IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 23-0736
Filed January 10, 2024
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF CLINT J. OELBERG
AND SAMANTHA J. OELBERG
Upon the Petition of
CLINT J. OELBERG,
Petitioner-Appellant,
And Concerning
SAMANTHA J. OELBERG,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pocahontas County, Kurt J. Stoebe,
Judge.
A father appeals from the order modifying the physical-care provisions of
his marriage dissolution decree. AFFIRMED.
Tammy Westhoff Gentry of Parrish Kruidenier Dunn Gentry Brown
Bergmann & Messamer, L.L.P., Des Moines, for appellant.
John M. Murray of Murray & Murray, P.L.C., Storm Lake, for appellee.
Considered by Bower, C.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ.
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LANGHOLZ, Judge.
When Clint and Samantha Oelberg divorced in September 2020, the district
court granted them joint physical care of their then-two-year-old son. They have
since alternated care every two weeks between their homes about four hours
apart. By all accounts, they are both excellent parents. And their cooperation and
communication have been reasonably good under the circumstances. But as their
son approached the start of kindergarten this fall, they both agreed that their long-
distance joint-physical-care arrangement cannot continue; one of them has to
become the primary caregiver. So they sought to modify the original decree.
The district court wrestled with this “happily difficult situation” and ultimately
granted Samantha physical care with robust visitation for Clint. Clint now appeals,
arguing that the court gave too much weight to placement of their son with his older
half-sisters who also live with Samantha and too little weight to the stability Clint
could provide. Clint also contends that placement with him would better serve their
son’s long-term interest because Clint is immersed in the Deaf community and
communicates exclusively with American Sign Language (“ASL”), while Samantha
is not as involved and her home is bilingual, using both spoken English and sign
language. Clint reasons the stronger connections and fluency are important both
to foster a strong relationship between father and son and because their son has
recently been diagnosed with some loss of hearing himself.
Clint’s novel arguments about the relative benefits of placement in a
bilingual home compared to an ASL-exclusive one raise some interesting
questions. But we do not have the inherent expertise to decide that either type of
home is better for their son’s physical, mental, and social development. Neither
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party presented expert testimony or scientific literature to help us make such a
decision. And because both parents identify as Deaf and Clint will retain
substantial contact with their son, this is not the case to explore how to weigh an
interest in maintaining a child’s connection to Deaf culture.
So given the otherwise closely balanced interests, we cannot conclude that
Clint presents any good and compelling reason to separate their son from his half-
sisters. We thus affirm the district court’s decision and decline Samantha’s request
for appellate attorney fees.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
Clint and Samantha Oelberg divorced in September 2020 after a two-and-
a-half-year marriage. Both are deaf. Clint was born deaf, and while he can hear
some sounds with his hearing aids, he communicates primarily through ASL.
Samantha lost most of her hearing after contracting meningitis when she was
fourteen months old. But she retains some ability to hear and can read lips. And
she communicates both with her voice and ASL.
Clint and Samantha had one son together during their marriage. For the
first several years of his life, their son had no identified hearing loss and learned
to speak English and sign ASL. Samantha also has two daughters from previous
relationships—one about three years older than their son and the other about six
years older. Neither daughter has any hearing loss, and they communicate mostly
in spoken English. But they also know some sign language.
All five family members lived together in Clint’s home in Gilmore City during
the marriage. Clint worked full-time. Samantha originally worked part-time at a
daycare but became a stay-at-home mom shortly before their son was born.
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In 2020, Clint and Samantha separated. She and the girls moved about
four hours away—first to Gary, South Dakota, then to a nearby town, Canby,
Minnesota, where she bought a home. Their eventual dissolution decree adopted
the parties’ stipulation to joint legal custody and joint physical care of their son.
They alternated care every two weeks, and their son attended preschool and
daycare near each parent when he was in their care.
Since shortly after she moved to the area, Samantha has worked about
twenty hours per week as an assistant manager of a grocery store deli. She also
receives social security disability benefits. Most of the time that their son is with
Samantha, his older half-sisters are also in her care.1 The three kids have
developed strong and positive relationships with each other.
Clint still resides in the same home in Gilmore City that he has for the past
seven years, including throughout their marriage. He also continues to work for
the same employer that he has for the past sixteen years. He is close friends with
his boss at work, who is also deaf. And he maintains ties with a dozen or so other
deaf friends in Gilmore City and the surrounding area.
At the age of four—and just a few months before the trial here—their son
was diagnosed with some hearing loss. He will need to continue to be assessed
to determine whether his hearing remains stable or declines further. He still
communicates in both spoken English and ASL. He had good fluency in ASL for
1 Samantha has physical care of the younger daughter; so she is nearly always
present except every other weekend when her father has visitation. Samantha
has joint physical care of the older daughter; so she is present in the home every
other week. This means at least one half-sister is almost always present. And
about half the time, both are present.
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his age. When he stays with Samantha, she and his half-sisters communicate with
him in both languages. When he stays with Clint, they communicate solely in ASL.
With their son due to start kindergarten in the fall of 2023, Samantha
petitioned to modify the decree, arguing that joint physical care was no longer
appropriate and seeking primary physical care. Clint agreed that modification was
necessary but argued that he should be awarded physical care instead of
Samantha.
After a trial in March 2023, the district court granted physical care of their
son to Samantha and maximized visitation to Clint, including the entire summer
except for one week per month when their son would return to Samantha. The
court praised the parties for their excellent care and cooperation, calling this a
“textbook example” of where joint physical care would be appropriate but for the
parties’ distance and the need to attend a single school. The court reasoned that
in determining their son’s best interests in this “happily difficult situation,”
Samantha had a “slight advantage” because she was their son’s primary caregiver
until they separated. And the court found that the balance further tilted to her
because it was in their son’s best interests to maintain his strong and beneficial
relationships with his half-sisters together in her home. Clint now appeals.
II. Physical Care
Modifications of physical-care provisions of a dissolution decree are
decisions in equity, so we review the district court’s decision de novo. In re
Marriage of Hoffman, 867 N.W.2d 26, 32 (Iowa 2015); see also Iowa R. App.
P. 6.907. While we make our own findings of fact, we give weight to the district
court’s findings because “a court is greatly helped in making a wise decision about
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the parties by listening to them and watching them in person.” In re Marriage of
Callahan, 214 N.W.2d 133, 136 (Iowa 1974). “In contrast, appellate courts must
rely on the printed record in evaluating the evidence” and “are denied the
impression created by the demeanor of each and every witness.” In re Marriage
of Vrban, 359 N.W.2d 420, 423 (Iowa 1984).
Neither party disputes that the requirements for modifying the joint-physical-
care provision in the original decree are satisfied here. See In re Marriage of
Frederici, 338 N.W.2d 156, 158 (Iowa 1983) (summarizing requirements). And we
agree that joint physical care is no longer in their son’s best interest—now that he
has reached school age—because of the distance between their homes and the
need for him to attend a single school. We thus focus on the critical issue: whether
the district court correctly decided that placement of their son in Samantha’s
physical care better serves his interests than placement with Clint.
In deciding which parent should be granted physical care, our guiding
principle is “what is best for the child”—not what is “fair[est] to the spouses.” In re
Marriage of Hansen, 733 N.W.2d 683, 695 (Iowa 2007). We consider the factors
in Iowa Code section 598.41(3) and those discussed by our supreme court in In re
Marriage of Winter, 223 N.W.2d 165, 166–67 (Iowa 1974). See In re Marriage of
Fennelly, 737 N.W.2d 97, 101 (Iowa 2007). Our goal is placing the child “in the
environment most likely to bring them to health, both physically and mentally, and
to social maturity.” Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 695.
As they did in the district court, both Clint and Samantha point to factors
where they perceive they have a slight edge over the other parent in providing the
best environment for their son and try to minimize those favoring each other. Clint
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in particular argues that his relative stability in employment and housing compared
to Samantha’s more frequent moves would benefit their son and that it would be
unfair to weigh Samantha’s time at home with their son against Clint since he was
providing the family with stable support. But stability in the child’s relationship with
his caregiver is more important than geographic stability. See In re Marriage of
Williams, 589 N.W.2d 759, 762 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998). And we do not consider the
relative perceived fairness to the parents. See Hansen, 733 N.W.2d at 695; In re
Marriage of Orte, 389 N.W.2d 373, 374 (Iowa 1986) (rejecting argument that the
presumption in favor of placing half-siblings together gives a natural parent of the
half-sibling an unfair advantage since the “primary concern is the welfare of” the
child being placed).
In any event, the district court only gave Samantha a “slight advantage” on
this point. Weighing these points ourselves, we do not find that either parent
moves the scales—not because of any perceived unfairness, but because both
have shared care equally for a longer and more recent time period and because
Samantha quickly settled back into a stable environment supported by her family
after the disruption caused by the separation.
So we find ourselves with the parties “at a virtual standoff in terms of their
performance as parents.” Orte, 389 N.W.2d at 374. Yet one other key factor
“weighs heavily” to break this balance in favor of granting physical care to
Samantha: the “strong interest in keeping children of [dissolved-marriage] homes
together.” Id. Children of dissolved-marriage homes are “innocent victims” of the
dissolution who should not be denied “the benefit of constant association with each
other” unless “their best interests require it.” In re Marriage of Wahl, 246 N.W.2d
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268, 270 (Iowa 1976). It matters not whether the children are full siblings or half-
siblings. Orte, 389 N.W.2d at 374.
Clint and Samantha’s son developed a close relationship with his two older
half-sisters during their time together in the marital household and over the last
several years of shared care. They are relatively close in age—especially the
younger sister who is only about three years older than their son. And while
sometimes all three children will not be in the home together because of their
varying care and visitation schedules, most of the time they will. With all that in
mind, depriving Clint and Samantha’s son of these important bonds that he has
known his entire life would not be in his best interest.
Clint argues that their son’s “cultural and linguistic development”—and thus
his relationship with Clint—will suffer with his placement in Samantha’s physical
care because of the bilingual communication in her home and weaker connections
to the Deaf community.2 And so he contends that the general presumption in favor
of placement with half-siblings is overcome here. While Clint is correct that the
general rule against separation “is not ironclad,” he must show “good and
compelling reasons” to depart from it. In re Marriage of Will, 489 N.W.2d 394, 398
(Iowa 1992) (cleaned up). And he has not done so here.
It does not intuitively follow that placement in a home with family members
who use both ASL and spoken English will harm the linguistic development of a
young boy who also uses both forms of communication. Clint firmly believes that
2 Clint also again argued that his greater stability is a good and compelling reason
to overcome the presumption. But as we have already explained, these other
factors come out as a wash. They thus do not provide a basis to support
separating Clint and Samantha’s son from his half-sisters.
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it will. But that mere belief is not a good and compelling reason. And Clint
presented no expert testimony nor pointed us to any scientific literature that would
give us a basis to find that their son’s development will suffer if he is primarily in a
bilingual home. Cf. Uhler v. Graham Grp., Inc., 992 N.W.2d 577, 582–84 (Iowa
2023) (discussing need for expert testimony—in another context—when the issue
is “beyond a layperson’s knowledge” and “the analytical gap between the evidence
presented and the inferences to be drawn is too wide” (cleaned up)). To be clear,
we likewise see no basis to find that their son would suffer developmentally if
placed primarily in Clint’s solely-ASL home. But given the strong interest in
keeping the siblings together, we would need something more than speculation to
find that separation would better serve their son’s long-term best interests.
Neither does an interest in maintaining their son’s connection to Deaf
culture affect the analysis here. Clint raises thoughtful points about understanding
“deafness as a distinct cultural identity category” and the importance of maintaining
connection within the Deaf community. Cf. In re L.L., 459 N.W.2d 489, 496–97
(Iowa 1990) (holding that retention of racial identify is properly considered in the
best-interests analysis for termination of parent rights under chapter 232, while
cautioning it is just “one of many” factors that does not “outweigh all the others”).
But this case does not present us with a choice between placement with one parent
within the Deaf community and another who is not.
Samantha too identifies as a Deaf person, is fluent in ASL, played a major
role in teaching their son ASL, and uses ASL in her home. And she has supported
video calls between Clint and their son to communicate together in ASL when he
is in her care. We expect all that positive conduct to nurture their son’s ASL fluency
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and connection with Deaf culture to continue. What’s more, Clint will have
extended periods of visitation each summer that will provide their son longer
periods of immersion in ASL-only communication and access to Clint’s network of
others in the Deaf community.
Clint and Samantha have worked mightily to cooperate for the benefit of
their son up until now. And like the district court, we regret that the physical
distance between the parties requires choosing one for physical care and limiting
the other to visitation. But we agree that placement of their son in Samantha’s
physical care is in his best interests. So we affirm the district court.
III. Appellate Attorney Fees
Samantha requests that we award her appellate attorney fees. While
appellate attorney fees are not awarded as a matter of right, we may award them
as a matter of discretion “to the prevailing party” in a modification proceeding. Iowa
Code § 598.36 (2022); see also In re Marriage of Maher, 596 N.W.2d 561, 568
(Iowa 1999). In exercising that discretion, we consider “the parties’ respective
abilities to pay,” the extent that the party prevailed, and whether the party had to
defend the trial court’s decision on appeal. In re Marriage of Michael, 839 N.W.2d
630, 639 (Iowa 2013).
Here, Samantha does have less income than Clint—but neither is wealthy
with a substantial ability to pay. They both sought a modification of the original
decree and we—like the district court—find the issue of who should receive
physical care to be close. We thus exercise our discretion to decline an award of
appellate attorney fees.
AFFIRMED.