In Re the Marriage of Nathan Allen Logemann and Kersten Ashley Logemann Upon the Petition of Nathan Allen Logemann, and Concerning Kersten Ashley Logemann, N/K/A Kersten Ashley Abild
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 13-1928
Filed January 28, 2015
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF NATHAN ALLEN LOGEMANN
AND KERSTEN ASHLEY LOGEMANN
Upon the Petition of
NATHAN ALLEN LOGEMANN,
Petitioner-Appellee,
And Concerning
KERSTEN ASHLEY LOGEMANN,
n/k/a KERSTEN ASHLEY ABILD,
Respondent-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cass County, J.C. Irvin, Judge.
A mother appeals the district court’s decision modifying a custody
arrangement. AFFIRMED.
Theodore R. Wonio of Cambridge Law Firm, P.L.C., Atlantic, for appellant.
Karen Atkinson Dales, Council Bluffs, for appellee.
Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ.
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MULLINS, J.
Kersten Abild appeals the district court’s grant of her former husband
Nathan Logemann’s petition to modify the physical care provisions of a custodial
arrangement regarding their two minor children. Kersten contends the district
court erred in transferring physical care from Kersten to Nathan. She argues
Nathan did not meet the heavy burden of showing there was a substantial and
material change in circumstances to justify modification of the care provisions.
For the reasons stated below, we affirm the decision of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND FACTS & PROCEEDINGS.
Kersten and Nathan are the parents of two minor children, C.L. and D.L.
In 2008, the district court entered a decree dissolving their marriage. The decree
awarded Kersten and Nathan joint legal custody and placed physical care with
Kersten with liberal visitation for Nathan. The court ordered Nathan to pay child
support to Kersten. Nathan has since remarried, and Kersten has been in a
relationship with Cory Harter for over five years.
In 2009, Nathan filed an application to modify the child support order,
which the court denied. In 2012, Kersten filed an application to modify the
visitation provisions to reduce visitation. The court entered an order maintaining
joint legal custody and physical care with Kersten, but inserted a number of
provisions to assist the parents in cooperating in the children’s care. Among
these, the court ordered that neither parent would enroll the children in an activity
without first consulting with and obtaining the approval of the other party. If one
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party signs up the children for an activity without obtaining approval, the other
parent is not responsible for that parent’s portion of the related fees.
In March 2013, Kersten asked the court to review the modification order
and reduce visitation as requested in her previous application to modify. Nathan
filed a counter-application requesting physical care. The court granted Nathan’s
application and awarded him physical care with Kersten having visitation and
paying child support to Nathan. Kersten filed an application for new trial and a
motion to enlarge, modify, and amend. The court made minor changes to its
order but maintained the modification it entered. Kersten now appeals the
modification.
II. SCOPE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW.
Because an action to modify a custody decree is heard in equity, our
review is de novo. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907; In re Marriage of Brown, 778 N.W.2d
47, 50 (Iowa Ct. App. 2009). We give weight to the district court’s findings of
fact, especially with regard to witness credibility, but we are not bound by them.
Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(g); In re Marriage of Will, 489 N.W.2d 394, 397 (Iowa
1992). Prior cases have little precedential value, as we must base our decision
on the particular circumstances of the case before us. Melchiori v. Kooi, 644
N.W.2d 365, 368 (Iowa Ct. App. 2002). “The trial court has reasonable discretion
in determining whether modification is warranted and that discretion will not be
disturbed on appeal unless there is a failure to do equity.” In re Marriage of Kern,
408 N.W.2d 387, 389 (Iowa Ct. App. 1987).
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III. ANALYSIS.
A. Modification of Physical Care.
Courts may modify the custody or care provisions of a decree only where
the record reveals “a substantial change in circumstances since the time of the
decree, not contemplated by the court when the decree was entered, which was
more or less permanent, and relates to the welfare of the child.” Melchiori, 644
N.W.2d at 368. The burden is on the party seeking modification to show a
substantial change by a preponderance of the evidence. In re Marriage of
Feustel, 467 N.W.2d 261, 263 (Iowa 1991). In addition, the party seeking
modification must demonstrate that he or she possesses a superior ability to
minister to the needs of the children. In re Marriage of Whalen, 569 N.W.2d 626,
628 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997). Once a custodial arrangement is established, “it
should be disturbed only for the most cogent reasons.” In re Marriage of
Frederici, 338 N.W.2d 156, 158 (Iowa 1983). As in any custody or care
determination, our paramount concern is the best interests of the child. See In re
Marriage of Bergman, 466 N.W.2d 274, 275 (Iowa Ct. App. 1990).
On appeal, Kersten contends Nathan did not meet the burden of showing
there has been a substantial and material change in the circumstances to justify
modification. Nathan contends that subsequent to their dissolution decree,
Kersten’s conduct with respect to the children and himself has created a
substantial and material change in the custodial circumstances such that it is in
the children’s best interest to grant him physical care. Nathan asserts Kersten is
unable to communicate or cooperate effectively with him to further the children’s
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care. He claims she does not inform him of the children’s doctor appointments,
subjects the children to excessive medical treatment, enrolls them in activities
without consulting him, and withholds visitation from him.
At the modification hearing, the court heard testimony from, among others,
Kersten, Nathan, and the guardian ad litem (GAL). Nathan testified to numerous
occasions when Kersten withheld visitation from him in violation of the court
order. In the summer of 2011, the parties had a two-week-on, two-week-off
visitation schedule. Kersten refused to give the children to Nathan for the first
two weeks of July because Nathan was late picking them up on the first day.
She admitted she refused to give Nathan visitation on that occasion because she
was angry at him. After a heated exchange, she also refused to give him the
children for the first two weeks of August. On another occasion in 2009, she
refused to give him the children because he had gotten temporarily behind in
child support payments. Easter weekend of 2012, Kersten’s brother was in town,
and Kersten informed Nathan he would not get the children even though the
decree stated he had visitation over the Easter holiday.
Exchanges of the children frequently involve Kersten yelling and
screaming at Nathan in front of the children. Nathan made some audio
recordings of these incidents. The GAL listened to some of these recordings and
agreed that Kersten is the instigator of these exchanges. The GAL also reported
Kersten was angry, combative, and abusive when the GAL attempted to contact
her. The children reported to the GAL that Kersten says negative things about
Nathan in front of them but they have not heard Nathan make similar statements.
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Nathan also testified Kersten does not consult him or obtain his approval
before enrolling the children in activities. He stated she usually only informs him
afterward. Nathan also complained Kersten signs the children up for events and
activities during his visitation time without informing him until immediately before
they are scheduled. On one occasion Kersten’s mother, who is often involved in
caring for the children, signed one child up for golf; Kersten did not inform Nathan
until afterward. Nathan also has had to cancel activities he planned during his
visitation time because Kersten has enrolled the children in an activity without
informing him. Kersten disagreed with Nathan’s characterizations. She stated
Nathan gets the same information in emails that she gets from Boy Scouts and
other groups the children are involved in. She also stated she gives Nathan
receipts of their fees from activities to inform him they are enrolled. Kersten
believes Nathan does not talk to her about the children’s activities because he
does not want to pay for anything.
Nathan believes Kersten seeks excessive medical treatment for the
children and does not involve him in medical decisions. D.L. has a number of
medical issues including an as-yet undiagnosed metabolic disorder which causes
him to have poor weight gain for his height and unstable blood sugar levels. A
letter from a treating doctor indicates no specific diagnosis has been made. D.L.
also has ADHD, Asperger Syndrome, and some developmental delays. Although
Kersten has taken the children to numerous doctors for testing no doctor has
given a specific diagnosis for D.L.’s metabolic issues.
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Nathan testified that when he is aware of the children’s doctor
appointments he attends but Kersten often does not inform him when they are
scheduled. Nathan testified he usually finds out about the children’s
appointments after they have taken place from medical providers, the insurer,
teachers, and the children. Kersten occasionally informs him afterward about
test results or what occurred at an appointment. Kersten testified she keeps
Nathan aware of the appointments by text, telephone, and informing him in
person. She produced a photograph of one text she sent Nathan informing him a
doctor’s appointment had been cancelled. Nathan later discovered she had
rescheduled the appointment and did not inform him of the new date. On one
occasion, it appeared that Kersten deliberately misled Nathan and his wife about
taking the children to a doctor’s appointment. Kersten asked Nathan to drop the
children off at her house on a Monday morning instead of at school because they
needed to pick up some things from her house. Nathan later discovered that
instead of taking them to school, Kersten took the children to a doctor’s
appointment. With regard to these issues, the district court found Nathan’s
testimony was more credible than Kersten’s.
Kersten’s mother testified that she attends most of the children’s doctor’s
appointments and was able to name seven or more doctors the children had
seen throughout Iowa and in Omaha. Nathan was unaware the children had
seen several of the named doctors and had never attended those appointments.
Upon examining the children’s medical records during the process of discovery,
Nathan became aware for the first time of some of the medical concerns Kersten
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has about the children, especially D.L. Kersten has reported symptoms and
concerns to medical personnel that Nathan and his wife have never observed in
the children while in their care. Nathan also became aware for the first time
through discovery that C.L. was seeing a therapist twice monthly. Kersten has
also told the children’s school that D.L. has diabetes and enforced a strict routine
and schedule for his snacks and meals. D.L. has never been diagnosed with
diabetes, and the school eventually declined to follow the routine Kersten
specified without medical documentation of his condition.
The GAL reported that both parents love the children, are close with them,
believe they are acting in their best interests, and maintain appropriate homes
where the children are well-cared for. She testified both parents can meet the
children’s needs, including special medical needs. However, she also reported
that it was in the children’s best interest to transfer physical care to Nathan. She
reported:
The children will maintain active and meaningful contact with both
parents if in Nathan’s care. I do believe that Kersten inhibits the
relationship between the children and their father. . . . The parents
are not able to effectively communicate at this time regarding the
children’s needs. They do not listen to each other or respect each
other. . . . Kersten unilaterally makes decisions and does not
include Nathan in the decisions. . . . There are major issues with
the health and well-being of [D.L.]. It is very concerning to me that
Kersten does not communicate with Nathan about the doctor’s
appointments or the results.
The GAL also testified she had originally planned to recommend a shared care
arrangement, however, Kersten refused to talk with the GAL about it. This and
her previous experience with Kersten convinced the GAL a shared care
arrangement would be infeasible between these parents. The GAL considered a
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number of factors including the children’s best interests; their emotional,
psychological, and mental well-being; the parents’ ability to communicate and
make decisions with each other; and the parents’ ability to facilitate a relationship
with the other. The GAL stated that the children were under constant stress and
pressure from being between Kersten and Nathan and that this affects their
mental health and emotional well-being.
Although Kersten challenged the inclusion of the GAL’s report and
testimony in the record based on various complaints about the GAL’s
investigations in this case, the district court specifically found the GAL
[h]as done extensive work in this case. She has been in contact
with professionals from both the children’s schools. She has
reviewed medical records, some of which the Court also has
reviewed. There is no indication that she has acted
unprofessionally or has been more predisposed to one parent over
the other during her investigation. The Court find[s] [the GAL’s]
report and testimony helpful to the Court and relies upon it along
with the other evidence presented in making its decision.
On our review of the record, we agree with the district court and will give
deference to its credibility determinations. The court found Nathan’s testimony
was generally credible. Nathan blamed the communication issues on Kersten
and the court agreed with him.
The court found “there has been a substantial and material change in
circumstances that warrants the Court changing primary physical care of the
children to Nathan with Kersten having reasonable and liberal rights of visitation.”
In so deciding the court found particularly significant the difficulties the parents
have communicating, Kersten’s withholding of visitation from Nathan, Kersten’s
failure to involve Nathan in the children’s medical treatment, Kersten’s failure to
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obtain Nathan’s approval of the children’s activities, and Kersten’s failure to
promote the children’s relationship with Nathan. The court also noted Kersten
had not acted in the children’s best interests.
Upon our de novo review, we agree with the district court that Nathan has
met his burden to demonstrate there has been a substantial and material change
in the circumstances. In cases where one parent has physical care, Iowa Code
section 589.41(5)(b) (2015) provides:
[T]he parent responsible for providing physical care shall support
the other parent’s relationship with the child. . . . Rights and
responsibilities as joint legal custodian of the child include but are
not limited to equal participation in decisions affecting the child’s
legal status, medical care, education, extracurricular activities, and
religious instruction.
It is clear in this case Kersten has frustrated Nathan’s right to equal participation
in the children’s medical care, education, and extracurricular activities. The more
credible evidence was that she has not kept Nathan informed of their schedules,
appointments, and events. We are particularly troubled by Kersten’s failure to
ensure Nathan has the opportunity to be an equal participant in the children’s
medical treatment. Clearly, the children have some special needs, particularly
D.L. Nathan has a right not only to be informed of appointments and tests, but to
have an equal hand in determining if and when they take place, and to provide
doctors his own observations of the children’s symptoms and his opinions of their
needs. Kersten is very protective of the children but her conduct toward Nathan
is inconsistent with her responsibilities as a joint legal custodian, and it is not in
the children’s best interest because it inhibits their relationship with their father.
By withholding visitation, speaking negatively about Nathan in front of the
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children, and failing to cooperate and coordinate care of the children with Nathan,
she has demonstrated she is not able or willing to provide the necessary support
for their relationship with Nathan. This is a substantial change that the court did
not contemplate when it initially granted Kersten physical care. A preponderance
of the evidence supports our finding of a substantial change in circumstances
that justifies modification.
Having found there is a substantial change in circumstances, we must
next determine whether Nathan has met the burden to show he can provide
superior care. The evidence supports a finding that both parents are capable of
caring for the children and meeting their needs. However, in considering what
custody arrangement is in the best interest of the children, the court must weigh
the factors set out under Iowa Code section 598.41(3). Relevant here are the
questions of “[w]hether the parents can communicate with each other regarding
the child[ren’s] needs” and “[w]hether each parent can support the other parent’s
relationship with the child[ren].” See Iowa Code § 598.41(3)(c) and (e). The
GAL reported that Nathan was more likely to support the children having active
and meaningful contact with Kersten, but Kersten inhibits contact between the
children and Nathan. We find the evidence supports this finding. The children
report Kersten speaks negatively about Nathan outside his presence; Nathan
reports Kersten is abusive to him when he picks up the children and in the
presence of the children; and Kersten does not support Nathan’s involvement in
their activities and medical treatment. The children do not report that Nathan
speaks negatively about Kersten in their presence. The GAL reported Nathan is
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willing to have a shared physical arrangement, but Kersten does not want shared
physical care and wants to reduce Nathan’s visitation time. When writing the
original decree in 2008, the district court could not have contemplated how
Kersten’s inability to communicate and cooperate with Nathan in the children’s
care could come to impact the children’s relationship with Nathan and
consequently their mental and emotional well-being. We believe this change in
circumstances constitutes a cogent reason to modify the decree. Accordingly,
we affirm the district court’s modification of the custodial arrangement.
B. Attorney Fees.
“Attorney fees are not a matter of right, but rest in the court’s discretion.”
In re Marriage of Okland, 699 N.W.2d 260, 270 (Iowa 2005). Factors the court
considers include “the needs of the party seeking the award, the ability of the
other party to pay, and the relative merits of the appeal.” Id. (quoting In re
Marriage of Geil, 509 N.W.2d 738, 43 (Iowa 1993)). We may also consider
“whether the party making the request was obligated to defend the trial court’s
decision on appeal.” In re Marriage of Castle, 312 N.W.2d 147, 150 (Iowa 1981).
We award no attorney fees, and assess costs to Kersten.
IV. CONCLUSION.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s modification of the
care provisions of the parties’ custodial arrangement. We award no attorney fees
and assess costs to Kersten.
AFFIRMED.