Daniel R. Stephens v. Tiana R. Tiao

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 19, 2025
Docket24-0476
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel R. Stephens v. Tiana R. Tiao (Daniel R. Stephens v. Tiana R. Tiao) 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.

Bluebook
Daniel R. Stephens v. Tiana R. Tiao, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0476 Filed February 19, 2025

DANIEL R. STEPHENS, Petitioner-Appellee,

vs.

TIANA R. TIAO, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D. Huppert,

Judge.

A mother appeals from a custody decree placing physical care with the

father and ordering her to pay child support. AFFIRMED AND REMANDED TO

DETERMINE ATTORNEY FEES.

Jonathan Law of Mumma & Pedersen, Jefferson, for appellant.

Jason S. Rieper of Rieper Law, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Tiana Tiao appeals from a ruling placing physical care of her minor child

with the father—Daniel Stephens—and the related calculation of child support.

She argues physical care should have been placed with her and that the district

court should have determined Daniel’s self-employed income at a higher amount.

Daniel seeks $3000 in appellate attorney fees. We affirm and remand for the

district court to order Tiana to pay Daniel’s reasonable appellate attorney fees in

an amount not to exceed $1500.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Tiana and Daniel started dating in 2009 and had a child together in 2013.

They broke up in late 2016 and agreed on a roughly equal shared-care schedule

that worked for both of their professional obligations. They followed this

arrangement until they switched to a full-week-on/full-week-off schedule after the

child transferred to Rock Creek Elementary School in 2019. The change to Rock

Creek came as a surprise to Daniel—he testified he learned about it from the

school, not Tiana. After an informal mediation by Daniel’s mother, Daniel and

Tiana agreed to stick with Rock Creek, but “no more switching schools or nothing

[and the child would] remain there.” This roughly-equal schedule lasted until the

custody proceedings.

In early 2023, Daniel learned from the child that Tiana was moving to

Panora—about an hour and fifteen minutes drivetime from his home and an hour

drivetime from the Rock Creek school. Tiana said she was planning to tell Daniel

but hadn’t gotten around to it before the child told him. She also testified that she

did not originally intend to permanently move to Panora, but once she got there, 3

she just “decided to stay” instead of looking for property elsewhere. When Daniel

asked Tiana about the move, Tiana said she was “leaving things 100% up to” their

then ten-year-old child to choose schools and living arrangements. And she told

Daniel she had signed the child up for summer activities in Panora. Daniel was

concerned about the distance, the lack of communication, Tiana’s overall

instability, and that it would be the child’s third school in six years.

After the temporary-matters order placed physical care with Tiana, Daniel

believed the child was struggling with separation from him and thought her mental

health had been affected. He suggested to Tiana that the child might benefit from

seeing a therapist and explained he had suggested therapy “multiple times” dating

back to 2017 or 2018. Tiana did not engage with the suggestion until essentially

the time of trial, and she blamed an insurance snafu for the delay. Under

questioning from the court, the insurance explanation became muddled at best.

As of trial, Daniel lived in a house in Carlisle with his wife, their shared

biological child, and four stepchildren. The child at issue in this appeal had a good

bond with her siblings, enjoyed spending time with them, and shared a room with

one of her stepsisters while there. Daniel worked full-time as a self-employed

welding contractor: in 2022, he grossed just under $69,000, and in his proposed

child-support guidelines he estimated his relevant net income at approximately

$34,000.

Tiana lived in Panora with her significant other; they had been living

together for less than a year. At Tiana’s, the child had her own bedroom and no

human siblings—though there were four family dogs. Tiana worked as a hairstylist

in Ankeny but had a business venture planned with her significant other in Panora 4

and expected to change employment to that in the future. Tiana and her significant

other testified that the building for the venture was under construction as of trial

and they were “working on” forming an LLC.

Daniel sought physical care of the child but also told the court he would be

open to working out a shared-care arrangement like one-week-on/one-week-off so

long as he had some help with transportation, such as Tiana sometimes meeting

him halfway. Tiana sought physical care and generally opposed a shared-care

arrangement “due to the distance” between the parties’ homes—but she also

expressed a tepid belief shared care might work if there was less burden on her.

Both parents mostly spoke well of the other’s parenting and bond with the child.

But their communication became more fraught leading up to trial.

The child was doing well overall in school. And she loved both her parents

very much. The mental-health concerns identified by Daniel were largely

corroborated by the child and family reporter (CFR). The child told the CFR she

missed her siblings and Daniel when she couldn’t see them, and said she wished

everyone could go back to the equal-parenting schedule they had before the move.

The child said that, despite the drive, she preferred the past shared-care

arrangement. Consistent with the child’s wishes, the CFR recommended shared

physical care with a week-on/week-off arrangement. And the CFR recommended

that, if the court found shared care unworkable, the parent without physical care

should receive liberal visitation.

The district court found shared physical care was “not feasible and

ultimately not in the child’s best interests,” largely due to the drivetime between the

parents’ homes. In selecting a parent for physical care, the court focused on 5

whether each parent could support the other’s relationship and which parent

provided a more stable home. The court was critical of Tiana’s unilateral

decisionmaking and poor communication regarding the move; her prioritization of

her relationship and needs over the child’s; and her lack of candor or honesty. The

court made a few specific adverse credibility determinations regarding Tiana,

finding her “not credible” with regard to the insurance excuse for the delay in

therapy and that it was “intentional to prevent any therapy to begin until after trial.”

The court also opined that the sincerity of Tiana’s attempt to find housing closer to

Des Moines was “less than clear on the present record.” As for the business

venture in Panora the court described the details as “somewhat sketchy” and

expressed doubts as to its stability or viability.

In the court’s words, “Everything behind [Tiana’s] decision to relocate to

Panora appears to have been motivated by her own needs, not those of [the child].”

In contrast, the court found Daniel had consistently placed the child’s needs ahead

of his own, his home offered more stability, and placement with him would allow

Tiana to have more time with her siblings. The court granted Daniel physical care

and ordered liberal visitation for Tiana.

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Related

In Re the Marriage of Winter
223 N.W.2d 165 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1974)
In Re the Marriage of Rhinehart
704 N.W.2d 677 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2005)
In Re the Marriage of Hansen
733 N.W.2d 683 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2007)
Inghram Ex Rel. Inghram v. Dairyland Mutual Insurance Co.
215 N.W.2d 239 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1974)
In Re Marriage of Gonzalez
561 N.W.2d 94 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1997)

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Daniel R. Stephens v. Tiana R. Tiao, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-r-stephens-v-tiana-r-tiao-iowactapp-2025.