Court Opinion

ID: 4250586
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-02-28 21:49:28.091436+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:24:23.709400
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                 No. 16-0744
                          Filed December 20, 2017

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MARCUS RICHARDT YEAGER
AND JENNIFER KAY YEAGER

Upon the Petition of
MARCUS RICHARDT YEAGER,
      Petitioner-Appellant,

And Concerning
JENNIFER KAY YEAGER,
     Respondent-Appellee.

______________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Robert B. Hanson,

Judge.

      A husband appeals the economic provisions of the parties’ dissolution

decree. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

      R.A. Bartolomei of Bartolomei & Lange, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant.

      Anjela A. Shutts and Sarah S. James of Whitfield & Eddy, P.L.C., Des

Moines, for appellee.

      Heard by Vogel, P.J., and Tabor and Bower, JJ.
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BOWER, Judge.

        Marcus Yeager appeals the economic provisions of the dissolution decree

from his marriage to Jennifer Yeager. We find the district court properly divided

the marital property, including the down payment, and properly established child

support.   However, the spousal support established by the district court was

excessive. We also find an award of appellate attorney fees is not appropriate.

We affirm the district court decree as modified.

   I.      Background Facts and Proceedings

        Marcus and Jennifer married in 1996. They have three children, J.Y.,

M.Y., and S.Y. The oldest child was eighteen at the time of trial and anticipated

graduating from high school in the spring of 2016. Marcus completed his degree

in project management during the marriage while working.            Marcus earns

approximately $45,500 per year.

        Jennifer earned a degree in accounting from the University of Iowa prior to

the marriage. Jennifer attempted the CPA exam in 1994 but did not pass. The

parties moved to California, where Jennifer worked in several accounting

positions until 1999, when their second child was born.          Jennifer left the

workforce in order to raise the parties’ children. Jennifer worked sporadically for

Marcus’s small business doing bookkeeping and other accounting work but did

not fully return to the workforce. The parties moved back to Iowa in 2005.

        Jennifer returned to work in 2008 as an associate for students with special

needs. The parties agreed this position would allow her flexibility to continue to

care for their children as needed. Jennifer earned approximately $18,000 per
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year. Jennifer is currently pursuing a degree in education and plans to become a

middle school math teacher. At the time of trial, Jennifer anticipated she would

be student teaching in the fall of 2017, and obtaining her teaching license in

January of 2018.

      When the parties lived in California, the house they lived in was initially

purchased by Marcus’s parents.       The property was titled in the names of

Marcus’s parents and Marcus. Jennifer’s name was not listed on the property

title or the mortgage. Three years later the parties refinanced the house and

purchased the property from Marcus’s parents, although $28,000 was provided

by Marcus’s mother as a down payment. At trial, Marcus’s mother testified the

down payment was a loan. However, the parties have made no payments, no

documents exist referencing the loan, and even though a substantial profit was

made from the sale of the house, no payment or promise of payment was made.

      Marcus filed a petition for dissolution on January 21, 2015. Trial was held

January 27-29, and February 3, 2016. The district court entered its decree April

25. The district court awarded Marcus the marital home but required him to

refinance it in his own name within ninety days or sell the home, assigned him

sole responsibility for the mortgage, and required him to pay Jennifer her share

of the equity, $31,559, within ninety days or interest would accrue at five percent

per annum. Marcus was also required to pay Jennifer $750 per month in spousal

support until July 2018. Child support was set at $1049 per month for three

children, $888.57 for two, and $601.77 for one child. The district court’s decree

also established shared legal custody, granted physical care of the children to
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Jennifer, and divided other marital property, though none of these provisions are

appealed here. Marcus filed a notice of appeal April 29.

   II.       Standard of Review

          Equitable actions are reviewed de novo. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. We

examine the record and adjudicate the rights of the parties anew. In re Marriage

of Williams, 589 N.W.2d 759, 761 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998). Because the district

court is in a unique position to hear the evidence, we defer to the district court’s

determinations of credibility.    In re Marriage of Brown, 487 N.W.2d 331, 332

(Iowa 1992). While our review is de novo, the district court is given latitude to

make determinations which we will disturb only if equity has not been done. In re

Marriage of Okland, 699 N.W.2d 260, 263 (Iowa 2005).

   III.      Property Division

          Marcus claims the district court improperly valued the marital home and

should have set off $28,000 of its value as a gift to him from his mother, or in the

alternative, should have evenly divided the $28,000 loan between the parties as

a debt. The valuation by the district court will usually not be disturbed if it is

within the range of evidence. In re Marriage of Hansen, 733 N.W.2d 683, 703

(Iowa 2007). A homeowner is qualified to testify to the value of their own home.

Id. Our supreme court has also held loans from family members should not be

treated as loans from disinterested parties. Id. at 704.

             a. Value of the Marital Home

          Marcus claims the district court should not have averaged the parties’

estimates to determine the marital home’s value. Marcus claims he presented
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stronger, more reliable evidence on the valuation of the home. He investigated

the sales of other homes in the neighborhood, compared those homes and

values against the value of the marital home, and considered the purchase price

of the marital home. Jennifer relied on her own valuation of the home and the

assessed value of the home, which she testified, “seems to be about what the

houses in the neighborhood are doing.”

         Marcus valued the home at $180,000, and Jennifer valued the home at

$193,900. The district court specifically stated in its ruling, “The court accepts

the values assigned to the various assets and liabilities contained in the financial

affidavits and, when there are disparities between the values assigned to same

by the parties, the court averages the two.” Both parties presented qualified

evidence of the value of the home, and the district court’s value was within the

range of the evidence presented.      The district court is not required to favor

Marcus’s evidence simply because Marcus believes it is more convincing. The

district court’s value was within the range of evidence, and so we will not disturb

it. See id. at 703.

            b. Offset

         Marcus next claims the district court should have found the $28,000 down

payment was a gift to him alone or, in the alternative, the $28,000 was a loan that

should have been offset against the equity of both parties. The district court

found:

         Marcus has requested the Court offset some of the equity in the
         parties’ home to him, alleging that his parents loaned him and
         Jennifer money to purchase their first home in California. By all
         accounts, there was no written documentation of this loan. No
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         payments have ever been made by Marcus or Jennifer, even after
         the parties sold the home. For these reasons, the court is very
         skeptical as to Marcus’s assertion that this was a “real” loan as that
         term is generally used. Further, case law indicates that loans from
         family members are not to be treated like loans from third parties or
         financial institutions. . . . Because of these factors, the Court
         declines to offset any amount in the equity in the home to Marcus.
         The Court assigns this debt to Marcus but is reasonably certain
         that, in doing so, it will never have to be repaid by him.

         Marcus’s mother testified at trial the loan was in fact real, and she insisted

she required and expected repayment. No documents were signed evidencing

the loan, there is no evidence of private demands, and no legal action has been

taken to enforce the loan after more than fifteen years. We agree with the district

court. The evidence before us shows the $28,000 to be a loan, but one that has

not been, and likely never will be, pursued. An indebtedness to a close family

member may be treated differently than a loan from a financial institution or

disinterested third party. Id. at 704. Therefore, we find it is equitable to assign

the debt wholly to Marcus.

   IV.      Spousal Support

         Marcus claims the district court improperly determined the spousal support

award to Jennifer.        The district court found Jennifer had an income of

approximately $18,500 annually working as an educational aid. Marcus claims

Jennifer is immediately employable as a general accountant and so should not

be awarded alimony or, in the alternative, the court should have ordered a lesser

amount.

         “In reviewing questions related to spousal support, while our review is de

novo, we have emphasized that ‘we accord the trial court considerable latitude.’
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We will disturb the trial court’s order ‘only when there has been a failure to do

equity.’” In re Marriage of Gust, 858 N.W.2d 402, 406 (Iowa 2015) (citations

omitted). “Whether spousal support is justified is dependent on the facts of each

case.” In re Marriage of Shanks, 805 N.W.2d 175, 178 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011).

          Upon every judgment of annulment, dissolution, or separate
      maintenance, the court may grant an order requiring support
      payments to either party for a limited or indefinite length of time
      after considering all of the following:
          a. The length of the marriage.
          b. The age and physical and emotional health of the parties.
          c. The distribution of property made pursuant to section 598.21.
          d. The educational level of each party at the time of marriage
      and at the time the action is commenced.
          e. The earning capacity of the party seeking maintenance,
      including educational background, training, employment skills, work
      experience, length of absence from the job market, responsibilities
      for children under either an award of custody or physical care, and
      the time and expense necessary to acquire sufficient education or
      training to enable the party to find appropriate employment.
          f. The feasibility of the party seeking maintenance becoming
      self-supporting at a standard of living reasonably comparable to
      that enjoyed during the marriage, and the length of time necessary
      to achieve this goal.
          g. The tax consequences to each party.
          h. Any mutual agreement made by the parties concerning
      financial or service contributions by one party with the expectation
      of future reciprocation or compensation by the other party.
          i. The provisions of an antenuptial agreement.
          j. Other factors the court may determine to be relevant in an
      individual case.

Iowa Code § 598.21A(1) (2015); see also Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 407.

      The parties were married for twenty years. Jennifer worked prior to the

parties’ children being born and helped Marcus with his business during the

course of the marriage.    When the children were attending school, Jennifer

began to work in the school district as an educational aide, and she is attending

school to pursue her teaching degree.        We find Jennifer is not able to
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immediately re-enter the work force as an accountant, a field in which she has

not meaningfully worked for more than fifteen years.

          However, we find the district court did award an excessive amount of

alimony.      Based on Marcus’s income, child support obligations, and other

financial obligations, such as the mortgage payments for the marital home, the

amount of alimony is inequitable. Therefore, we find Marcus will no longer be

required to pay spousal support effective January 15, 2018.1

    V.       Child Support

          Marcus also claims the district court failed to do equity by failing to

consider the amount of spousal support when determining his child support

obligation. The district court is required to take obligations of child or spousal

support from previous dissolutions into consideration when determining the

amount of child support in a dissolution decree. Iowa Ct. R. 9.5(8). The district

court may take into account the amount of spousal support awarded in the

current decree but is not required to. In re Marriage of Lalone, 469 N.W.2d 695,

697 (Iowa 1991). We find the district court equitably awarded child support.

    VI.      Attorney Fees

          Jennifer claims she should be awarded appellate attorney fees.            “An

award of attorney’s fees is not a matter of right but rests within the discretion of

the court.” In re Marriage of Benson, 545 N.W.2d 252, 258 (Iowa 1996). We find

a grant of appellate attorney fees is inappropriate in this case.

          AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

1
  As we have terminated spousal support effective January 15, 2018, there is no longer a
requirement that Marcus have life insurance to secure the obligation.