Alynn Smith, petitioner-appellee/cross-appellant v. Howard Eaton, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 21, 2016
Docket16-0553
StatusPublished

This text of Alynn Smith, petitioner-appellee/cross-appellant v. Howard Eaton, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee. (Alynn Smith, petitioner-appellee/cross-appellant v. Howard Eaton, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Alynn Smith, petitioner-appellee/cross-appellant v. Howard Eaton, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee., (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 16-0553 Filed December 21, 2016

ALYNN SMITH, Petitioner-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

vs.

HOWARD EATON, Respondent-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, David M. Porter,

Judge.

A father appeals, and a mother cross-appeals, the district court’s

modification decision. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

Lynne Wallin Hines of Lynne W. Hines Law Office, Des Moines, for

appellant/cross-appellee.

Jeffrey A. Kelso of Cunningham & Kelso, P.L.L.C., Urbandale, for

appellee/cross-appellant.

Considered by Vogel, P.J., and Vaitheswaran and McDonald, JJ. 2

VOGEL, Presiding Judge.

Howard Eaton appeals, and Alynn Smith cross-appeals, the district court’s

modification order regarding the parties’ minor child. Howard asserts the child

support that the court ordered Alynn to pay should have been retroactive to

November 2014. He claims the court abused its discretion in not awarding him

trial attorney fees as the successful party. He takes issue with the court’s

decision to grant seven weeks of summer visitation to Alynn, asserting it should

only be six weeks. He also asks that we reverse the district court’s award of

attorney fees to Alynn that pertain to the parties’ dispute over the court’s

jurisdiction. In her cross-appeal, Alynn claims the court should not have awarded

physical care of the parties’ child to Howard, the court’s child support calculation

is incorrect, and the court should not have ordered all additional visitation to take

place in Tennessee.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Howard and Alynn are the parents of a child born in 2003. The court

entered a paternity and custody decree in 2004 placing the child in Alynn’s

physical care, subject to Howard’s visitation. That decree was modified in

February 2008 to grant the parties joint physical care. Howard moved to

Arkansas in July 2009, leaving the child in Iowa with Alynn and returning to see

the child monthly. Alynn began experiencing behavioral issues with the child and

discussed with Howard the possibility of having the child live with Howard in

Arkansas. The parties agreed to a ninety-day trial period beginning in December

2009. In the late spring 2010, the parties negotiated the terms of a modification

decree that would provide for the child to remain living in Arkansas with Howard, 3

with visitation to Alynn, and establish Alynn’s child support obligation. While an

agreement was reached and Howard signed the necessary documents, Alynn

changed her mind and refused to file the modification decree.

Thereafter, Howard instituted a custody action in Arkansas in September

2010. Though the action was served on Alynn, she failed to respond, and a

default order was entered in November 2010, establishing Alynn’s child support,

retroactive to December 2009, and giving Howard “full custody” of the child. The

order did not provide any specific visitation schedule for Alynn, but she continued

to have visitation with the child during his breaks from school, including the fall

break, winter break, spring break, and a portion of the summer break every year.

In August of 2011, Howard and the child moved from Arkansas to

Tennessee. Visitations with Alynn continued on all of the child’s school breaks,

and Alynn continued to pay the child support ordered by the Arkansas court. In

November 2013, Howard attempted to have the Arkansas decree registered with

the Tennessee court. After Alynn filed a resistance, the Tennessee court denied

the registration, finding it appeared Iowa retained jurisdiction to modify the 2008

decree, making the Arkansas order invalid. Alynn filed a motion for a declaratory

judgment in Arkansas asking that the 2010 order be declared void ab initio. In

July 2014, the Arkansas court granted Alynn’s motion, declaring Iowa retained

exclusive jurisdiction to modify the 2008 custody order and that the 2010

Arkansas order was void in light of the lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

That same week, Alynn filed a modification petition and a petition for writ

of habeas corpus in Iowa, and Howard filed a modification action in Tennessee.

The Iowa court annulled Alynn’s petition for writ of habeas corpus, concluding 4

“[t]he best interests of the child mandate that the child be returned to Tennessee

in time to start school.” However, the Iowa court denied Howard’s application for

Iowa to decline jurisdiction to allow the Tennessee action to continue. In denying

Howard’s request, the court noted Howard

attempted to secure jurisdiction in Arkansas through unjustifiable conduct in restraining the child and he continues with these same actions in Tennessee. This Court cannot not reward a parent’s use of the minor child as a pawn to attempt to secure jurisdiction in another state. Further, Iowa is not an inconvenient forum to modify its custody order.

Thereafter, the Tennessee modification action was dismissed, and the

modification action proceeded solely in Iowa.

After a four-day trial in November 2015, the court issued its modification

ruling on December 24, 2015. The court placed the child in Howard’s physical

care subject to Alynn’s visitation rights, which occur in conjunction with the child’s

school breaks, and ordered Alynn pay child support starting on January 1, 2016.

Both parties filed posttrial motions under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2).

In response, the court filed an amended and substituted ruling and order on

February 24, 2016, which, among other things, reduced the amount of monthly

child support Alynn was required to pay, denied Howard’s request for the child

support obligation to start in November 2014, adjusted the start date of the

summer visitation, provided all additional visitation on the child’s three-day

weekends would take place in Tennessee, outlined the obligations of the parties

with respect to the child’s mode of transportation for the visitation and the parties’

payment obligations for that transportation, and awarded Alynn attorney fees

incurred to contest the jurisdiction issue. Both parties now appeal. 5

II. Scope and Standard of Review.

Our review of this modification petition is de novo as the matter was heard

in equity. In re Marriage of Hoffman, 867 N.W.2d 26, 32 (Iowa 2015). We give

the district court’s findings of fact weight, especially with regard to the court’s

assessment of the credibility of witnesses, but we are not bound by those

findings. Id. With respect to the district court’s decision to award attorney fees,

our review is for the abuse of discretion. Christy v. Lenz, 878 N.W.2d 461, 469

(Iowa Ct. App. 2016).

III. Modification of Physical Care.

Alynn claims the district court should not have granted physical care of the

parties’ child to Howard in Tennessee but instead should have placed the child in

her care in Iowa. A party seeking to modify the terms of custody decree “must

prove by a preponderance of the evidence a substantial change in circumstances

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