This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A14-0612
A14-1681
Hennepin County, petitioner,
Respondent,
Mamie Jegbadai, petitioner,
Respondent,
vs.
Gbenga Akinnola,
Appellant.
Filed May 4, 2015
Affirmed
Bjorkman, Judge
Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-FA-09-8294
Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Catherine Terese Fridgen, Theresa
Farrell-Strauss, Assistant County Attorneys, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent
Hennepin County)
Mamie Jegbadai, Minneapolis, Minnesota (pro se respondent)
Gbenga Akinnola c/o Busayo Akinnola, Minneapolis, Minnesota (pro se appellant)
Considered and decided by Stauber, Presiding Judge; Bjorkman, Judge; and
Minge, Judge.
Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
BJORKMAN, Judge
Appellant-father challenges two orders denying his motions to modify his child-
support obligation, arguing that the existing support obligation is erroneous because (1) it
is based on his income at the time of the action to establish child support rather than his
income at the time of the parties’ separation, and (2) it does not account for his student-
loan debt. We affirm.
FACTS
Appellant Gbenga Akinnola (father) and respondent Mamie Jegbadai (mother)
were married in March 2006. Their only joint child, C.A., was born in May 2009. Father
and mother separated shortly thereafter. Their marriage was dissolved in Florida in
September 2011, but the Florida court reserved all issues of child support because it
lacked jurisdiction over C.A.
C.A. continued to reside with mother in Minnesota, and mother received medical
assistance from the state for C.A. In May 2013, respondent Hennepin County initiated an
action on behalf of mother to establish child support. A hearing was scheduled for mid-
July, and the county requested financial information from father. Father did not supply
any documentation of his income or expenses but confirmed at the hearing that his annual
income was approximately $70,000. On August 5, a child-support magistrate (CSM)
ordered father to pay $761 in monthly child support and $23 in monthly childcare
support, and to obtain medical and dental insurance for C.A. through his employer. The
CSM also ordered father to reimburse the state $1,524 for past medical assistance and to
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reimburse mother $12,905 for past basic child support. Father sought review of the
CSM’s order, and the district court affirmed. The district court also denied father’s
request to submit evidence of his debt obligations and other expenses, which he had not
timely presented to the CSM. Father did not timely appeal the district court’s order.1
On January 30, 2014, father moved to modify his child-support obligation, arguing
that it should be reduced because of his student-loan debt. At the hearing on the motion,
father testified that he was resigning his position because of discrimination and planned
to take a part-time job working 20 hours per week at $12.50 per hour; in addressing his
potential income, father urged the CSM to consider that he had been earning only $12 per
hour as recently as 2012. Father also asserted that he was attending law school. The
CSM denied father’s motion, finding that father “plans to be voluntarily unemployed”
and failed to show a bona fide career change for child-support purposes. The CSM also
declined to consider father’s student-loan debt. Father requested reconsideration, which
the CSM denied. Father appealed; we stayed the appeal to allow the parties to mediate.
On April 1, father again moved to modify his child-support obligations based on
his student-loan debt. At the hearing on father’s second modification motion, father
testified that he had not resigned but had been discharged, and that he was receiving
unemployment benefits. The CSM discredited these assertions, noting that both are
inconsistent with father’s previous representations and that father presented no
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Father sought reconsideration, and the district court filed two additional orders
clarifying its original order and affirming the CSM’s order. Father appealed the last of
these orders and sought thereby to challenge the district court’s affirmance of the CSM’s
order. We dismissed the appeal as untimely.
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corroborating documentation. The CSM found that father’s “circumstances are
unchanged from those existing at the time of the last hearing” and that he is “voluntarily
unemployed and capable of earning sufficient income to meet the existing support
obligations.” Accordingly, the CSM denied father’s modification motion. Father sought
review, and the district court affirmed the CSM’s order in all respects. Father appealed
the district court’s order. We vacated the stay in father’s pending appeal from the CSM’s
order and consolidated the two appeals.
DECISION
A district court may modify an existing child-support order upon a showing that a
substantial change in circumstances has occurred and that the change makes the terms of
the existing order unreasonable and unfair. Minn. Stat. § 518A.39, subd. 2(a) (2014).
The moving party has the burden of demonstrating both a substantial change in
circumstances and the resulting unfairness and unreasonableness. Rose v. Rose, 765
N.W.2d 142, 145 (Minn. App. 2009). We review the denial of a motion to modify child
support for abuse of discretion. See Putz v. Putz, 645 N.W.2d 343, 352 (Minn. 2002).
Father largely failed to address the modification standard in his argument to the
CSM and district court and does not address it on appeal.2 Instead, he argues that the
existing support obligation is erroneous, unreasonable, and unfair because (1) it is based
2
In support of his modification motions, father alleged one changed circumstance—a
change in his employment. The district court declined to modify child support on this
basis because it determined that father is voluntarily unemployed. Father initially noticed
a challenge to this determination but expressly waived the argument in his principal brief,
stating that he “is no longer pursuing the issue.” Accordingly, we decline to address this
issue.
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on his income in mid-2013, rather than his significantly lower income in April 2009,
when the parties separated, and (2) it does not account for the student-loan debt he
incurred in achieving the higher income level. Neither claimed error warrants reversal
because neither implicates a legal basis to modify father’s child-support obligation. Only
a substantial change in circumstances may justify a modification, and father neither
claims nor substantiates any such change. Accordingly, we discern no abuse of
discretion in the denial of father’s motions to modify child support.
Moreover, we observe that father had ample opportunity to litigate the issues he
now raises. In mid-2013, when the county initiated the child-support proceeding, it asked
father to supply his financial information; he failed to do so. Since then, he has
repeatedly disputed what income and debt evidence should be considered in determining
his support obligation, often through untimely and improperly filed submissions. And
despite these procedural deficiencies, the CSM and district court have repeatedly
considered and rejected father’s substantive arguments. He may not continue to litigate
these issues indefinitely. See Maschoff v. Leiding, 696 N.W.2d 834, 838 (Minn. App.
2005) (noting that, even in family-law matters, “an adjudication on the merits of an issue
is conclusive, and should not be relitigated” (quotation omitted)).
Affirmed.
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