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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 RICHARD GABALDON, JR.,
3 Petitioner-Appellant,
4 vs. No. 31,769
5 MARTHA MONTANO,
6 Respondent-Appellee.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
8 Elizabeth Whitefield, District Judge
9 Elizabeth Stacy Vencill
10 Albuquerque, NM
11 for Appellants
12 James R. Beam
13 Albuquerque, NM
14 for Appellee
15 MEMORANDUM OPINION
16 GARCIA, Judge.
1 Petitioner appeals an order of the district court refusing to enter supplemental
2 findings of fact and conclusions of law. In our notice, we proposed to affirm.
3 Petitioner has responded to our proposal. We have considered his arguments and not
4 being persuaded, we affirm.
5 Petitioner’s docketing statement raised a number of issues arguing violation of
6 fundamental rights, violation of due process, and district court abuse. We proposed
7 to affirm in large part because Petitioner’s arguments were not clear and were
8 unsupported by relevant authorities.
9 Petitioner responds that our notice did not address the jurisdictional issue.
10 There was no jurisdictional issue raised in the docketing statement. Petitioner now
11 appears to be arguing that the issue in this case was whether the district court had
12 jurisdiction to enter supplemental findings and conclusions based on the record. [MIO
13 4] We do not view this as a jurisdictional issue. The district court’s order does not
14 state that it lacked jurisdiction to enter findings of fact and conclusions of law. It
15 simply states that it will not do so. [DM RP 143] We believe that the district court had
16 jurisdiction to enter the findings if it so desired. However, simply because a district
17 court has jurisdiction to act does not mean that it must do so in any particular way.
18 See Sundance Mech. & Util. Corp. v. Atlas, 109 N.M. 683, 687, 789 P.2d 1250, 1254
19 (1990) (“This Court has repeatedly noted that the jurisdiction of a district court does
2
1 not depend on how the court decides a contested issue submitted to it; the test is
2 whether or not it had power to enter upon the inquiry; not whether its conclusion . . .
3 was right or wrong.” (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)). Therefore, the
4 issue here is not whether the district court could act but whether it erred in refusing
5 to rule as Petitioner requested.
6 Petitioner contends that the district court erred in denying his motion “with
7 prejudice.” [MIO 6, DS 11, 12] He argues that such language can have res judicata
8 effect in the future. We fail to see why. The “with prejudice” language is included
9 only in the order denying Petitioner’s request for entry of supplemental findings and
10 conclusions. We view the “with prejudice” language as simply stating that the district
11 court will not entertain future motions for entry of supplemental findings and
12 conclusions based on prior hearings. We do not agree with Petitioner’s view of the
13 language such that he will no longer be able to bring up the record of prior
14 proceedings. There is nothing in the district court’s order that can even remotely be
15 construed as prohibiting Petitioner from referring in the future to matters that are of
16 record in this case.
17 Petitioner argues that the district court should have made the oral findings of
18 the domestic violence commissioner a part of the written record. As we pointed out
19 in our notice, while it might be the better practice to have such findings in the written
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1 record, those findings are nevertheless on the record in this case. Likewise, while
2 written findings are more convenient for the court and the parties, the failure to have
3 them does not rise to the level of a violation of due process or fundamental rights. We
4 agree that judicial efficiency would be promoted by the written memorialization of
5 oral findings of fact. But, Petitioner has cited us no authority and we know of none
6 that requires district court judges to take the most judicially efficient road or risk being
7 reversed by the appellate courts.
8 Petitioner’s attempt to distinguish the authorities upon which we relied for
9 general propositions is unpersuasive. Those cases were cited for the general
10 proposition denoted in the parenthetical. They were not cited for their similarity to this
11 particular case. Thus, any attempt by Petitioner to distinguish them on their facts is
12 unavailing.
13 Further, Petitioner accuses this Court of giving an advisory opinion in our
14 notice when we addressed the res judicata effect of the findings made by the domestic
15 violence commissioner in a pending criminal case. We did so because it appeared to
16 us that Petitioner’s complaint was that without those findings, Respondent could argue
17 in the criminal case that she was the victim when the commissioner had already found
18 that they were both aggressors and both victims. This appeared to us in the nature of
19 a res judicata argument. We simply pointed out that such findings could not be used
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1 to prohibit a criminal prosecution based on the same facts and circumstances. We are
2 simply stating that if this is the reason that Petitioner wants the findings entered, it is
3 not persuasive.
4 Finally, Petitioner argues that the district court was biased because of actions
5 that he contends evened the playing field. [MIO 13] Petitioner has cited us no
6 authority in support of his contention that the district court was biased because it took
7 actions perceived by one party to equalize the parties’ positions. As we pointed out
8 in our notice, simply because a district court rules against a party does not mean that
9 it is biased. State v. Hernandez, 115 N.M. 6, 20, 846 P.2d 312, 326 (1993). Nor do
10 we believe that actions allowing the parties to cool down where it is clear they are
11 jockeying for position establishes bias.
12 For the reasons stated herein and the notice of proposed disposition, we affirm.
13 IT IS SO ORDERED.
14 _______________________________
15 TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
16 WE CONCUR:
17
18 CELIA FOY CASTILLO, Chief Judge
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1
2 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
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