Court Opinion

ID: 6339544
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-11 15:07:32.239791+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:49:10.514729
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                  No. 21-0693
                              Filed May 11, 2022

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF BEKELE TUKE ADAM
AND HABIBA HUSSEIN ADAM

Upon the Petition of
BEKELE TUKE ADAM,
      Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning
HABIBA HUSSEIN ADAM,
     Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Lars G. Anderson,

Judge.

      A former husband appeals the district court decision granting a dissolution

rather than an annulment of his marriage. AFFIRMED.

      Joseph C. Pavelich of Spies & Pavelich, Iowa City, for appellant.

      Charles L. Pierce of Iowa Legal Aid, Iowa City, for appellee.

      Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Badding, JJ.
                                          2

TABOR, Judge.

       Bekele Adam and Habiba Kedir chose to end their marriage.               Bekele

preferred an annulment, but the district court rejected that bid and granted a

dissolution.   Bekele appeals contending two statutory grounds exist for an

annulment: (1) the marriage was prohibited by law and (2) one of the parties was

impotent at the time of the marriage. See Iowa Code § 598.29 (2018). Because

Bekele failed to prove either ground, we affirm the dissolution.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

       Both Bekele and Habiba are from Ethiopia and immigrated to the United

States, he as a refugee and she on a fiancée visa. But the record regarding their

marriage histories is imprecise. Bekele testified he married his first wife in Ethiopia

in 1986, then gave wavering testimony about the validity of that marriage. That

wife disappeared from Ethiopia shortly after their purported marriage.

       Bekele met Habiba in 2000—he was forty-three and she was sixteen. She

testified that she was a student at the school where Bekele was a teacher. Shortly

after they met, Bekele asked Habiba’s family if he could marry her. Bekele and

Habiba had a ceremony that same year, though they disagree about what it

symbolized. He claimed his family attended an engagement ceremony. But she

testified it was a wedding. To counter, Bekele introduced several letters from

municipal authorities in Ethiopia stating they could not locate any marriage

certificate between the parties.

       Still, after this 2000 ceremony, Habiba moved into the house of Bekele’s

family. Two years later, Habiba and Bekele had a son, A.A., who is now an adult.

That same year, Bekele moved to Kenya for political reasons, leaving Habiba and
                                         3

A.A. in Ethiopia. Bekele would occasionally communicate with Habiba by phone

or letter. While in Kenya, he discovered that his first wife was living in the United

States. With her sponsorship, he moved to the United States in 2004. In 2006,

Bekele’s first wife obtained a divorce by default decree in Colorado.

       Having settled in Iowa City, in 2008, Bekele began sending remittances to

Ethiopia to support Habiba and A.A., a practice he continued for eight years. In

2012, Bekele became a U.S. citizen.

       The next year, Bekele returned to Ethiopia and brought their then eleven-

year-old son, A.A., back to the United States.       Habiba supported the move,

explaining: “Even though, as a mother, I felt bad when he departed, I was happy

that he came to the United States to get a good education.”

       Around that same time, Bekele and Habiba agreed that Bekele would apply

for a visa listing Habiba as his fiancée so that she could join him and their son in

the United States. On his own, Bekele twice filed applications, which were denied.

For the third application, Bekele hired an immigration attorney, and the application

was approved. As part of the process, Bekele and Habiba agreed to wed within

ninety days of her arrival in the country. Bekele paid the application fees, attorney

expenses, and Habiba’s travel costs.1

       With the visa approved, Habiba came to the United States in January 2017.

Dutifully, the parties were married on February 1, 2017, according to the certificate

recorded in Johnson County, Iowa. After the wedding, they filed paperwork to

1 Meanwhile, Bekele went back to Ethiopia in 2015, at which time there was
another wedding according to Habiba. She produced a civil marriage certificate
dated July 12, 2015, which Bekele claims is fraudulent.
                                           4

allow Habiba to work in the United States, which received approval in early

October. Habiba began working as a housekeeper at a local hotel, a job she

enjoyed.

       But married life proved distressing.      According to Habiba, Bekele was

physically and emotionally abusive, sometimes holding her immigration status over

her head. She testified that Bekele strangled her, slapped her, and called her a

“bitch.” Bekele denied the abuse. At one point, Habiba’s employer called Bekele

to ask for a copy of her work authorization paper. Bekele denied that such

paperwork existed, and Habiba lost her job. Soon after that incident, Habiba

moved out of their house. From November 2017 forward, she spent seven months

living in a domestic violence shelter. In March 2018, while still living in the shelter,

she petitioned for relief from domestic abuse; the court granted the protective

order. Family members in Ethiopia coordinated with a cousin in Minneapolis who

was dispatched to pick up Habiba. She has lived in Minnesota since then.

       Also in March 2018 Bekele petitioned for annulment, claiming that Habiba

refused to consummate the marriage in 2017 and had only married him for

immigration purposes. Habiba resisted annulment, arguing they were married in

2000 and consummated the marriage then. She also asked for the court to convert

the case to a dissolution of marriage. She sought no property or spousal support.2

The district court held a trial on those matters in January 2021.

       At the trial, both parties agreed they did not have sex after the 2017

wedding. Bekele testified Habiba refused to have sex with him, saying that she

2 Bekele was then sixty-three, and Habiba was thirty-seven. Their son was no
longer a minor.
                                          5

was “cursed” or was going to be “cursed.” Bekele added that he did not believe

that she actually had a curse. Habiba denied telling Bekele that she was cursed.

Instead, she testified that when they tried to have sex he experienced premature

ejaculation and erectile dysfunction, for which he said he would seek treatment,

asking her to “be patient” with him. But he never sought treatment.

       The court found Bekele did not establish that the 2017 marriage should be

annulled for either illegality or impotency.3 As to illegality, the court found the

evidence did not show the marriage between these parties was prohibited by law.

No Iowa cases cited an immigration violation as reason for annulment. But even

if an immigration violation fit the statutory language, the court found that Bekele

did not “establish that Habiba was motivated to marry him solely for immigration

purposes.” In reaching that result, the court made strong credibility findings that

Habiba was the more believable witness.

       As to impotency, the court found “the fact that the parties did not have sex

after they married does not equate to impotency under the statute.” And Bekele

did not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that their failure to have sex was

a result of the impotence of either party. The court denied Bekele’s post-ruling

motion to reconsider the credibility findings.

       Bekele appeals, insisting again that the marriage should be annulled.

3The court did not address whether the parties were married before 2017. In any
event, because Bekele’s earlier marriage was dissolved in 2006, there was no
question that he was free to marry Habiba in 2017.
                                          6

II. Scope and Standards of Review

       We review annulment and dissolution matters de novo.             Iowa R. App.

P. 6.907; In re Marriage of Larsen, 912 N.W.2d 444, 448 (Iowa 2018); Jensen v.

Jensen, 147 N.W.2d 612, 615 (Iowa 1967). We give weight to the district court’s

fact findings, particularly on witness credibility, but they do not bind us. See In re

Marriage of Sullins, 715 N.W.2d 242, 247 (Iowa 2006).

       We review statutory interpretation for legal error. McHugh v. Smith, 966

N.W.2d 285, 287 (Iowa Ct. App. 2021). “The purpose of statutory interpretation is

to determine legislative intent.” Babka v. Iowa Dep’t of Inspections & Appeals, 967

N.W.2d 344, 355 (Iowa Ct. App. 2021). “We give words their ordinary and common

meaning by considering the context within which they are used, absent a statutory

definition or an established meaning in the law.” Doe v. Iowa Dep’t of Human

Servs., 786 N.W.2d 853, 858 (Iowa 2010). If a term is “undefined in the statute”

and lacks an “established legal meaning,” then it should be given its “common,

ordinary meaning in the context within which [it is] used.” De Stefano v. Apts.

Downtown, Inc., 879 N.W.2d 155, 168 (Iowa 2016). We read the statute as a

whole to reach “a sensible and logical construction.” Babka, 967 N.W.2d at 355

(citation omitted).

III. Analysis

       Bekele bears the burden of showing his marriage to Habiba should be

annulled. Annulments are a creature of statute. “When the validity of a marriage

is doubted, either party may file a petition, and the court shall decree it annulled or
                                        7

affirmed according to the proof.” Iowa Code § 598.30. Iowa Code section 598.29

sets out grounds:

             Marriage may be annulled for the following causes:
             1. Where the marriage between the parties is prohibited by
      law.
              2. Where either party was impotent at the time of marriage.
              3. Where either party had a husband or wife living at the time
      of the marriage, provided they have not, with a knowledge of such
      fact, lived and cohabited together after the death or marriage
      dissolution of the former spouse of such party.
              4. Where either party was a ward under a guardianship and
      was found by the court to lack the capacity to contract a valid
      marriage.

      Bekele relies on one and two, illegality and impotency.

   A. Prohibited by Law

      Bekele first contends Habiba entered the marriage for the sole purpose of

obtaining favorable immigration status, which he argues is “prohibited by law.”

      Under federal law, “Any individual who knowingly enters into a marriage for

the purpose of evading any provision of the immigration laws shall be imprisoned

for not more than 5 years, or fined not more than $250,000, or both.” 8 U.S.C.

§ 1325(c). We have no cases in Iowa holding that a marriage entered into for the

purpose of evading immigration laws is invalid, void, or voidable. But Bekele cites

cases from three other jurisdictions that at least acknowledge the possibility. See

In re Marriage of Kidane and Araya, 389 P.3d 212, 220 (Kan. Ct. App. 2017)

(finding where “the parties have no intention of making their marriage a permanent

institution, nor . . . plan to live together as husband and wife,” where the “sole

purpose of the marriage is to commit a fraud on immigration authorities” the

marriage is void or voidable under annulment statute); In re Marriage of Rabie, 115

Cal. Rptr. 594, 597 (Cal. Ct. App. 1974) (granting annulment where husband
                                         8

“never intended to fulfill any . . . marital duties” to the wife such as cohabiting,

remaining faithful, or even remaining married); Kurys v. Kurys, 209 A.2d 526, 528

(Conn. Super. 1965) (finding annulment appropriate “if an alien marries a citizen

of this country for the only purpose of entering the United States, and without any

intention of assuming the duties and responsibilities of the marriage”).

       Trouble is, in those cases the request for annulment was based on a claim

of fraud relating to the immigration purpose and our statute does not include fraud

as a ground for annulment.4 See Kidane, 389 P.3d at 217 (quoting Kan. Stat. Ann.

§ 23-2702 (2016)); Rabie, 115 Cal. Rptr. at 597–98; Kurys, 209 A.2d at 528. Still,

Bekele argues the district court should have decided that “a marriage which was

undertaken for the sole purpose of evading immigration rules is an illegal marriage

that may be annulled under Iowa’s limited statute.” He invites us now to “affirm

that such a marriage is voidable and may be annulled under Iowa law.”

       We need not settle that statutory interpretation question because Bekele

did not prove that Habiba entered into their marriage for the purpose of evading

any provision of immigration law. Far from “evading” immigration law, the credible

evidence is that she applied to enter the United States so that she could have a

marital relationship with Bekele. Habiba testified that she came to America to live

with her husband and reunite with their son. In fact, she believed that they had

been married since 2000, long before Bekele revealed any plan to immigrate to

4 We agree with Bekele that Habiba mistakenly relies on Estate of Wild v. Wild
because it did not recognize fraud as a basis for annulment. Rather, our court
found the estate had no standing to seek an annulment, not being “either party” to
the marriage. No. 12-1525, 2013 WL 2371190, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. May 30, 2013)
(quoting Iowa Code § 598.29).
                                         9

the United States. Habiba testified that she agreed to the 2017 marriage because

she was following her husband’s instructions for her visa application. And she

testified that she would have stayed in a marital relationship if Bekele had not

abused her.

       Bekele counters that she was motivated by immigration matters. He points

out that although she believed they were married when she was sixteen, they spent

most of the next decade apart. He also emphasizes that she left their marital home

in Iowa shortly after receiving her work authorization. She did not seek a protective

order until four months after moving out. And she could not produce police reports

or photographs to document the abuse. He posits she fabricated the abuse to

obtain a favorable immigration status.

       His arguments are unconvincing. The evidence shows Bekele made the

decision to leave Habiba and his son in Ethiopia and travel first to Kenya and then

to the United States. Bekele also conceded that having Habiba join him and their

son in the United States was a plan they discussed and agreed on.

       The credible evidence also shows Habiba left their home because of

Bekele’s abuse. She spent seven months living in a domestic violence shelter. A

caseworker at the shelter’s Domestic Violence Intervention Program testified that

she observed meetings between Habiba and Bekele, and Habiba was “clearly

shaken” and “clearly afraid” in Bekele’s presence, on the verge of crying. Similarly,

an employee at a refugee resettlement program in Minneapolis testified Habiba

reported abuse by Bekele. That employee offered Habiba a place to live because

she brought nothing with her when she fled the marital home. She also left the
                                         10

home without her son and important paperwork documenting her immigration and

work status.

       Important to our decision, the district court found Habiba was “very credible

in her testimony that immigration was not her sole motivation” for the marriage.

The court also found the corroborating witnesses to be credible and their testimony

to be “largely support[ive]” of hers. By contrast, the court disbelieved Bekele’s

explanation that Habiba made up the abuse allegations to help her immigration

status. The court noted Habiba did not speak or read English. Habiba confirmed

that she could not read or understand the immigration documents, and only signed

them because she trusted her husband. And Habiba testified she was unaware of

legal options for immigrants who are victims of abuse, such as a “U visa.”

       Bekele urges us to disregard the court’s credibility determinations, pointing

to inconsistent statements by Habiba. But we traditionally give deference to the

court’s credibility determinations because it has “a firsthand opportunity to hear the

evidence and view the witnesses.” Christy v. Lenz, 878 N.W.2d 461, 464 (Iowa

Ct. App. 2016) (citation omitted). “[T]he conduct and appearance of the witness

on the witness stand” as well as their “carriage, behavior, bearing, manner[,] and

appearance” are all relevant factors that the trial judge is in the best position to

assess. Ruden v. Peach, 904 N.W.2d 410, 413 (Iowa Ct. App. 2017) (citations

omitted). Such in-person cues likely increase in value when a translator operates

as a filter to our cold transcript. So we follow the traditional path and defer to the

district court’s conclusions on the relative veracity of the parties. The credible

evidence shows that when Habiba entered the 2017 marriage, she both believed
                                          11

the parties were already married and intended to live with her husband and son as

a family.

       Bekele did not show his marriage to Habiba was “prohibited by law” under

our annulment statute. Even if we assume his statutory interpretation is correct,

he did not prove Habiba entered into the marriage for the purpose of evading

immigration laws.

    B. Impotence

       Failing the illegality ground, Bekele turns to impotence. He argues the court

erred in its interpretation of the annulment statute. Under a different interpretation,

Bekele contends he proved that one or both parties were “impotent at the time of

marriage.” Iowa Code § 598.29(2).

       Because the statute does not define “impotent,” the district court looked to

the dictionary definition:

       According to Merriam-Webster, impotent is defined as “unable to
       engage in sexual intercourse because of inability to have and
       maintain      an    erection.”        Impotent,   Merriam-Webster,
       https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/impotent.            This
       definition pertains obviously to a male, but the legislature
       contemplated impotence on the part of females as well by including
       the phrase “either party” in the statute. Generally, impotent in the
       context of annulment statutes then means “denoting an inability to
       have sexual intercourse due to any of several causes.” Incapacity
       for sexual intercourse as ground for annulment, 52 A.L.R.3d 589, § 4
       (1973) (Originally published in 1973).

The district court then asked, “Must this ‘inability’ be more or less permanent to

equate to statutory impotence?” and answered yes. Citing Heller v. Heller, 174 A.

573, 575 (N.J. 1934),5 and the American Law Review, 52 A.L.R.3rd 589, § 8

5Heller may not be the best authority here because it interprets a statute that
explicitly requires the spouse be “incurably impotent.” 174 A. at 574–75.
                                           12

(originally published 1973), the court reasoned that the statute contemplated

permanent or incurable impotency because “[a]llowing for annulments in cases of

transitory or easily remedied impotence” would make “little sense.”

         Turning to the record, the court found, “Here, there is no firm evidence of

impotence, and, even if it existed, there was no evidence of its incurability.” The

court considered Bekele’s testimony that Habiba claimed to be “cursed” and noted,

“the evidence established she could address that curse in Ethiopia.” 6 The court

also found if Bekele was suffering from “more traditional impotence,” there was not

enough evidence to establish it was incurable.

         Like the district court, we grapple with what the drafters meant by impotent.

No cases interpret that provision.7 When a term is “undefined in the statute” and

lacks an “established legal meaning,” then we adopt its “common, ordinary

meaning in the context within which [it is] used.” De Stefano, 879 N.W.2d at 168.

Also like the district court, we find the dictionary definition to be, at best, a starting

point.    The dictionary’s male-centric definition of impotence, highlighting the

inability to maintain an erection, does not fit with the annulment statute’s reference

6 Habiba denied telling Bekele she was cursed such that she was impotent. But
Bekele testified to various remedies he pursued including talking with religious
leaders at their mosque, reading the Quran, and seeking a cure in Ethiopia. He
stopped short of sending Habiba to Ethiopia, which led the court to conclude he
had not proved the curse was permanent and incurable.
7 Our courts have discussed impotency as a defense to a crime or to disprove

paternity. See State v. John, 176 N.W. 280 (Iowa 1920) (finding evidence of
impotency due to a severe stroke causing paralysis could be used as a defense to
assault with intent to commit rape); State v. Norris, 97 N.W. 999 (Iowa 1904)
(finding, where impotence was alleged as a defense to rape, sufficiency of the
evidence was a jury question); State v. Lavin, 46 N.W. 553 (Iowa 1890) (holding
the presumption that a child born in wedlock is legitimate may be rebutted with
proof the husband was impotent or without access to the mother).
                                         13

to “either party” being impotent at the time of the marriage. See Iowa Code

§ 598.29(2). When the legislature adopted that language, marriage in Iowa was

limited to opposite-sex couples, so the drafters must have believed both men and

women could be impotent. In other words, impotence must mean more than being

unable to maintain an erect penis. Indeed, the less specific sense of the word

impotent is “not potent.”       Impotent, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-

webster.com/dictionary/impotent (last visited Apr. 27, 2022).         “Potent,” more

prosaically, means “having or wielding force, authority, or influence,” “achieving or

bringing about a particular result,” “chemically or medicinally effective,” “rich in a

characteristic constituent,” or finally “able to copulate—usually used of the male.”

Potent,   Merriam-Webster,      https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/potent

(last visited Apr. 27, 2022).

       Iowa case law does little to assist our quest for a definition. The few cases

that discuss impotency are not very enlightening. In an early case, McCraney v.

McCraney, the supreme court approved the principle that if a husband is divorced

from his first wife based on his “perpetual impotence, quoad hanc”8 and goes on

to have children with his second wife, those children “shall be legitimate.” 5 Iowa

232, 244 (1857). And in Rouse v. Rouse, the court declined on procedural grounds

to determine whether the wife was entitled to spousal support after the husband

discovered she had “some sort of a tumor in the pelvic cavity.” 47 Iowa 422, 424

(Iowa 1877).    The court did detail the evidence of the tumor as being of a

8 As opposed to “universal impotency,” impotency quoad hanc means a person is
incapable of having sexual intercourse with another specific person. See Vanden
Berg v. Vanden Berg, 197 N.Y.S. 641, 642 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1923).
                                           14

“cancerous character, and dangerous to both parties.” Id. Neither case speaks to

the permanency of the condition.

       Given the paucity of authority on the subject, Bekele faults the district court

for inserting into “this vacuum . . . a standard that the impotence must be more-or-

less incurable.” He also insists the court erroneously required that he prove

impotence with medical evidence beyond his own testimony. At bottom, Bekele

contends: “In the case of impotency, the reason for an annulment—for determining

the marriage contract to be a nullity—is the likelihood that the parties will not be

able to procreate.” He argues that such a rationale has little to do with the

condition’s susceptibility to treatment.

       On the issue of curability, several other states have interpreted their statutes

as requiring the impotency be incurable even though not explicit in the language

of their statutes.   In Dolan v. Dolan, 259 A.2d 32, 38 (Me. 1969), the court

explained:

               Although marriage is a civil contract, immediately upon its
       consummation public policy endows the marital relationship with
       enduring rights and responsibilities concerning which the State
       attaches primary importance and exercises ultimate control. In terms
       of State interest, the dissolution of the marriage in annulment suits
       has virtually the same impact upon the public good as the liquidation
       of the marital status through divorce. Public policy would be in a
       constant state of frustration if the judiciary attributed to the
       Legislature in its use of the term impotence as a cause for divorce or
       nullity of marriage a meaning encompassing any temporary or
       occasional incapacity for sexual intercourse. We hold with virtually
       universal authoritative acceptance that impotence within the purview
       of our statute regulating divorce and annulment denotes a
       permanent inability on the part of one of the parties to the marriage
                                         15

       contract to perform the complete act of sexual intercourse. The
       incapacity must be incurable.

259 A.2d at 38 (internal citation omitted). The Missouri Supreme Court reached a

similar conclusion in Kempf v. Kempf, 34 Mo. 211, 213–14 (Mo. 1863). As did the

Kansas Supreme Court in Bunger v. Bunger, 117 P. 1017, 1018–19 (Kan. 1911).

In Bunger, the court also rejected the notion that impotence refers only to an

incapacity for procreation. 117 P. at 1018. “[I]n the law of divorce it means want

of potentia copulandi, and not merely incapacity for procreation. It is an incapacity

that admits neither copulation nor procreation.” Id.

       Persuaded by those rationales, we do not believe that our legislature

intended annulment to be an available remedy if the condition of impotence was

temporary.    Bekele must show Habiba’s impotence, if any, was more than

transitory—even though that language does not appear in our statute. As the

district court noted, this makes sense given the importance we place on marriage

and “the vagaries associated with interpersonal sexual relations.” As for the

necessary proof, we do not read the district court decision as requiring medical

evidence.

       Turning to the evidence, we find that Bekele failed to show Habiba was

impotent at the time of the marriage.9 But we take a different tack from the district

court. The only evidence of a curse is Bekele’s recounting of statements that

9 Although the district court discussed the lack of evidence showing either party
was impotent, Habiba points out that Bekele never pled his own impotence and
never agreed that he had sexual performance problems. We agree that ground
was not properly pled. We also find Bekele, as the party requesting an annulment
and bearing the burden of proof, cannot rely on Habiba’s testimony to establish his
own impotence. We decline to consider Bekele’s alternative claim that he is the
impotent party.
                                        16

Habiba denies making. She also testified that she was “able to engage in sexual

intercourse,” and the couple tried several times but Bekele could not maintain an

erection due to erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation. Bekele presented

no evidence about the persistence of her alleged impotence. After all, they have

a child in common and had sex off and on since 2000. Given the court’s credibility

determinations and the shortcomings in Bekele’s evidence about Habiba’s

physical condition, we conclude Bekele did not prove Habiba was impotent.

      In sum, Bekele has not carried his burden of showing that Habiba was

impotent at the time of their marriage.      Nor did he show their marriage was

prohibited by law. Finding no grounds to annul the marriage and being presented

with no other challenges to the dissolution, we affirm the decree.

      AFFIRMED.