IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 19-1998
Filed June 17, 2020
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF KENNETH DUNAWAY
AND MEGAN DUNAWAY
Upon the Petition of
KENNETH DUNAWAY,
Petitioner-Appellee,
And Concerning
MEGAN DUNAWAY,
Respondent-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, John Telleen, Judge.
Megan Dunaway appeals an order granting a motion to enforce settlement.
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
Maria K. Pauly of Maria K. Pauly Law Firm, P.C., Davenport, for appellant.
Jennie Clausen and Ryan Beckenbaugh of H.J. Dane Law Office,
Davenport, for appellee.
Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Mullins and Ahlers, JJ.
2
MULLINS, Judge.
In July 2016, a decree was entered dissolving the marriage of Kenneth and
Megan Dunaway. The parties were granted joint legal custody of their two
children—X.D., born in 2005; and S.D., born in 2008—with physical care to Megan
and visitation to Kenneth. In March 2017, Kenneth filed a petition for modification
of the child custody provisions of the decree. In July, an order was entered setting
the matter for settlement conference. The record indicates the ensuing settlement
conference in January 2018 was unfruitful. In March, the court reset the matter for
another settlement conference in October and, if necessary, trial on December 4.
The settlement conference order entered after the conference in October noted
the matter “should settle.”
In February 2019, the court entered an order for hearing for dismissal for
lack of prosecution. In March, Kenneth filed a motion to dismiss that conference
and for an order setting a trial scheduling conference. The court granted the
motion and ordered a trial scheduling conference to take place in late March. The
court, apparently after that conference, set the matter for a settlement conference
in late September, and then trial in October. The order following the September
conference noted: “There may be a motion to enforce a previously signed
settlement agreement.”
Kenneth filed such a motion in early October. Therein, Kenneth stated the
parties entered into a stipulation and settlement agreement the eve of the
December 4, 2018 trial date, disposing of all issues, which was signed by all
parties, including counsel for the child support recovery unit (CSRU). However,
the motion noted Kenneth’s counsel was never provided a signed copy of the
3
agreement, and Megan changed her mind after the agreement was executed and
refused to allow her counsel to file the agreement with the court or provide the
executed agreement to Kenneth’s counsel. The agreement attached to the motion
was signed by Kenneth, his counsel, and counsel for the CSRU. Kenneth
requested the court to enforce the executed agreement.1 Megan resisted, arguing
no agreement was ever reached or executed.
The matter proceeded to a hearing. During her testimony, Megan was
presented with a copy of the agreement that was attached to Kenneth’s motion to
enforce settlement. Megan testified she received a copy of the agreement on
December 3, 2018 and signed it. She later testified she did not sign it, and the
agreement attached to the motion and what she signed was not the final stipulation
agreement. She then testified she signed “[t]he first copy that was sent which was
later changed.” And she testified she initialed every page. She later testified she
“signed a draft conditionally.” She agreed she did not appear for trial on
December 4 because it was removed from the court schedule. Significantly,
Megan was unable to elaborate what was different between the agreement
attached to the motion and the one that she signed.
The exhibits show that at 2:41 p.m. on December 3, Kenneth’s counsel sent
Megan’s counsel a stipulation agreement with the CSRU counsel’s revisions. The
email noted Kenneth was reviewing the agreement at that time as well, thus
1The attached agreement entitled the parents to joint legal custody and shared
physical care of the children. The agreement provided an alternating weekly
parenting-time schedule as to X.D. As to S.D., Kenneth would be entitled to
parenting time every other Wednesday overnight and forty weekends out of the
year.
4
indicating he had yet to sign it. Then, at 4:04 p.m. Kenneth’s counsel sent Megan’s
counsel a copy of the agreement which had been executed by Kenneth, his
counsel, and CSRU counsel. Then, the morning of December 4, some emails
were exchanged between the parties’ counsel, but the substance of the
attachments to those emails is unclear.
Following the presentation of evidence, the court ruled from the bench. The
court found Megan’s testimony inconsistent and not credible and concluded Megan
executed the settlement agreement, but somehow it disappeared thereafter. The
court noted the matter would not have been removed from the trial calendar unless
it was settled. The court granted the motion to enforce the settlement agreement
and entered a written order to that effect. Megan now appeals, challenging the
district court’s grant of the motion to enforce.
Actions to modify a decree of dissolution of marriage are equitable
proceedings, which we review de novo. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907; In re Marriage of
Kupferschmidt, 705 N.W.2d 327, 331 (Iowa Ct. App. 2005). We give weight to the
factual findings of the district court, especially when considering the credibility of
witnesses, but we are not bound by them. Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(g).
Megan cites only one of this court’s opinions in support of her position where
we found insufficient evidence a settlement agreement was made. See In re
Marriage of Treimer, No. 07-1746, 2008 WL 2039602, at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. May 14,
2008). In that case, there was no signed written agreement, and the evidence only
suggested a proposed agreement was floated from one party to the other. See id.
But here, the evidence shows Kenneth’s counsel sent a final agreement, signed
5
by Kenneth, his counsel, and CSRU counsel, to Megan.2 Megan expressly
testified she signed the agreement containing the signatures of all other parties,
the one that was attached to Kenneth’s motion to enforce, and also initialed each
page. The district court found her backtracking from that testimony not credible,
an assessment we now adopt as our own. Then, after executing the agreement,
Megan changed her mind, the reasons for which remain unknown, and her counsel
refused to provide the executed copy or file it with the court. As a result, Kenneth
pursued other settlement options in the coming months. When no progress was
made, he ultimately decided to pursue enforcement of the agreement.3 We agree
with the district court that this case is distinguishable from Treimer. Here, the
agreement produced by Kenneth, coupled with Megan’s testimony she signed it,
amounts to sufficient evidence an agreement was reached.
Next, Megan complains the court made no finding as to whether the
agreement was fair and equitable. See In re Marriage of Dawson, No. 01-1088,
2002 WL 531532, at *2–3 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 27, 2002). But she fails to explain
2 Megan claims the 2:41 p.m. email on December 3 clearly shows counsel for the
CSRU still had revisions to make to the agreement. We disagree. The title of the
attachment to that email clearly indicates that version included CSRU counsel’s
revisions. Megan goes on to claim the agreement attached to the 4:04 p.m. email
included additional revisions from CSRU counsel. We again disagree. Both
emails indicated the attachment was the “Revised Stipulation.” The only difference
as to the one attached to the second email is that the agreement was “signed by
us and [CSRU counsel].”
She also alleges she made changes to the agreement and placed her
initials next to them. However, no evidence was produced to that effect, and she
was unable to testify how those changes modified the substance of the agreement
or amounted to a counteroffer.
3 Megan stresses the fact that no motion to enforce was filed for several months
and other negotiations ensued. We find those circumstances irrelevant as to
whether an agreement was previously reached, and Kenneth’s efforts to resolve
the ensuing dispute amicably should not be used against him.
6
how it was inequitable. And, rather than raise that complaint for the first time on
appeal, the proper procedure to preserve error on this issue was to file a motion
raising the district court’s failure to decide the issue prior to appealing. See
Lamasters v. State, 821 N.W.2d 856, 863 (Iowa 2012). Megan did not do so, and
error is thus not preserved. Even if error had been preserved, we are without an
adequate factual record to determine whether the settlement agreement is fair and
equitable. It would be improvident for us to speculate on the matter, and we decline
to do so. See In re F.W.S., 698 N.W.2d 134, 135–36 (Iowa 2005).
As to Megan’s remaining arguments and conclusory statements that are not
supported by citations to legal authority, we deem them waived. See Iowa R. App.
P. 6.903(2)(g)(3). We do not consider any of the arguments raised by Megan for
the first time in her reply brief. See Young v. Gregg, 480 N.W.2d 75, 78 (Iowa
1996). We affirm the district court order granting Kenneth’s motion to enforce
settlement. We deny Megan’s request for attorney fees. See Iowa Code § 598.36
(2017). As to Kenneth’s request for appellate attorney fees, we conclude he may
be entitled to an award for having to defend himself on appeal. See id.; In re
Marriage of Hoffman, 891 N.W.2d 849, 852 (Iowa 2016). However, because we
have no information concerning Kenneth’s need for the award, Megan’s ability to
pay, or the reasonableness of Kenneth’s request, we remand the matter to the
district court for development of a record and the district court’s determination of
Kenneth’s appellate attorney fee award, if any. See In re Marriage of Berning, 745
N.W.2d 90, 94 (Iowa Ct. App. 2007); Markey v. Carney, 705 N.W.2d 13, 26 (Iowa
2005).
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.