Court Opinion

ID: 4653187
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-21 18:04:57.990246+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:52.218002
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                  No. 20-0621
                            Filed January 21, 2021

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MICHAEL LAWRENCE TRUE
AND WENDY SUE TRUE

Upon the Petition of
MICHAEL LAWRENCE TRUE,
      Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning
WENDY SUE TRUE, n/k/a WENDY SUE ROBINSON KOCH,
     Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Muscatine County, Thomas G.

Reidel, Judge.

      Michael True appeals from the court’s ruling that he may be responsible for

his children’s postsecondary education expenses. REVERSED.

      M. Leanne Tyler of Tyler & Associates, PC, Bettendorf, for appellant.

      Robert DeKock of DeKock Law Office, P.C., Muscatine, for appellee.

      Considered by Bower, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Greer, JJ.
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BOWER, Chief Judge.

       Despite a rather convoluted procedural history—which began with dueling

applications to show cause for failing to abide by various provisions of a 2007

Tennessee dissolution decree and a petition to modify custody filed by Michael

True—the sole issue on appeal is whether the district court had jurisdiction or

authority to rule “Iowa Code section 598.21F [(2018)] is applicable to these

parties.”1 Concluding Iowa courts do not have the authority to grant relief that is

contrary to Tennessee law, we reverse on the sole issue before us.

       Wendy True, now known as Wendy Robinson Koch, was granted a divorce

from Michael True by a Tennessee court on October 2, 2007. Under the decree,

Wendy was granted physical custody of the parties’ two children and Michael was

to have supervised visitation. Michael was ordered to pay alimony, child support,

and one-half of a student loan Wendy had taken out during the marriage.

       On September 3, 2008, an Agreed Modification Order was entered in

Tennessee, providing Michael with unsupervised visitation with the children on

alternating weekends from Friday at 6:00 p.m. until Sunday at 6:00 p.m.; phone

calls with the children twice per week; and holiday, and spring and summer

visitation. Michael’s child support obligation was modified downward.

       On July 31, 2018, Wendy registered the Tennessee decree in Iowa and

sought the assistance of the Iowa court in enforcing the provisions of the decree.

1Iowa Code section 598.21F allows the court to order a postsecondary-education
subsidy payable for a child pursuing a higher education if good cause is found.
Neither child of the former couple is currently eligible for postsecondary education.
The trial court’s ruling on this issue was limited to the ability to modify the foreign
decree to consider postsecondary education in the future.
                                         3

Michael appeared in the Iowa case and also filed an application for rule to show

cause, and later filed a petition for modification of custody. At the time of trial,

Michael amended his modification action to request joint physical care, and Wendy

filed a counter-claim seeking a determination that Michael may be responsible for

a postsecondary educational subsidy.

       After the trial, the district court found both parties in contempt of the

provisions of the decree, rejected Michael’s request for a modification of custody,

and concluded that, because Michael had availed himself of the jurisdiction of Iowa

courts, the prior decree could be modified to include a postsecondary education

subsidy award in the future if an adequate showing was made.

       Michael appeals, contending the Iowa district court was required to give full

faith and credit to the Tennessee decree, and, because Tennessee law does not

allow for postsecondary education support, the Iowa court has no jurisdiction or

authority to modify the decree to permit such an award.2

       This court considered a similar question in In re Marriage of White,

No. 10-0437, 2011 WL 227624 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 20, 2011). There, the former

wife asked the Iowa court to modify an Alaska dissolution decree to order the

former husband to pay postsecondary education subsidies for their two adult sons.

White, 2011 WL 227624, at *1.          Alaska had no statutory provision for a

postsecondary education subsidy. Id. at *2. We explored Alaska case law and

concluded:

       [B]ecause the Alaskan decree here was silent on the issue of a
       college subsidy, the issue of a college subsidy as a result of this

2Iowa Code section 252K.611 grants “a tribunal of this state” jurisdiction to “modify
a child support order issued in another state” if certain requirements are met.
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        divorce could not be raised in subsequent modification proceedings.
        Giving full faith and credit to the Alaskan decree, we conclude the
        Iowa court should not have established an educational subsidy.

Id. at *3.

        In Tennessee, statutorily “a parent is obligated to provide support for

children only until they turn eighteen years old or graduate from high school,

whichever occurs later.” Corder v. Corder, 231 S.W.3d 346, 356 (Tenn. Ct. App.

2006); see also Blackburn v. Blackburn, 526 S.W.2d 463, 466 (Tenn. 1975)

(finding under earlier law that “[t]he authority of the chancellor to order appellant to

make child support payments is statutory and generally exists only during

minority”). This is based on Tennessee Code Annotated section 34–1–102 (2007),

which states:

        (a) Parents are the joint natural guardians of their minor children, and
        are equally and jointly charged with their care, nurture, welfare,
        education and support and also with the care, management and
        expenditure of their estates.
                ....
        (b) Parents shall continue to be responsible for the support of each
        child for whom they are responsible after the child reaches eighteen
        (18) years of age if the child is in high school. The duty of support
        shall continue until the child graduates from high school or the class
        of which the child is a member when the child attains eighteen (18)
        years of age graduates, whichever occurs first.

“Thus, in Tennessee, a parent has no legal obligation to pay for the college

education of a child who has reached the age of majority, except when the parent

contractually assumes such a duty.” Corder, 231 S.W.3d at 356. The court’s

authority to require a parent to pay child support ends when the child either reaches

his or her eighteenth birthday or graduates from high school. See id. at 357

(concluding that lower court’s order that the father was to produce documents for

the benefit of the children’s college education “must be deemed a ‘support’
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obligation, and the trial court was without authority to impose such a requirement

. . . past the children’s minority . . . [because any] order reaching beyond the age

of minority constitutes an invalid exercise of jurisdiction and is unenforceable”).

       Here, under the Tennessee decree, Michael’s obligation to pay child

support ceases when the children turn eighteen or graduate from high school,

whichever occurs later. The parties did not enter into an agreement that Michael

pay support beyond the statutory timelines. Cf. Kesser v. Kesser, 201 S.W.3d 636,

642 (Tenn. 2006) (“An agreement between parties ‘with respect to,’ ‘dealing with,’

or within ‘the scope of’ the legal duty to support their children during minority ‘loses

its contractual nature’ when merged into a divorce decree. Because the provision

merges into the decree, the child support obligation is subject to modification by

the trial court. If the parties agree to extend child support beyond the child’s

minority, however, that portion of the agreement is not merged into the final decree

of divorce, retains its contractual nature, and is subject to the general rules of

contract interpretation.” (citations omitted)). Consequently, the Iowa court was

without authority to require an obligation which the decretal court could not impose.

See Iowa Code § 252K.611(3) (“A tribunal of this state may not modify any aspect

of a child support order that may not be modified under the law of the issuing state,

including the duration of the obligation of support.”). We therefore reverse the

district court’s ruling that the Tennessee decree could be modified with respect to

possible postsecondary education subsidies.

       REVERSED.