IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 21-0823
Filed March 2, 2022
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JESSICA PECKUMN
AND THOMAS PECKUMN
Upon the Petition of
JESSICA PECKUMN,
Petitioner-Appellee,
And Concerning
THOMAS PECKUMN,
Respondent-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Greene County, Adria Kester, Judge.
A former husband appeals the division of assets and physical-care provision
in the decree dissolving his marriage. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Joel Baxter of Wild, Baxter & Sand, P.C., Guthrie Center, for appellant.
Kate Simon of Cordell Law, LLP, Des Moines, for appellee.
Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and May, JJ.
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TABOR, Judge.
Jessica and Thomas Peckumn divorced after a seven-year marriage. The
decree awarded physical care of their two children, ages two and four, to Jessica.
In dividing their property, the district court awarded roughly seventy-five acres of
farmland to Thomas. To achieve an equitable distribution, the court then directed
him to pay $325,802.48 to Jessica. Thomas now challenges that equalization
payment and the physical care award.
Because the district court’s distribution was fair under the circumstances of
this marriage, we reject Thomas’s argument about the fortuitous appreciation of
the farm property. But we reduce the equalization payment to $302,065.46 to
reflect minor miscalculations of the non-real estate assets, as well as taxes and
advance attorney fees paid by Thomas. And, to promote continuity of caregiving
during the marriage, we affirm the physical care award to Jessica.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
Jessica and Thomas married in 2014. Both had college degrees. Thomas
studied agriculture and agronomy. Jessica majored in children and family studies.
They have two sons, J.T.P. born in 2016 and J.H.P born in 2019.
When she petitioned for divorce in April 2020, Jessica was working as an
executive assistant at the Greene County Medical Center in Jefferson. In that
position, she worked forty to fifty hours per week and earned $42,000 per year.
But in July 2020 she lost that job—told by her boss that she “wasn’t reliable during
the pandemic.” She testified that she had to take leave from work when their
daycare closed three or four times because of COVID-19 or when the children had
to quarantine. Jessica testified that she asked Thomas for help with child care, but
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he declined. Despite her diligent efforts, she had not found a comparable position
in Jefferson by the time of the divorce trial in April 2021. Jessica testified that she
planned to move to Des Moines to secure a new job.
Thomas works in agriculture with his father, though they maintain separate
farming operations. Thomas calculated his annual income from farming as
$69,358, an amount that the district court accepted as accurate.
Before the marriage, Thomas bought three parcels of land: ten acres in
2007, thirty-nine acres in 2009, and twenty-six acres in 2010. Working from
Thomas’s 2013 statement of his net worth, the district court found that when he
entered the marriage, his equity in those properties was $118,750.43. Then
working from Thomas’s January 2021 balance sheet, the court determined the
equity in those properties had grown to $445,988. When dividing the marital
estate, the court set off the $118,750.43 in premarital equity to Thomas. But the
court decided the rest of the increased equity ($327,237.57) should be divided
equally between Thomas and Jessica. The court completed a detailed balance
sheet awarding those properties and the marital home (valued at $42,000) to
Thomas, as well as dividing the couple’s non-real estate assets. As its bottom line,
the court ordered Thomas to make an equalization payment of $325,802.48 to
Jessica. The court allowed Thomas to pay that amount in installments.1
Thomas contests that property division on appeal. He also challenges the
district court’s decision to place physical care of the children with Jessica. For
defending the decree on appeal, Jessica asks for roughly $2000 in attorney fees.
1 The court declined Jessica’s request for spousal support.
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II. Scope and Standards of Review
We review appeals from dissolution decrees de novo. Iowa R. App. P.
6.907; In re Marriage of Larsen, 912 N.W.2d 444, 448 (Iowa 2018). We give weight
to the district court’s fact findings, but, in the end, we make our own assessment
of the record. See In re Marriage of Sullins, 715 N.W.2d 242, 247 (Iowa 2006).
“No hard and fast rules govern the economic provisions in a dissolution
action; each decision turns on its own uniquely relevant facts.” In re Marriage of
Smith, 573 N.W.2d 924, 926 (Iowa 1998). With that understanding, we will disturb
the court’s resolution of disputed claims only if the decree fails to do equity. Id.
When physical care is at issue, our primary consideration is the best interests of
the children. In re Marriage of Hansen, 886 N.W.2d 868, 874 (Iowa Ct. App. 2016).
III. Legal Analysis
A. Equalization Payment
Thomas contends the district court erred in calculating his equalization
payment. He agrees with the court’s decision to set off $118,750.43—the amount
of equity he had in the farmland coming into the marriage. And he concedes
Jessica has a right to share in the value of the property that appreciated based on
their joint marital efforts. But he objects to the court’s decision to evenly split those
increases in the land’s equity stemming from its “fortuitous appreciation.”
When deciding how to equitably divide property owned by one spouse
before the marriage that has appreciated during the marriage, we emphasize three
factors: (1) each spouse’s tangible contributions to the marital relationship;
(2) whether the property’s appreciation is attributable to the spouses’ joint efforts
or fortuitous circumstances; and (3) the length of the marriage. In re Marriage of
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Grady-Woods, 577 N.W.2d 851, 852–53 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998). We also consider
the statutory factors including the age and physical and emotional health of the
parties, as well as their earning capacities and economic circumstances. Id. (citing
Iowa Code § 598.21).
In seeking to reduce his equalization payment, Thomas relies on the
analysis in In re Marriage of Lattig. 318 N.W.2d 811, 815 (Iowa Ct. App. 1982).
That case recognized that when one party brings property into the marriage, and
that property increases in value, the other party is not necessarily entitled to one-
half the difference without showing contributions to the enhancement of value by
joint effort, skill, or funds. Id. at 816.
Thomas is correct in noting similarities between Lattig and this case. For
instance, Richard and Shirley Lattig had also been married just seven years. And
as Thomas describes: “The marital estate in Lattig included farmland that was
brought into the marriage by one spouse. The property had appreciated in value
in part due to fortuitous circumstances and in part due to the efforts of both parties.”
Lattig held that the district court’s formula for awarding Richard four-sevenths and
Shirley three-sevenths of the increased value of the land he brought into the
marriage was faulty. Id. at 815. On the one hand, our court noted, the property
was not jointly held and Shirley did not make any payments on the farm. Id. On
the other hand, she did guarantee a loan for farm equipment and did help on the
farm for a short period before she began working full time.2 Id. at 816. Reasoning
2 Shirley and Richard did not have any children in common. Shirley testified that
she spent most of her own paychecks to support her four school-aged children
from a previous marriage. Lattig, 318 N.W.2d at 813–14.
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that Shirley should receive some credit for her “risk under the loan agreement” and
her “contributions to the marriage,” our court reduced Shirley’s award from $68,297
to $25,000. Id.
Claiming to apply the logic of Lattig, Thomas contends it was inequitable for
the district court to divide the land’s increased value of $327,237.57 because—in
his estimation—at least $246,500 of that amount was “fortuitous appreciation.” It
is hard to track Thomas’s calculations because he cites mainly to the decree, not
the transcript or exhibits, to support his figures.3 But as his bottom line, Thomas
asserts his equalization payment to Jessica should fall in the range of $124,132 to
$134,224—less than half of the $325,802 ordered by the district court.
To counter, Jessica argues the facts of Lattig differ from this case. For one
thing, before she was fired, her earnings supported the growth in equity of the
properties. Even Thomas testified: “Jessica did contribute to paying the mortgage
on these farms during our marriage and that needs to be taken into account.”
While the three parcels were not jointly held, the bank required Jessica to sign
security agreements. In another departure from Lattig, Jessica and Thomas have
two children in common and she was the primary caretaker, even though she also
worked full-time outside the home. In fact, she lost her job because of her
absences caring for their children during the pandemic and Thomas’s refusal to
lend a hand. Jessica insists the district court gave appropriate consideration to the
economic value of her contribution to the marriage through both her income and
3From what we can tell, Thomas disagrees with the district court’s decision to use
his own statement of his net worth to determine the premarital value of the parcels.
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provision of health insurance, as well as her homemaking and childcare services.
See Iowa Code § 598.21(5)(c).
We agree with Jessica. We find it equitable given the circumstances of this
marriage to evenly divide the appreciated value of the premarital property. We
need not emphasize how the property appreciated “fortuitously versus laboriously.”
See In re Marriage of Fennelly, 737 N.W.2d 97, 104 (Iowa 2007). We recognize
that in Fennelly, our supreme court deemphasized that distinction in a marriage of
nearly fifteen years. Id. But even in this marriage of seven years, the manner of
appreciation does not dictate a different outcome. Like the parties in Fennelly,
both Thomas and Jessica “contributed in countless ways to the marriage.” Id. If
either party can be accused of shirking duties, it would be Thomas, having refused
to help with childcare after the pandemic disrupted the normal routine.
While we endorse the district court’s attempt to equally divide the parties’
assets, we modify based on three inaccuracies conceded in Jessica’s brief: (1) the
balance in her health savings account transposing a decimal;4 (2) an accounting
of her IPERS benefits;5 and (3) the value of Thomas’s work truck.6 The district
court calculated the marital estate at $711,250.18 with each party receiving half,
or $355,625.09. With the net adjustments of $24,318.96, the total marital estate
is $686,931.22—divided by two is $343,465.61. The adjustments change the net
4 The value is $264.31, not $26,431, removing $26,166.69 from the marital estate.
And as Thomas suggests, it is more appropriate to award this asset to Jessica.
5 The value is $20,170.34, not $18,822.61, adding $1347.73 to the marital estate.
6 The value is $1000, not $500, adding $500 to the marital estate.
In addition, we decline to modify based on Thomas’s claim that the district
court double counted a government payment of $28,000 because the parties’
stipulation contradicts that assertion.
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value of Thomas’s distribution from $681,427.57 to $655,496.57 and Jessica’s
distribution from $29,822.61 to $31,434.65. Based on those new figures, we
calculate Thomas’s equalization payment at $312,030.96.
We further reduce that amount to reflect two expenditures made by
Thomas: $4000 in fees for Jessica’s trial attorney and $5965.50, Jessica’s share
of their 2020 tax bill. After those deductions, Thomas owes Jessica an equalization
payment of $302,065.46. The installment plan outlined in the decree will remain
in place.
B. Physical Care
Thomas argues that the court should have granted him physical care of their
sons. In making a physical-care determination, we focus on the best interests of
the children. Fennelly, 737 N.W.2d at 101. That focus is informed by the factors
in Iowa Code section 598.41(3) (2021). See In re Marriage of Hansen, 733 N.W.2d
683, 696 (Iowa 2007) (applying section 598.41(3) to physical care decisions). We
also consider the characteristics of the children and their parents, the children’s
needs and the parents’ ability to meet them, the relationships between the parents
and children, the effect of continuing or disrupting an existing physical care
arrangement, the nature of each proposed environment, and any other relevant
matter revealed in the evidence. In re Marriage of Winter, 223 N.W.2d 165, 166–
67 (Iowa 1974).
Neither Thomas nor Jessica asked for joint physical care. Rather, both
parents asked to be the physical caretaker. To support her request, Jessica
testified that she had filled that role since the births of the children. Even when
she was employed outside the home, she was the parent who took off work when
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the children were ill or other issues arose. As a self-employed farmer, Thomas
spent long hours working, especially in the spring and fall.
Thomas did not dispute her testimony, acknowledging that she was “a very
good mom.” Instead, he testified that he had hoped that if he agreed to Jessica
having physical care that “she would stick around versus moving to Des Moines
so [he] could see [his] kids more even if she was primary.” But upon learning that
Jessica intended to move, he sought physical care. In his words: “Knowing my
boys, how they are at the farm, . . . I just think it would be devastating for them to
move at this point.” Thomas said he would rely on his family members to watch
the boys when he needed to do farm work.
The district court found both Thomas and Jessica were good parents and
would be suitable caregivers. But Jessica’s established pattern of attending to the
children’s day-to-day needs tipped the scales. The court believed “continuation of
the currently established custodial arrangement” would be in the boys’ best
interests. In reaching that determination, the court considered Jessica’s
anticipated move away from Greene County.
Like the district court, we conclude that the continuity of caregiving is the
key factor. See Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 696. The boys’ emotional bonds with
Jessica outweigh any disruption that will accompany her expected relocation. See
In re Marriage of Thielges, 623 N.W.2d 232, 236 (Iowa Ct. App. 2000) (placing
greater importance on the stability of relationship between children and their
primary caregiver than on physical setting). We affirm the grant of physical care
to Jessica.
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C. Appellate Attorney Fees
Jessica seeks appellate attorney fees of $1967. We do not award appellate
attorney fees as a matter of right. In re Marriage of Towne, 966 N.W.2d 668, 680
(Iowa Ct. App. 2021). Rather, we exercise our discretion, weighing the needs of
the party seeking the award, the other party’s ability to pay, and the relative merits
of their arguments on appeal. Id. Although Jessica has largely succeeded in
defending the decree on appeal, given Thomas’s obligation to make significant
equalization payments, we find it more equitable for each party to pay their own
fees. Costs will be divided equally.
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.