Anna Joy Wise Bindert v. Zachary Wayne Debower

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 25, 2023
Docket22-0766
StatusPublished

This text of Anna Joy Wise Bindert v. Zachary Wayne Debower (Anna Joy Wise Bindert v. Zachary Wayne Debower) 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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Anna Joy Wise Bindert v. Zachary Wayne Debower, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0766 Filed January 25, 2023

ANNA JOY WISE BINDERT, Petitioner-Appellant,

vs.

ZACHARY WAYNE DEBOWER, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Benton County, Christopher L.

Bruns, Judge.

A mother of a child appeals an order granting the father physical care.

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED AND REMANDED.

Alexander S. Momany of Howes Law Firm, P.C., Cedar Rapids, for

appellant.

Bruce J. Toenjes of Nelson & Toenjes, Shell Rock, for appellee.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., Ahlers, J., and Scott, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2022). 2

VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.

A mother of a child appeals an order granting the father physical care. The

child was born in 2013 to Anna Joy Wise Bindert and Zach Wayne DeBower. After

the parents separated, they agreed to rotate care of the child on a weekly basis.

Meanwhile, Bindert married and moved to a town about sixty miles away from the

town in which the child attended preschool. The move placed her approximately

midway between her place of work and her husband’s place of work. The parents

continued the rotating schedule, only reaching an impasse when it was time to

enroll the child in kindergarten.

Bindert filed a petition for custody, visitation, and support. The district court

entered a temporary order granting Bindert physical care.

A day after the order was filed, Bindert sustained severe injuries in a car

accident and was placed in an induced coma. DeBower filed an “emergency

motion for temporary order” seeking to have the child transferred to him. The

district court “held [the prior order] in abeyance . . . until [Bindert was] again able

to at least make decisions related to exercising her parental responsibilities.” The

court granted DeBower temporary physical care of the child subject to Bindert’s

filing of an affidavit “indicating she [was] no longer in a coma and her medical

condition [would allow] her to make decisions consistent with exercising her

parental authority.” The court stated the stay of the original order would be lifted

at that point and physical care would be “automatically transferred to” Bindert,

subject to either parent’s right to seek a modification of the original temporary

order. 3

The child was transferred to DeBower and attended preschool near where

he lived. Seven months after the accident, Bindert filed an affidavit attesting to “a

full recovery” and “the ability to make decisions concerning [her] child and to

exercise parental authority.” DeBower did not file a resistance. The district court

reinstated the original order and transferred “temporary primary care of” the child

to Bindert, who no longer earned wages.

When the case proceeded to trial, the child was eight years old, had been

in Bindert’s physical care for a year and eight months, and had been enrolled in a

school district near Bindert’s home. Following trial, the district court acknowledged

this was “a close case because of the established pattern of primary care with”

Bindert and because of “the fact that both parties [were] clearly very competent

parents.” But the court found DeBower “more supportive of [the child’s]

relationship with” Bindert. The court also stated Bindert’s “change to being a stay-

at-home mother, combined with [DeBower’s] work schedule, “actually weigh[ed] in

favor of a care/visitation schedule that place[d] [the child] with [Bindert] in the

summer and with [DeBower] during the school year.” The court ordered the child

transferred to DeBower’s physical care, subject to completion of the remaining few

weeks of the school year and a summer transition period. Bindert appealed.

I. Physical Care Determination

Bindert contends the district court’s physical care determination was not in

the child’s best interests. See Iowa Code § 600B.40(2) (2019) (referencing section

598.41(3) and factors bearing on the best interest of the minor child); Lambert v.

Everist, 418 N.W.2d 40, 42 (Iowa 1988) (“It is axiomatic that we are concerned 4

above all else in child custody cases with the best interests of the child.”). On our

de novo review, we agree.

A. Caretaking Ability

Neither DeBower nor any other witness disputed Bindert’s ability to care for

the child following the accident. Nor was there any serious disagreement about

the quality of Bindert’s care in the year and eight months preceding trial. Although

DeBower mentioned Bindert’s excessive consumption of alcohol following the

child’s birth, Bindert testified her alcohol issues occurred when she was in her early

twenties, seven years before trial. The district court found “concerns about ongoing

alcohol abuse” were “not a factor in whether it [was] in [the child’s] best interest to

award primary care to [Bindert].” The court further found Bindert was “able to be

a full-time parent to” the child. The record supports these findings.

B. Supporting Other Parent’s Relationship with the Child

The primary question was whether Bindert would support the child’s

relationship with DeBower. See Armstrong v. Curtis, No. 20-0632, 2021 WL

210965, at *6 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 21, 2021) (“The Iowa courts have been clear that

the ability to support the other parent and not exhibit hostility or ill will toward them

is an important factor to consider in making a custodial award.” (citing In re

Marriage of Johnston, No. 01-0606, 2002 WL 535104, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. April 10,

2002))). The district court answered no to this question.

The court first addressed the parents’ choice of schools. The court found

that Bindert “unilaterally” selected the school district the child would attend. While

true, there is more to the story. Six months before the child was slated to start

kindergarten, DeBower, rather than Bindert, unilaterally enrolled her in a school 5

district close to his home. At trial, he conceded receiving a text message from

Bindert a month before he made the decision asking to discuss school options for

the fall. DeBower also conceded Bindert tried to discuss a school arrangement

that would have allowed the parents to pursue a joint physical care arrangement.

He said they met “a few times, talked face-to-face about the situation,” and “talked

over the phone on it.” Bindert received no response to her suggested list of schools

located between their homes.

Bindert did not waver on her assertion that DeBower was the parent who

initiated the impasse. In her affidavit supporting her request for temporary physical

care, she attested that DeBower “went behind [her] back and enrolled” the child in

the school district of his choice “without discussing this with [her].” She further

attested that she attempted to work with him to resolve the issue. Notably, the

district court judge who considered the parents’ request for temporary physical

care cited Bindert’s efforts to reach an agreement with DeBower as a reason to

grant her temporary physical care. While he faulted her for moving, he also

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Related

In Re the Marriage of Walton
577 N.W.2d 869 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1998)
Lambert v. Everist
418 N.W.2d 40 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1988)

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