IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-0049
Filed June 17, 2020
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MATTHEW J. MEYER
AND CARRIE R. MEYER
Upon the Petition of
MATTHEW J. MEYER,
Petitioner-Appellant,
And Concerning
CARRIE R. MEYER,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Lars G. Anderson,
Judge.
The father appeals the custody determination and visitation schedule in this
dissolution case. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Matthew J. Adam and Rae M. Kinkead of Simmons Perrine Moyer Bergman
PLC, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.
Carrie Meyer, Richville, Minnesota, self-represented appellee.
Considered by Tabor, P.J., and May and Greer, JJ.
2
GREER, Judge.
Believing he should be the physical care parent, Matthew Meyer appeals
the district court decision awarding the mother, Carrie Meyer, physical care of their
one child. Alternatively, Matthew argues that if Carrie is granted physical care, the
child’s best interests require affording him additional visitation. Matthew also
requests that Carrie pay the costs of the appeal. Carrie files no responsive brief. 1
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Carrie and Matthew met in May 2013. The relationship led to their marriage
on July 1, 2014. Carrie, along with her two children2 from her previous marriage
moved into the Solon, Iowa home Matthew bought. After the move in 2014, Carrie
and Matthew’s child, C.J.M., was born in October of that same year. The parties
raised the child in Solon, where Matthew still resides, until the marriage failed. The
parties separated in January 2017 after Matthew assaulted Carrie.3 After that, all
communication about the child occurred by text messaging between the parties.
Matthew moved in with his mother, Joette Meyer. Carrie remained in the family
home until March 2018, when the home was sold at a sheriff’s sale in foreclosure
proceedings. Then Carrie moved in with relatives in Minnesota who had offered
to help her. The child will begin kindergarten the fall of 2020.
1 Carrie did file a statement waiving a brief. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(3) (“The
appellee shall file a brief or a statement waiving the appellee’s brief.”).
2 Both children are older, one was eighteen years old and the other was in high
school, and moved from the Meyer home to their father’s home in 2016, before
these proceedings.
3 Matthew was charged with domestic abuse assault and operating while
intoxicated (OWI). He pled guilty to the assault charge and the OWI was
dismissed. Because he successfully completed the plea terms, his deferred
judgment of assault was expunged.
3
To set the stage for our discussion, Matthew continues to reside in his
mother’s home in Solon. Matthew described a strong relationship between him
and the child that included close contact with her grandmother, who provided day
care for the child while Matthew worked. Matthew emphasized his involvement in
the community and his church and his long-standing stable employment heading
the commercial division of a heating and air-conditioning company. Matthew earns
around sixty thousand dollars annually.
Before and during the marriage, Carrie worked for Conagra Foods making
over sixty thousand dollars annually until she was laid off in the fall of 2016. While
she has a master’s degree in business administration, Carrie was no longer
employed at the time of trial and had not had a part-time or full-time job for over
three years. Carrie described her role as primary caretaker of the child since
Matthew left the home in January 2017 and even before he left. She described a
close relationship with the child that also included strong connections with the older
step-siblings.
Both parents were actively involved with the care of the child during the first
two years of the child’s life when both parents were working full-time and living in
the same home. Matthew assumed the role of cook and grocery shopper and
Carrie handled more of the medical appointments for the child. But after the no-
contact domestic abuse order prevented contact between Carrie and Matthew,
fifteen months went by with what Matthew described as limited contact with the
child. Matthew asserted Carrie limited his contact with the child to only times where
she wanted to go somewhere or when she needed something from him. Yet
4
Matthew did not initiate any formal efforts to seek additional time with the child
during those fifteen months.
Finally, Matthew filed to terminate the marriage in February 2018 and to
seek physical care or shared care of the child. According to Matthew, the main
sources of friction were the cleanliness of the home and Carrie’s inability to find
another job and financial deficiencies. Money was tight, Carrie’s vehicle was
repossessed, and the house foreclosed. Carrie’s assessment of the marriage
failure focused on her concern for her safety. She cites Matthew’s aggression
towards her, their poor communication, and Matthew’s drug and alcohol addictions
as primary concerns. And while Matthew downplayed the domestic assault
incident, he did plead guilty and did successfully complete the terms of his plea.
It was not until March 2018 that a temporary custody order established
physical care in Carrie with Matthew exercising regular visitation every other
weekend, plus a Wednesday overnight each week. Then in March 2019, once the
home was foreclosed, Carrie moved more than seven hours away to a town in
Minnesota. Matthew requested temporary custody and to hold Carrie in contempt
of the previous temporary custody order. While the district court did not find Carrie
in contempt, it did modify the schedule in May 2019 to allow Matthew visitation with
the child one-week per month. Although the child was in good physical health, the
parents used an Iowa therapist for counseling with the child related to coping with
the divorce for a few months in the summer of 2019.4
4 After discharge in September 2019 because of lack of engagement, the
counselor recommended continuation of therapy wherever the child resided.
Counseling has not resumed.
5
With custody as the central issue, the dissolution went to trial in October
2019. The child was five years old at the time of trial, Matthew was thirty-eight and
Carrie was forty-three. After a two-day trial, the district court entered a
December 23, 2019 decree awarding the parties joint legal custody with physical
care of the child in Carrie, “[b]ased primarily on the fact that Carrie has been the
undisputed primary caretaker.” Because there is more than a seven-hour travel
distance between the parties’ homes, visitation for Matthew was limited to one
weekend per month to be exercised in Minnesota, seven consecutive weeks in the
summer, and extra time during school winter and spring breaks. After considering
Matthew’s post-trial motion, the court ordered an additional summer visitation week
if the summer school break is twelve weeks or longer. The court also added a
Thanksgiving visitation from Wednesday to Sunday in odd numbered years and
mandated phone contact every Tuesday and Saturday night over and above
communication encouraged by the district court. Matthew appealed.
II. Standard of Review.
Marriage dissolution proceedings are equitable in nature. Iowa Code
§ 598.3 (2018). Thus, our review is de novo. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.907; Wilker
v. Wilker, 630 N.W.2d 590, 594 (Iowa 2001). We review the entire record and
decide anew the factual and legal issues preserved and presented for review. See
In re Marriage of Williams, 589 N.W.2d 759, 761 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998). Although
we give weight to the district court’s findings of fact, we are not bound by them.
See In re Marriage of Gust, 858 N.W.2d 402, 406 (Iowa 2015). Even so, we will
affirm the district court unless it failed to do equity. See In re Marriage of Mauer,
874 N.W.2d 103, 106 (Iowa 2016).
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III. Custody Determination.
When physical care is at issue, our primary consideration is the best
interests of the child. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(o). Our objective “is to place
the child[ ] in the environment most likely to bring [the child] to health, both
physically and mentally, and to social maturity.” In re Marriage of Hansen, 733
N.W.2d 683, 695 (Iowa 2007). We review “a nonexclusive list of factors to be
considered when determining whether a joint physical care arrangement is in the
best interests of the child.” In re Marriage of Berning, 745 N.W.2d 90, 92 (Iowa Ct.
App. 2007).
The factors are (1) “approximation”—what has been the historical
care giving arrangement for the child between the two parties; (2) the
ability of the spouses to communicate and show mutual respect; (3)
the degree of conflict between the parents; and (4) “the degree to
which the parents are in general agreement about their approach to
daily matters.”
Id. (quoting Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 697–99); see also Hensch v. Mysak, 902
N.W.2d 822, 824–25 (Iowa Ct. App. 2017) (same). When determining who will
have physical care of the child, we will consider “stability and continuity with an
eye toward providing the child[ ] with the best environment possible for [the child’s]
continued development and growth.” Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 700. “[T]he factors
of continuity, stability, and approximation are entitled to considerable weight.” Id.
Carrie has approximation and continuity on her side, and Matthew has stability in
his corner.
We respect that “[t]he trial court has the advantage of hearing the evidence
and observing the witnesses.” In re Marriage of Brainard, 523 N.W.2d 611, 614
(Iowa Ct. App. 1994). But we look to which parent will do better in raising the child
7
into a healthy, content, and well-adjusted young adult. See In re Marriage of
Rodgers, 470 N.W.2d 43, 44 (Iowa Ct. App. 1991). On that end, the district court
weighed several concerns about each parent:
The Court does have concerns about Matthew and Carrie. On
Matthew’s end, they include:
• He did plead guilty to OWI and domestic abuse of Carrie. He
appears to minimize what happened.
• He clearly is angry with Carrie.
• He appears to have said things to or in front of C.J.M. about Carrie
that he should not have.
On Carrie’s end, they include:
• Her living conditions appear to have at times left something to be
desired.
• She also appears to have said things to or in front of C.J.M. about
Matthew that she should not have.
• She was not credible about why she has not sought or obtained
work, and this failure has contributed to her financial instability.
The district court emphasized that the deciding factor is “the history of care, which
supports awarding physical care to Carrie.” No one testified that the child did
anything but thrive under Carrie’s care. “[S]uccessful caregiving by one spouse in
the past is a strong predictor that future care of the child[ ] will be of the same
quality.” Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 697. Although Matt blames Carrie for keeping
the child away from him after the no-contact order issued, he created that situation.
And he failed to formally seek more visitation time or contact for those fifteen
months. From January 2017 until trial in October 2019, Carrie was the day-to-day
caretaker of the child. And Carrie argued that she assumed that role after her job
layoff in 2016 until trial as well. So her history of successful caregiving is a strong
predictor of the quality of her future care. See In re Marriage of Walton, 577
N.W.2d 869, 871 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998).
8
But there are other factors to weigh, and we too have concerns to address
in making this custody decision. We note that Matthew is favored if stability of the
physical home is a consideration. “[P]reservation of the greatest amount of stability
possible is a desirable goal.” Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 696–97. Although Carrie
has a master’s degree, she remains unemployed and, since the filing of the divorce
decree, has failed to position herself and the child in a stable long-term housing
situation. With regard to Matthew, his mother cares for the child and he has many
family members in the community. In contrast, even at trial, it was unclear whether
Carrie would remain in Minnesota, return to Iowa, or relocate again—this time to
Arizona to be near her parents. The instability of her finances and the home weigh
against Carrie.
Likewise, Carrie’s failure to inform Matthew about her move to Minnesota
until after she left the state is concerning. See Johnson v. DeJoode, No. 08-0378,
2008 WL 5412114, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Dec. 31, 2008) (recognizing the mother
provided early caretaking responsibilities, the court awarded custody to the father
and cited the importance of communication between parents that is required to
promote child’s well-being). Even so, the district court noted the move was not for
the purpose of depriving Matthew of contact with their child. At trial Carrie urged
the court to award her sole custody, citing the past abuse from two years earlier.
And Carrie suggested she could live closer to Matthew if he would fund expenses,
stating, “[O]therwise we are northern bound.” Hopefully, the parties now look
forward and communicate with the best interests of the child in mind avoiding
power plays on either side.
9
While minimal changes in the physical environment of the child could
promote emotional stability, which favors Matthew, we note “our case law places
greater importance on the stability of the relationship between the child and the
primary caregiver over the physical setting of the child.” Williams, 589 N.W.2d at
762; see also In re Marriage of Wilson, 532 N.W.2d 493, 495 (Iowa Ct. App. 1995).
Carrie served as the physical care parent since early 2017 and successfully
supported the child financially, socially, and emotionally in spite of the conflict
between the parents and her lack of employment. And even after moving to
Minnesota in March 2019, no trial testimony revealed the child was not thriving in
the new environment. The care history supports an award of physical care in
Carrie and we anticipate stability in Carrie’s living situation and finances will
materialize, enabling Carrie to bring the child to healthy physical, mental, and
social maturity. In the end, these parents remain focused on the best interests of
the child and we hope that effort continues even given the distance between the
parental homes. Finally, a child will fare better if parents are communicating. See
In re Holub, 584 N.W.2d 731, 733 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998) (noting that successful
parenting involves setting aside petty differences to act in the child’s best interest).
Therefore, we affirm the district court custody decision, noting it had the benefit of
observing and evaluating these parents’ live, in-court testimony.
IV. Visitation.
Because we affirm the physical care determination, Matthew asks us to
consider increasing the parameters of his visitation. “A noncustodial parent should
be awarded liberal visitation in order to afford the child[ ] the opportunity to
maximize continuing physical and emotional contact with both parents.” In re
10
Marriage of Farrell, 481 N.W.2d 528, 531 (Iowa Ct. App. 1991). “Although liberal
visitation is the benchmark, our governing consideration in defining visitation rights
is the best interests of the children, not those of the parent seeking visitation.”
Brainard, 523 N.W.2d at 615. With the distance between homes involving a more
than seven-hour drive, the district court was challenged to craft a liberal schedule.
Overall we agree with the district court’s visitation ruling with two
exceptions. First, we modify the decree to accommodate Matthew’s request for
every other weekend visitation in or near the vicinity where the child resides. Next,
we modify the order to offer Matthew the extended Memorial Day and Labor Day
weekends.
V. Request for Payment of Costs.
Matthew requested that we require Carrie to pay the costs associated with
this appeal. Costs shall be shared equally between the parties.
VI. Conclusion.
We affirm the district court decision on the physical care issue, modify the
visitation provisions, and require Matthew and Carrie to split equally the costs of
this appeal.
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.