IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 14-0635
Filed February 25, 2015
JUAN CARLOS GONZALEZ,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
vs.
LAINE ALEXANDRA EDWARDS,
Defendant-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Arthur E. Gamble,
Judge.
Juan Carlos Gonzalez appeals a district court order modifying a paternity
decree to place physical care of a child with the mother, Laine Edwards.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Karen A. Taylor of Taylor Law Offices, Des Moines, for appellant.
Debra Hockett-Clark of Hockett-Clark Law Firm, West Des Moines, for
appellee.
Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Vaitheswaran and Potterfield, JJ.
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VAITHESWARAN, J.
Juan Carlos Gonzalez appeals a district court order modifying a paternity
decree to place physical care of a child with the mother, Laine Edwards.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
Gonzalez and Edwards had a short-term relationship that resulted in the
birth of a daughter in 2008. When the child was approximately seven months
old, Gonzalez filed a petition to establish custody, visitation, and child support.
Gonzalez and Edwards stipulated to joint legal custody of the child, with
Gonzalez assuming physical care. Edwards was afforded visitation every other
weekend. Additionally, she was entitled to one optional four-hour visit during the
week. Because she was involved in a physically abusive relationship, the
parents stipulated to having the visits at the home of the child’s daycare provider,
who was Gonzalez’s cousin. While Edwards had the option of choosing her
mother’s home as the visitation site, she voted against this option because she
was not getting along with her mother at the time.
The district court approved the stipulation in early 2010. Edwards was
ordered to pay Gonzalez ten dollars per month in child support.
More than three years later, Edwards petitioned for a modification of the
decree. She alleged Gonzalez failed to provide proper medical treatment for the
child, “routinely denied [her] weekday, weekend, holiday and summer visitation,”
failed to properly supervise the child, and was undocumented. She also noted
she had moved since the entry of the decree. On the same date, Edwards filed
an application for rule to show cause why Gonzalez should not be held in
contempt for claimed denials of visitation and medical care.
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Following a hearing on the contempt application, the district court found
Gonzalez denied Edwards weekend visitation on two specified occasions and
denied her weekday visitation on unspecified dates based on Edwards’s failure to
pay child support. The court further found “Gonzalez did allow visitation to
Edwards at times other than the times set forth in the decree.” The court
nonetheless held Gonzalez in contempt for the denials of visitation. The court
also found Gonzalez “in default” on a provision of the stipulated decree requiring
him “to keep Edwards apprised of [the child’s] medical condition and following
recommendations of her medical providers with respect to her condition referred
to as ‘lazy eye.’” The court ordered Gonzalez to afford Edwards two additional
weekend visits and eight additional weekday visits, abide by the visitation
provisions of the decree, and “include[ ] Edwards in decisions regarding [the
child’s] medical care.”
Six months after the court entered this order, the district court heard
Edwards’s application to modify the physical care provision of the decree.
Following the hearing, the district court granted the application and Gonzalez
appealed. The only issue before us is the propriety of the district court’s physical
care ruling.
II. Modification of Physical Care
Once a physical care arrangement is established, courts are empowered
to modify the arrangement “only when there has been 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 children.” See Dale v. Pearson, 555 N.W.2d 243, 245 (Iowa Ct.
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App. 1996) (citation omitted). “Additionally, the parent seeking custody must
prove an ability to minister more effectively to the children’s well-being.” Id.
“This strict standard is premised on the principle that once custody of children
has been determined, it should be disturbed only for the most cogent reasons.”
Id. The burden on the non-custodial parent is a heavy one. See Melchiori v.
Kooi, 644 N.W.2d 365, 368-69 (Iowa Ct. App. 2002). We give weight to the
district court’s fact findings, especially those addressing the credibility of
witnesses, but we are not bound by them. Iowa Ct. R. 6.904(3)(g).
The district court found a substantial change of circumstances based on a
variety of factors, including Gonzalez’s denial of visitation and his refusal to
afford Edwards “equal participation” in decisions affecting the child’s welfare. 1
We agree Gonzalez’s denial of visitation, as found by the court in its contempt
order, constituted a substantial change of circumstances.
The district court next found that the question of whether Edwards could
“minister more effectively to the needs of the child [was] a closer question.” The
court cited several deficiencies in Edwards’s lifestyle and parenting abilities but
ultimately stated “the determining factor” was Gonzalez’s “inability to provide for
the medical needs of the child.” The court concluded Edwards had “a superior
ability to effectively minister to the medical needs of the child” and to “provide for
the social, physiological, economic, and educational needs of the child.”
1
The district court did not rely on Gonzalez’s immigration status in finding a substantial
change of circumstances and neither do we because there had been no change in the
status from the time the stipulated decree was entered. See Orantes v. Orantes, 381
S.W.3d 758, 763 (Ark. 2011).
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The court’s findings included credibility assessments of both parents.
Those assessments heavily favored Edwards over Gonzalez. On appeal,
Gonzalez asserts the court was mistaken in placing a negative spin on his
testimony. Because the court was able to listen and watch the witnesses and
glean nuances in their demeanor which are not apparent in the transcript, we
give weight to the credibility findings. See, e.g., In re Marriage of Vrban, 359
N.W.2d 420, 423 (Iowa 1984); In re Marriage of Roberts, 545 N.W.2d 340, 343
(Iowa Ct. App. 1996). Accordingly, we will not rely on Gonzalez’s testimony if it is
at odds with Edwards’s testimony on the question of who could minister more
effectively to the child. We turn to the record on this question, reviewing the
record de novo.
At the time of the stipulated decree, Edwards agreed Gonzalez should
assume care of the infant child because she was unemployed and living with a
physically abusive man—a man she ultimately married. As noted, the court
adopted the stipulation.
Gonzalez served as primary caretaker of the child for approximately five
years. He moved to Iowa twenty years before the modification hearing, held a
steady supervisory position with a construction company, owned a home, and
arranged for daycare with his cousin until the child started school. When the
child entered kindergarten, she attended a before-and-after-school program and
also continued day care with Gonzalez’s cousin.
The child shared a close bond with Gonzalez, as confirmed by her
kindergarten teacher. She testified the child “usually runs out in the hallways and
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jumps into her dad’s arms.” She also noted the child was “doing wonderful in all
academic areas” and she expressed “[n]o” concerns about the child.
The child similarly enjoyed a good relationship with Gonzalez’s fiancée, a
Columbian education professor who hoped to continue her own education
following her marriage to Gonzalez and move to the United States.
From the outset, Gonzalez afforded Edwards’s mother weekly visits with
the child for at least a day and sometimes two days. Shortly after the paternity
decree was entered, Edwards reconciled with her mother and elected to exercise
half her visits at her mother’s house. Other than the denial of visits summarized
in the contempt ruling, she furnished no documentation of having sought and
been denied the balance of her visits. At the modification hearing, she conceded
the child “doesn’t recognize me as an authority figure. As I said before, our bond
isn’t as what it should be.” When asked about the relationship between
grandmother and child, she said, “They’re really close. They have a strong bond
that I wish I had with her.” Edwards also conceded that, in the six months after
the entry of the contempt order, Gonzalez provided all the visits required by the
decree plus more.
Meanwhile, Edwards lived with her abusive husband until mid-2011.
While still married to him, she began a short-lived liaison with another man. She
did not seek a dissolution of the marriage at any time.
Edwards also showed instability in housing, employment, and financial
matters. She lived in six different locations, including her mother’s house in 2010
and again as of mid-2013. She held thirteen jobs—many of which she quit
before obtaining alternate employment. Three months before the modification
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hearing she obtained her most recent job, which paid $4.25 per hour plus tips.
Earlier, she quit a job paying close to three times that sum. She had her license
suspended twice, the second time just three weeks before the modification
hearing. She did not pay the fines that resulted in her second suspension until
shortly before the modification hearing. She also failed to pay the ten dollars per
month child support obligation for forty months despite regular, albeit changing
employment. She only made good on those arrears in 2013, shortly before filing
the custody modification application. At the time of the modification hearing, she
remained financially dependent on her mother for food, shelter, and the child’s
extracurricular activities.
We turn to Gonzalez’s medical care of the child, which the court found
dispositive on the superior care factor. The record reflects the following facts.
In March 2013, the child’s grandmother took the child to ophthalmologist,
Dr. Clavenna, for an evaluation of her crossed eyes. The grandmother had
previously worked for the institution employing Dr. Clavenna. Dr. Clavenna
prescribed glasses and a patch for one of the eyes. Gonzalez purchased the
glasses.
A month after the first appointment, Dr. Clavenna expressed uncertainty
as to whether the child was wearing the patch and glasses. Two months later
and just three days before Edwards filed her contempt and modification
applications, Dr. Clavenna authored a letter stating treatment required full-time
wearing of spectacles and part-time patching. He said there would be permanent
vision loss and lack of depth perception, and if the treatment was not
implemented, permanent visual loss would occur. By October 2013, he noted
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the child was wearing new glasses “full-time.” He recommended a patch two to
three hours a day “when possible.”
The October note followed the father’s decision to seek a second opinion
from child ophthalmologist Dr. Jean Spencer. Gonzalez testified he wanted to be
sure the child still needed glasses. Gonzalez told Dr. Spencer the child wore her
glasses four to five hours per day for two months and also patched the left eye
for about four hours per day, “but not every day.” Dr. Spencer entered the
following progress note: The child had “[n]o current glasses. Doing well right now
without the glasses.” Dr. Spencer confirmed Dr. Clavenna’s diagnosis and
concluded: “Glasses prescribed for full time wear. Looks to be doing better and
hyperopia has decreased so will try now without the bifocal correction. Ongoing
follow-up care recommended.”
In a deposition, Dr. Spencer provided a detailed explanation of the child’s
eye conditions. She testified the child had a birth condition known as
“accommodative esotropia,” manifested by crossing of eyes inward as a result of
excessive focusing, and amblyopia, “a vision problem where an eye doesn’t see
properly, and it’s not just explained by glasses.” She found the child’s eye
conditions “had improved with treatment by the time” she saw the child “and it
looks like it started quite a bit worse than that when she came in.”
In December 2013, Gonzalez, accompanied by Edwards and Edwards’s
mother, brought the child in for a follow-up examination with Dr. Spencer. Dr.
Spencer noted the child was “[w]earing glasses full time. No patching. No new
concerns.” She observed the following: “Wears the glasses. Still sees some lazy
eye. Mom reports went back to Dr. Clavenna—wants to do a bifocal
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prescription.” She recommended “patching the left eye for 3 to 4 hours per day.”
Dr. Spencer updated the glasses to a “slightly stronger prescription” and said
surgery would be considered if the condition was not well-controlled with glasses.
She characterized the child’s vision as having “moved up.”
In early 2014—just a month before the scheduled modification hearing—
Gonzalez, Edwards, and Edwards’s mother took the child to another follow-up
exam with Dr. Spencer. Edwards and her mother told Dr. Spencer they were
insisting on the patch when they had the child; Gonzalez was not. Dr. Spencer
observed that the child’s eyes would cross “occasionally with the glasses but
slight and very brief.” She noted there was “[s]till . . . some decreased best
corrected acuity in the right eye” compared with the left eye. She recommended
continuation with the patching of the left eye four to five hours a day and advised
Gonzalez to try a cloth rather than an adhesive patch. She stressed the
importance of compliance with treatment. Nonetheless, she found good control
with the glasses and determined the child was able to read “the hardest test for
trying to test vision.”
Significantly, Dr. Spencer’s notes from this third visit contained her first
and only admonition to comply with treatment. Even more importantly, Dr.
Spencer later minimized Gonzalez’s noncompliance, testifying by deposition that
the “bigger issue” was not the parents’ cooperation but “[w]hether the child will
cooperate” because, “commonly, children did not like to wear the patch.” When
asked if the child’s vision would get worse in the right eye if she stopped wearing
the patch, her response was equivocal at best:
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So that’s a good question. Up until age seven or eight,
some children will slip—what we call slip with their vision where it
will start to decrease again. If that happens, we start the patch or
the eye drop up again. After age seven or eight, it’s typically, for
most children, cemented in where even if they favor the other eye,
we don’t have to patch to maintain the vision anymore. So until age
seven or eight, they do require periodic checks on the vision.
She continued:
Now, some children you can patch and get their vision back and
stop, and they’ll maintain it, and they won’t need to patch again.
Other children, it will slip and you’ll have to start the patching up
again. And there’s no way to predict who is going to do that,
whether [the child] would be in the first group or the second group.
When asked if she knew what would happen if the child stopped wearing her
glasses, she responded, “I don’t know that we know exactly how to predict what
will happen in that circumstance.” And when asked if something could be done
for a child with inattentive parents who did not do anything until the child reached
young adulthood, she responded, “Yeah. I mean, you would do the standard
treatment, try glasses and see how it responds and just—determine if glasses
are taking care of it or if surgery is indicated.” She did not indict Gonzalez for
inattention to the child’s eye-care needs or at any time suggest his actions or
inactions would lead to permanent vision loss.
Dr. Spencer’s overall prognosis for the child was positive. She stated the
glasses alone “corrected the majority of the esotropia” and helped with the
amblyopia “to some degree as well.” All that remained was to “work with the
patching to try and get the right eye vision the best [they] could.” In terms of her
plan, she stated,
I would like the vision in her right eye to be better if we can get it
there. Some amblyopia never responds completely where you can
do all the treatment and the vision may always end up a little short
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of the good eye. If we can get it to 20/20 or close to that, that’s our
goal.
There was no dispute Gonzalez used patches as of the modification hearing.
While Edwards criticizes Gonzalez’s care, she acknowledged having difficulty
obtaining the child’s compliance. More importantly, she acknowledged Gonzalez
took the child to as many medical appointments as she did and the child’s vision
improved.
Based on this record, we cannot conclude Gonzalez jeopardized the
child’s vision. He initiated the contact with the child ophthalmologist, purchased
glasses for the child with three different prescriptions, informed Edwards and her
mother of follow-up appointments, and took the child to those appointments. At
worst, he succumbed to the child’s complaints about the patch. However, even
with this temporary lapse in judgment, the child’s vision improved. The child’s
eye condition and Gonzalez’s response to it were not grounds to modify the five-
year physical care arrangement.
The same holds true of Edwards’s reliance on the child’s periodic vaginal
redness and discharge, which all concerned attributed to the child’s failure to
properly wipe herself. While Edwards and her mother faulted Gonzalez for failing
to apply a vaginal cream to the affected area, a nurse practitioner treating the
child recommended against its use, stating the child did “not have an abnormality
of the perineal area on exam.” She continued,
There is no evidence of infection or reason for medications to be
used in this area of the body. The use of medications not
recommended by her doctor can lead to further problems such as
skin irritation or infection. Please do not apply creams on the
vaginal area without supervision from our office.
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Significantly, when this condition re-developed later in the year, Gonzalez took
the child to a medical provider. There was no indication the condition was
serious or life-threatening. At worst, it reflected a failure on the part of Gonzalez,
as well as Edwards and her mother, to teach the child proper hygiene practices
following urination and defecation.
Edwards also contends Gonzalez ignored a rash near the child’s eye,
which could have affected her vision. The rash was diagnosed as herpes
simplex and a medical note indicated it was already “nearly dry” at the time of the
clinic visit. Edwards conceded Gonzalez asked her to come to his house and
look at the sore and, together, they went and purchased the required medicine.
On our de novo review, we conclude the child’s health conditions and
Gonzalez’s responses to them did not establish neglect on his part and did not
establish Edwards as the superior caretaker. Additionally, the balance of the
record showed Gonzalez rather than Edwards to be the superior caretaker.
In reaching this conclusion, we have considered Edwards’s present
contention that Gonzalez excluded her from key decisions. Edwards testified
otherwise at the modification hearing, agreeing Gonzalez repeatedly told her he
was interested in having the two of them parent the child together without so
much involvement by Edwards’s mother. Certainly, there was a period when
Gonzalez, frustrated by Edwards’s nonpayment of her minimal child support
obligation, impermissibly denied her visitation, but the district court dealt with this
issue in the contempt order and Gonzalez complied with the order. Accordingly,
Gonzalez’s improper denial of visits for a limited period of time did not require
modification of the physical care provision in the custody decree.
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Having found a failure of proof on the “superior care” factor, we reverse
the district court’s modification of the physical care provision in the stipulated
decree. We conclude Gonzalez is entitled to physical care of the child. We
remand for further proceedings on the parents’ differing visitation plans and for
recalculation of child support. Because Edwards was not the prevailing party, we
deny her request for appellate attorney fees.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.