IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 14-1741
Filed June 24, 2015
GARRETT JOSEPH CLAERHOUT,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
KRISTI LYNN ANDERSON,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Gregory Hulse,
Judge.
Kristi Anderson appeals from a district court award of physical care to the
child’s father. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Lynn C.H. Poschner of Borseth Law Office, Altoona, for appellant.
Tara M. Elcock of Elcock Law Firm, P.L.C., Indianola, for appellee.
Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Doyle, JJ.
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VAITHESWARAN, J.
Kristi Anderson appeals a district court order placing physical care of her
child with the child’s biological father, Garrett Claerhout. She also challenges
several other aspects of the decree.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
Anderson and Claerhout had an affair which resulted in the birth of a child.
During the pregnancy, Anderson essentially lived two lives, one with her husband
and the other with Claerhout. While both men suspected something was awry,
they chose to believe Anderson when she told one she was just friends with the
other and told the other she was not married.
In the eighth month of Anderson’s pregnancy, Claerhout confronted her
about her marital status. Anderson told him she had been married but obtained
an annulment. At the same time, she told Claerhout she had miscarried. Both
statements were false.
A devastated Claerhout sought and obtained eight days of bereavement
leave from his employer. His family cancelled a scheduled baby shower.
A month later—just three days before the baby’s birth—Anderson called
Claerhout and told him the baby never died. She declined to disclose her plans
for the birth. When Claerhout asked to be at the delivery, she refused, stating he
would make the situation worse.
Claerhout learned of the baby’s birth from one of his friends. Claerhout
called Anderson and asked to see the infant. Again, Anderson refused.
Claerhout scheduled a paternity test. On the day of the test—five days
after the child’s birth—he held his child for the first time. As the parents
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completed paperwork in connection with the test, Claerhout discovered the
person he believed to be Kristi Wellman was officially registered as Kristi
Anderson, and her registered address was Keokuk rather than the Des Moines
area, as he had been led to believe. He also discovered Anderson had given the
child her husband’s last name. When Claerhout asked Anderson about these
discrepancies, she again told him she had been married but the marriage was
annulled.
Meanwhile, the paternity test confirmed Claerhout as the biological father
of the child. In completing additional paperwork for a pediatrician, Claerhout
surmised Anderson was indeed married and living with her husband in Keokuk.
Claerhout petitioned to establish paternity, custody, child support, and
visitation. Six weeks after the child’s birth, the district court entered a temporary
order granting the parents temporary joint legal custody and week-to-week joint
physical care. The court also appointed a custody evaluator.
In time, the parents deviated from the temporary order. Because
Anderson was unemployed, Claerhout allowed her to care for the child at her
mother’s home in the Des Moines area on three days of his “physical care” week.
Following trial, the district court entered a decree stating the parents would
continue to share care on a week-to-week basis until August 1, 2016, at which
time Claerhout would receive physical care and Anderson would exercise
visitation on the first three weekends of the month. The court also granted
Claerhout the dependent tax exemption and ordered Anderson to pay Claerhout
$1500 towards his trial attorney’s fees.
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Anderson filed a motion for expanded findings and conclusions pursuant
to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2). The district court amended the decree
to provide that exchanges would take place either at Claerhout’s home if
Anderson was unemployed or in Batavia or Ottumwa—midway between the
parents’ homes—if Anderson was employed. Anderson appealed.
II. Analysis
A. Physical Care
“Physical care” is defined as the “right and responsibility to maintain a
home for the minor child and provide for the routine care of the child.” Iowa Code
§ 598.1(7). The overriding consideration in determining which parent shall have
physical care of a child is the best interests of the child. Lambert v. Everist, 418
N.W.2d 40, 42 (Iowa 1988); see also Iowa Code § 600B.40.
Anderson contends the child’s best interests were not served by the
district court order granting Claerhout physical care. She suggests she was the
primary caretaker and points to the three “nearly eleven hour[ ]” days of care she
provided during Claerhout’s physical care weeks, in addition to her weeks of
care.
Anderson’s offer to assist with care does not transform her into the
primary caregiver. While she may have spent more waking hours with the child
through Claerhout’s good will in letting her serve as daycare provider, both
parents shared physical care of their child for more than a year. In other words,
both fed, bathed, and attended to the child’s daily needs on a sustained basis,
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both nurtured the child, and both could take credit for the child’s achievement of
“developmental milestones.”1
The factor tipping the scales in favor of Claerhout as physical caretaker
was Anderson’s dissembling. As the custody evaluator reported,
My biggest concern in this evaluation is the mother’s history of lying
about herself and people in her life in order to avoid dealing with
difficult situations or for other reasons that promote her self-interest.
In my opinion, her decision to say that [the child] was dead was the
ultimate expression of interference in and lack of respect for the
father-daughter relationship. It suggests that she has not been able
to differentiate her personal wants or needs from the child’s best
interest, and it shows a fundamental disrespect for [the child] prior
to her birth. The mother’s apparent lack of awareness of the
inappropriateness of this behavior leads me to doubt her ability to
facilitate father-daughter contact if she were granted primary
physical care of the child and if it were not convenient or
comfortable for her to do so. For that reason, I recommend that
[the child] be placed in the primary physical care of her father and
spend weekends (Friday and Saturday overnights) in the care of
her mother.
At trial, the evaluator testified, “I am concerned about . . . [Anderson’s] ability to
model for [the child] how you cope when things are not going exactly the way you
want them to without lying to people about them.”
Anderson’s trial testimony did not dispel this concern. While she admitted
to acting rashly in feigning a miscarriage, she justified her action on the basis of
Claerhout’s emotional and angry confrontation about her marital status. When
asked why she waited three to four weeks to correct her assertion, she
responded, “if you want to make the best life that you can for everybody and for
your unborn child, you need to start with the truth, which is why I said she is still
alive.”
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Citing the parents’ care, the custody evaluator noted the child was “a fortunate little girl
in many respects.”
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Notwithstanding Anderson’s new-found commitment to being “100 percent
honest with everybody,” she failed to retract her statements about the annulment
of her marriage. When asked about her difficulties with honesty, she stated she
“didn’t want to hurt [Claerhout’s] feelings” and she “likes to make people feel
good about themselves.” Anderson’s failure to fully apprehend the trauma she
caused made her less equipped than Claerhout to serve as primary caretaker of
the child. As Claerhout’s mother testified,
“[Anderson] just doesn’t get it. I don’t think she has any clue how
much she hurt [Claerhout]. I don’t know if she has a clue how
much she has hurt all of us. . . . And so I am really worried about [ ]
just raising [the child] to know the difference between right and
wrong and to know that you have to treat people right. Just all the
things you’re supposed to teach a child, because they do not know
any of that stuff. You have to teach them to be compassionate for
people. And I just don’t know she can do it.
On our de novo review, we concur in the district court’s decision to assign heavy
weight to Anderson’s history of untruthfulness.
We also are troubled by Anderson’s views about Claerhout’s parenting
abilities. She testified, “I think that I am best for [the child] because I promote her
well-being. I promote her development, every stage of development, so
creatively, physically, verbally, emotionally, whereas I do not think that she would
get that anywhere else.” (Emphasis added). She added, “I have an expectation
of how I see [the child] to grow up, and I see that being fulfilled when I am
primarily taking care of her. If [Claerhout] were primarily taking care of her, I do
not think those expectations would be met.” (Emphasis added). These views
raise doubts about her willingness to support Claerhout’s relationship with the
child.
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We recognize Anderson communicated effectively with Claerhout while
the paternity action was pending. For example, she regularly texted him pictures
of the child, copied medical records for him, and held video chats when the child
was in her care. Anderson also facilitated some visitation with Claerhout before
the temporary custody order was entered and, after it was entered, exchanged
the child without incident. But her statements quoted above suggest she might
not be as conciliatory in the long-term.
Claerhout, in contrast, while expressing understandable distrust of
Anderson, refused to disparage her and exhorted his family to do the same.
When asked why he should serve as primary caregiver, he acknowledged
Anderson was a good mother but echoed his own mother’s testimony concerning
the importance of teaching the child right from wrong.
We agree with the district court that the child’s best interests were served
by granting Claerhout physical care of the child as of August 1, 2016.2
B. Dependent Exemption
Anderson contends the district court should not have granted Claerhout
the dependent tax exemption. We disagree. Iowa Court Rule 9.6(5) states,
“[t]he custodial parent shall be assigned one additional dependent exemption for
each mutual child of the parents, unless a parent provides information that the
noncustodial parent has been allocated the dependent exemption for such child.”
Claerhout became the custodial parent and, as of the date of trial, was the only
employed parent who would benefit from the dependent tax exemption.
2
We acknowledge the unusual circumstance of delaying the award of physical care until
August 1. 2016. However, the parties agreed to share care until the child reached the
age of preschool, and neither party raised the delay as an issue on appeal.
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Accordingly, we conclude the district court acted equitably in granting him the
exemption.
C. Transportation
Anderson next takes issue with the district court’s decision to assign all
the transportation responsibilities to her unless she becomes employed. We
agree this provision is inequitable.
Anderson’s unemployment is a factor weighing for rather than against
transportation assistance. While she may not have had employment-related time
constraints at the time of trial, she had home-related time constraints, which
made the three-hour commute as difficult for her as for Claerhout. Additionally,
she bore the entire cost of transportation despite the absence of an income
stream. Under these circumstances, we modify the transportation provision to
require—absent agreement of the parties—the exchanges of the child in Batavia
or Ottumwa whether or not Anderson is unemployed. See In re Marriage of
Bonnette, 492 N.W.2d 717, 722-23 (Iowa Ct. App. 1992); see In re Marriage of
O’Reagan, No. 08-0591, 2009 WL 606136, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 11, 2009)
(requiring transportation costs to be shared).
III. Attorney Fees
Anderson appeals the district court order requiring her to pay $1500
towards Claerhout’s trial attorney fees. An award is authorized to a prevailing
party. See Iowa Code § 600B.26 ("In a proceeding to determine custody or
visitation, or to modify a paternity, custody, or visitation order under this chapter,
the court may award the prevailing party reasonable attorney fees."). An award
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lies within the district court’s discretion. See Markey v. Carney, 705 N.W.2d 13,
25-26 (Iowa 2005).
Claerhout prevailed after a lengthy hearing. We discern no abuse of
discretion in the district court’s minimal attorney award.
Both parents seek appellate attorney fees. Again, an award is
discretionary. In re Marriage of Okland, 699 N.W.2d 260, 270 (Iowa 2005).
Given Anderson’s unemployment, we decline Claerhout’s request to have her
contribute to his appellate attorney fee obligation. Although Anderson partially
prevailed on appeal, we decline her request to have Claerhout contribute to her
attorney fee obligation because the issue on which she prevailed was not the
primary issue.
We affirm the district decree as modified.
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.