
105(1)(d), C.R.S. 2023; and (2) it abused its discretion by failing to
adjudicate K.P. as the child’s legal father based on the weightier
considerations of policy and logic.
II. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
¶ 12 “The UPA governs the court’s jurisdiction to establish a
parent-child relationship and mandates specific procedures that
must be followed when a party seeks to establish paternity.” In re
Support of E.K., 2013 COA 99, ¶ 9; see also §§ 19-4-101 to -130,
C.R.S. 2023. As a result, the UPA can be invoked as part of a
dependency and neglect proceeding. People in Interest of K.L.W.,
2021 COA 56, ¶ 14; see also People in Interest of J.G.C., 2013 COA
171, ¶ 10.
¶ 13 A man is presumed to be a child’s natural father if, while the
child is under the age of majority, he receives the child into his
home and openly holds out the child as his natural child. § 19-4-
6
105(1)(d); see People in Interest of O.S-H., 2021 COA 130, ¶ 52. A
biological father is also a presumed parent. See § 19-4-105(1)(f).
5
¶ 14 But neither presumption is conclusive, including the
presumption in favor of a biological parent. N.A.H. v. S.L.S., 9 P.3d
354, 361 (Colo. 2000) (“[S]ection 19-4-105 does not indicate that
the presumption of legitimacy automatically outweighs the
presumption of biology, or that the converse is true.”). Rather, any
presumption can be rebutted by clear and convincing evidence.
§ 19-4-105(2)(a); J.G.C., ¶ 21.
¶ 15 When two or more conflicting presumptions of paternity arise,
and neither has been rebutted by clear and convincing evidence,
the court must then determine by a preponderance of the evidence
that the presumption founded on the weightier considerations of
5
Section 19-4-105(1)(f) states that a person is a presumed natural
parent if
[t]he genetic tests or other tests of inherited
characteristics have been administered
pursuant to section 13-25-126, and the results
show that the alleged genetic parent is not
excluded as the probable genetic parent and
that the probability of the person’s genetic
parentage is ninety-seven percent or higher.
This subsection (3)(f) [sic] does not apply to a
donor as defined in section 19-1-103.
7
policy and logic controls. § 19-4-105(2)(a); J.G.C., ¶ 22. In
determining which presumption controls, the court considers, in
relevant part,
(I) The length of time between the proceeding
to determine parentage and the time that the
presumed parent was placed on notice that the
presumed parent might not be the genetic
parent . . . ;
(II) The length of time during which the
presumed parent has assumed the role of the
child’s parent;
(III) The facts surrounding the presumed
parent’s discovery of the possibility that the
presumed parent was not a genetic
parent . . . ;
(IV) The nature of the existing parent-child
relationship;
(V) The child’s age;
(VI) The child’s relationship to any presumed
parent or parents;
(VII) The extent to which the passage of time
reduces the chances of establishing another
person’s parentage and a child support
obligation in favor of the child; and
(VIII) Any other factors that may affect the
equities arising from the disruption of the
parent-child relationship between the child
and the presumed parent or parents or the
chance of other harm to the child.
8
§ 19-4-105(2)(a)(I)-(VIII).
¶ 16 This inquiry is fact intensive. N.A.H., 9 P.3d at 362. The
court’s primary concern in “making a parentage determination is
the child’s best interests and not the rights of, or the fairness to,
each of the presumptive parents.” K.L.W., ¶ 50; see In re Parental
Responsibilities Concerning A.R.L., 2013 COA 170, ¶ 18 (“[A]t the
heart of any parentage decision is the child’s best interests.”).
¶ 17 We review de novo whether the court considered and applied
the correct legal standard in determining paternity. K.L.W., ¶ 42.
But we review the court’s paternity determination for clear error,
People in Interest of M.B., 2020 COA 13, ¶ 39, which occurs if its
factual findings are unsupported by the record, People in Interest of
J.C.S., 169 P.3d 240, 243 (Colo. App. 2007) (“If the record supports
a factual finding, we are bound by it under the clear error test.”).
And we review for abuse of discretion the court’s fact-intensive
process of weighing the statutory factors and the child’s best
interest to determine which presumption should control. See W.C.
in Interest of A.M.K., 907 P.2d 719, 722-23 (Colo. App. 1995); see
also N.A.H., 9 P.3d at 362-66. An abuse of discretion occurs when
9
the court’s decision is manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair
or a misapplication of the law. See W.C., 907 P.2d at 723.
III. Preservation
¶ 18 Z.L. contends that K.P. did not preserve his arguments raised
on appeal concerning the court’s consideration of certain
presumptions to which K.P. now argues he was entitled. We agree.
A. Name on Birth Certificate
¶ 19 K.P. contends that he preserved his argument that he was
entitled to a conclusive legal determination of parentage because
his name is on the child’s birth certificate and he is the biological
father. He relies on the presumption in 19-4-105(1)(f), which
governs the results of a genetic test that proved he was the
biological parent. He points to the paternity results he filed in June
2022 that established him as the child’s biological father.
¶ 20 He also relies on section 19-4-105(1)(e), C.R.S. 2021, a
provision that was in effect at the time Z.L. filed his motion seeking
adjudication as the child’s legal father. But the General Assembly
repealed that provision by the time the district court held the
hearing and entered the paternity judgment. When in effect,
section 19-4-105(1)(e) authorized a paternity presumption if a man
10
acknowledged the paternity of a child in writing and the writing was
filed with a court or the registrar of vital statistics. That provision
stated,
He acknowledges his paternity of the child in a
writing filed with the court or registrar of vital
statistics, which shall promptly inform the
mother of the filing of the acknowledgment,
and she does not dispute the acknowledgment
within a reasonable time after being informed
thereof, in a writing filed with the court or
registrar of vital statistics, if such
acknowledgment has not previously become a
legal finding pursuant to paragraph (b) of
subsection (2) of this section. If another man
is presumed under this section to be the
child’s father, acknowledgment may be effected
only with the written consent of the presumed
father or after the presumption has been
rebutted.[
6
]
§ 19-4-105(1)(e), C.R.S. 2021.
¶ 21 K.P.’s argument continues that, although it is unclear whether
mother asserted a paternity affidavit on his behalf, as required by
section 19-4-105(2)(b), his name on the birth certificate and being
6
This provision was removed from the UPA by the General
Assembly, effective August 10, 2022. See Ch. 210, sec. 4, § 19-4-
105(1)(e), 2022 Colo. Sess. Laws. 1390. Under the current version
of the UPA, some but not all the elements of former section 19-4-
105(1)(e) appear in section 19-4-105(2)(a.5), although the
requirements significantly differ.
11
the biological father entitled him to two presumptions, the
significance of which had not been considered by the court.
¶ 22 To support that he preserved these two presumptions, he
points us to the December 6, 2022 hearing where he stated, “[The
child] was already over 5 at that time [Z.L. filed his paternity
determination motion] and it is my understanding that [K.P.’s]
name did appear on the birth certificate of the child. In addition,
there was a DNA – a paternity test done by DNA.” And, although he
did not refer to his closing argument to support preservation, we
note that he also made a similar statement there that he was
entitled to two paternity presumptions.
¶ 23 We do not dispute that K.P. asserted these two presumptions
below. But, as we mention above, section 19-4-105(1)(e) was not in
effect by December 2022, and K.P. cannot rely on a presumption
that was repealed by the General Assembly.
¶ 24 And even assuming K.P. could rely on that presumption
because Z.L.’s paternity claim was filed before the provision was
repealed, K.P.’s arguments were not preserved. At the December 6,
2022 hearing, K.P. failed to make the connection that subsections
(1)(e) and (1)(f) entitled him to a conclusory parentage presumption
12
over Z.L., or that because he had two presumptions, he was entitled
to greater consideration under the UPA. He also did not make any
argument that the voluntary acknowledgment of his parentage on
the birth certificate entitled him to a de facto determination that he
was the child’s legal parent. Simply referring to statutory
provisions does not preserve an issue for appellate review if the
litigant fails to adequately put the district court on notice as to how
it should consider, interpret, or weigh those provisions. Therefore,
we deem this argument unpreserved. See Wolven v. Velez, 2024
COA 8, ¶ 8 (“To preserve an issue for appeal, an appellant, during
trial, must raise it in a manner specific enough that it ‘draws the
[trial] court’s attention to the asserted error.’” (quoting People v.
McFee, 2016 COA 97, ¶ 31)); Curry v. Zag Built LLC, 2018 COA 66,
¶ 61 (“To preserve a contention, a party does not have to cite a
specific statute, but it must at least raise the issue to the trial
court, so that the court has an opportunity to rule on it.”) (citations
omitted).
¶ 25 And any claim on appeal that he was entitled to a conclusive
determination of paternity is contrary to the position he took in his
closing argument, where he said that the case was one of competing
13
presumptions because no one presumption had been rebutted by
clear and convincing evidence, and therefore, the court needed to
decide the UPA claim on the “weightier considerations of policy and
logic.” Therefore, we will not address this argument on the merits.
See Laleh v. Johnson, 2016 COA 4, ¶ 8, aff’d on other grounds 2017
CO 93.
B. Section 19-4-105(1)(d)
¶ 26 K.P. also contends that “the district court failed to consider
that he was entitled to a presumption of paternity pursuant to
[section 19-4-105(1)(d)] in that for the first two years of [the child’s]
life she lived with K.P. and Mother as a family and K.P. openly held
her out as his natural child.” While that may be true, K.P.
specifically argued to the district court that he was entitled to the
presumptions in subsections (1)(f) and (1)(e) of section 19-4-105,
and that Z.L. was entitled to the presumption in subsection (1)(d).
So, not only is K.P.’s appellate argument unpreserved, but his
position below invited the court’s alleged error in failing to afford
him the presumption of section 19-4-105(1)(d). Thus, we will not
review his new claim. See People v. Zapata, 779 P.2d 1307, 1309
(Colo. 1989) (“[A] party may not complain on appeal of an error that
14
he has invited or injected into the case; he must abide by the
consequences of his acts.”).
7
IV. The Paternity Adjudication
¶ 27 K.P. contends the district court erred by determining that the
weightier considerations of policy and logic favored adjudicating
Z.L. as the child’s legal father. We disagree.
A. District Court Order
¶ 28 Although the district court did not explicitly identify which
presumption belonged to Z.L. and which belonged to K.P., it
determined that the men had competing presumptions. As noted
above, K.P. asserted the paternity presumption in section 19-4-
105(1)(f) that he was the child’s biological parent and the
presumption in section 19-4-105(1)(e) that his name appeared on
the child’s birth certificate. Z.L. asserted the presumption in
section 19-4-105(1)(d) that he had taken the child into his home
and had held the child out as his own. Although the court did not
explicitly find whether any presumptions had been rebutted by
7
And, though we need not decide it, we question whether the
biological father can even assert a paternity presumption under
section 19-4-105(1)(d).
15
clear and convincing evidence, it implicitly concluded that none had
been rebutted when it turned to the second part of the analysis in
the UPA.
¶ 29 For the reasons we stated above, K.P. had not preserved his
arguments that he had essentially rebutted Z.L.’s presumption by
being both the child’s biological parent and having his name on the
child’s birth certificate. And, as also noted above, K.P. took the
position in his closing argument, quoting section 19-4-105(2)(a),
that “no presumptions were rebutted, and the court must determine
the competing presumptions based on the ‘weightier considerations
of policy and logic.’”
¶ 30 The district court then resolved the competing presumptions
considering the factors in section 19-4-105(2)(a)(I)-(VIII) and what
would be in the child’s best interests, finding Z.L. to be the child’s
legal father. We conclude that the district court applied the correct
legal standard in determining paternity.
B. Weightier Considerations of Policy and Logic and Best
Interests Analysis
¶ 31 Turning to the merits determination, we conclude that the
district court did not abuse its discretion in weighing the factors
16
found in section 19-4-105(2)(a)(I)-(VIII), as there is evidence
supporting the court’s decision in the record. We also conclude
that the court did not abuse its discretion by determining that it
was in the best interests of the child for Z.L. to be adjudicated the
child’s legal father. Therefore, we discern no basis to disturb the
district court’s order.
¶ 32 Considering the length of time K.P. and Z.L. had assumed a
parental role under section 19-4-105(2)(a)(II), the district court
recognized that K.P. and mother “were an intact couple when child
was born and for the first [eighteen] months of her life,” and that
following K.P.’s disengagement, Z.L. had an immediate relationship
with the child “without a break from July of 2017 to now.” Indeed,
K.P. did not interact with the child from 2017 until after the
commencement of the dependency and neglect action giving rise to
the subject paternity determination, and the court surmised that
K.P. would not have reentered the child’s life but for the court
action. K.P. admitted that he had been absent from the child’s life
for “three to four years.”
¶ 33 The district court considered the nature of the existing
relationships between child and both Z.L. and K.P. under section
17
19-4-105(2)(a)(IV) and (VI). It determined that K.P. admitted he had
not prioritized the child for many years because he had been busy
with familial health issues and his criminal matters. K.P. stated,
“[B]efore I can get my daughter, I have to save my life,” when
referring to his criminal matters.
¶ 34 K.P. further claimed that he had been unable to maintain his
relationship with the child because of mother’s alienation. The
court found that, although there “has been alienation,” K.P.’s
disengagement was more a result of his failure to act than mother’s
behavior. For example, the court noted that “there was a domestic
violence incident [between K.P. and mother] and a protection order
was granted” for mother’s safety.
¶ 35 And mother asserted that she did not alienate K.P. from the
child, but that K.P. neglected his parental responsibilities once her
relationship with Z.L. was made “Facebook official” in 2017. The
record supports that, even though there was a protection order in
place, K.P. had been allowed to communicate with mother and the
child through the “Talking Parents app,” but he never did.
¶ 36 The district court considered the child’s age under section 19-
4-105(2)(a)(V). It concluded that K.P. was present in the child’s life
18
through the first few years, but that Z.L. “has been present for a
much longer duration of the child’s life.” Indeed, since June 2017,
Z.L. had held himself out as the child’s father and became a de
facto parent in K.P.’s absence.
¶ 37 And the record supports that even after Z.L. and mother had
separated, Z.L. continued to have contact with the child, including
midweek dinners and extended stays with the child every Sunday.
Z.L. testified that he supports the child “financially, emotionally,
pretty much psychologically. If she needs something, even if she
wants something, I feel not obligated but I’m driven to try to get it
for her.” Mother agreed with Z.L. that he is the child’s psychological
father.
¶ 38 The court noted that J.H. had the strongest case for paternity,
ostensibly because J.H. was the father of the child’s three half-
siblings. But as mentioned above, J.H. did not assert a paternity
claim. The court found instead that between Z.L. and K.P., the
child’s relationship was stronger with Z.L. The record indicates that
the child had been apprehensive to engage in reintegration therapy
with K.P. because “she only heard bad things about him” and her
maternal family has ill feelings toward him. The child, however,
19
later reported a positive relationship with K.P. after both engaged in
reintegration therapy.
¶ 39 Even so, the child referred to Z.L. as “Dad,” Z.L. held the child
out as his own, and Z.L. had acted as a parent by supporting but
also disciplining the child. The court found “there is a clear bond
and attachment” between the child and Z.L. When asked how he
knew the child loved him, Z.L. stated, “Aside from us telling each
other, ‘I love you,’ I just – I see it when I go to pick her up for visits
and stuff.” He pointed to specific instances, saying, “I ring the
doorbell and she suddenly appears behind me because she came
out of the garage and she’s all smiles and jumping up and down,
‘Where are we going? What are we doing?’ It’s cool to feel wanted
like that so I think it’s based in love.”
¶ 40 And despite the fact that Z.L. and mother were no longer a
couple, the court found that Z.L. continued to provide financial
support to mother and the child and Z.L. saw the child at least two
times a week. Indeed, when probed about his understanding that
he would potentially be required to pay child support if adjudicated
the legal father, Z.L. stated, “[T]hat doesn’t matter,” and “[t]hat’s my
daughter. I support her now anyways. I will continue to support
20
her. Even if I’m not required to pay child support or however this
goes, if [the child] ever needed anything from me, she could call on
me, so.” Although K.P. had asserted he had obtained a successful
job, there was no evidence that he had financially supported the
child for the previous four years. Specifically, mother testified that
K.P. provided financial support for the child when the two were a
couple, but once she began to date Z.L., K.P. stopped helping
financially and mother did not bother seeking child support.
¶ 41 Weighing all the factors together, the court considered the
child’s best interest and determined that, although it is important
for the child to have a relationship with her biological father, the
child’s relationship was stronger with Z.L. And the court credited
the court evaluator’s testimony that “[found] it highly detrimental to
sever the only parent child relationship she has.”
¶ 42 Nonetheless, K.P. rehashes the arguments that the court erred
in its analysis because he is the biological father and his name
appears on the birth certificate. But biology is not a dispositive
factor under the UPA, and it is measured against the other
presumptions listed in section 19-4-105(1) if another man has
asserted and has proved that he is also entitled to a paternity
21
presumption. See N.A.H., 9 P.3d at 361. By listing a myriad of
potential paternity presumptions, the General Assembly has
evinced its intent that no factor is dispositive but must be decided
under the UPA framework and guidelines, which is precisely what
the court did here. See People v. Coleman, 2018 COA 67, ¶ 41.
¶ 43 And many of K.P.’s arguments relate to the court’s application
of the statutory factors, which would require us to reweigh the
evidence, something we cannot do. See Owners Ins. Co. v. Dakota
Station II Condo. Ass’n, 2021 COA 114, ¶ 50 (it is within the sole
province of the fact finder to determine the sufficiency and weight of
the evidence, and we may not reweigh evidence or substitute our
own judgment for that of the fact finder). Nor is it proper for us to
make credibility determinations as to witness testimony. See
Chapman v. Willey, 134 P.3d 568, 569 (Colo. App. 2006) (noting
that a court’s credibility determination will only be disturbed if
clearly erroneous and not supported by the record).
¶ 44 For example, although the court found that both mother and
K.P. were not credible on their contrary allegations as to why they
separated, the court gave the edge to mother because a protection
order had been issued against K.P. given his domestically violent
22
actions toward mother. Based on K.P.’s many years’ absence from
the child’s life and his lack of financial support for the child, and
Z.L.’s continued presence and financial support, even though he
and mother are now separated, the court did not abuse its
discretion by concluding that it would be “detrimental” to sever the
relationship the child has with Z.L., and thus, it was in the child’s
best interest for Z.L. to be adjudicated the child’s legal father.
¶ 45 On this record, we discern no basis for reversal of the court’s
judgment.
V. Conclusion
¶ 46 The judgment is affirmed.
JUDGE NAVARRO and JUDGE PAWAR concur.