David A. Muhr and Christine L. Mickel v. Rachelle E. Willenborg

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 24, 2024
Docket22-1780
StatusPublished

This text of David A. Muhr and Christine L. Mickel v. Rachelle E. Willenborg (David A. Muhr and Christine L. Mickel v. Rachelle E. Willenborg) 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
David A. Muhr and Christine L. Mickel v. Rachelle E. Willenborg, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1780 Filed January 24, 2024

DAVID A. MUHR and CHRISTINE L. MICKEL, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

RACHELLE E. WILLENBORG, Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Carroll County,

Christopher C. Polking, Judge.

Two cotenants challenge the district court’s hybrid partition of a family farm.

AFFIRMED.

James R. Van Dyke of the Law Office of James Van Dyke, P.C., and Jessica

L. Morton of Bruner, Bruner, Reinhart & Morton, LLP, Carroll, for appellant.

Eric J. Eide of Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Ames, and Ryan Stefani of

Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

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

BULLER, Judge.

In Iowa, we’ve waffled on our preferences in partitioning family farms,

bouncing between partition in kind and partition by sale.1 See Iowa Code § 651.30

(noting current legislative preference for partition in kind); Spies v. Prybil, 160

N.W.2d 505, 507 (Iowa 1968) (tracing change in statutory preference from partition

in kind to partition by sale). Now, we must decide if a district court can order a

hybrid of both remedies, as it did with a Carroll County farm owned by cotenants

David Muhr, Christine Mickel, and Rachelle (“Shelly”) Willenborg. Muhr and Mickel

requested the farm be sold in its entirety, while Willenborg sought physical division

of her share of the land. Applying a 2018 statute, the district court ordered a hybrid

partition—dividing the land partially in kind and partially by sale—with an owelty

payment from Willenborg to balance the ledger.

1 We use some terms of art throughout this opinion. A “partition in kind” is “a court- ordered division of property subject to partition into physically distinct and separately titled parcels.” Iowa Code § 651.1(8) (2021). A “partition by sale” is “a court-ordered sale of property subject to partition.” Id. § 651.1(7). “Owelty” is “an equitable remedy in a partition action used to equalize the value of the property a party receives through the payment of a sum of money from a recipient of a higher value property to the recipient of a lower value property.” Id. § 651.1(6). And “heirs property” is real property held by tenants in common that meets the following criteria before a tenant petitions for partition: a. There is not a recorded agreement that binds all of the cotenants that governs the partition of the property. b. One or more of the cotenants acquired title from a living or deceased relative. c. Any of the following apply: (1) Twenty percent or more of the interests are held by cotenants who are relatives. (2) Twenty percent or more of the interests are held by an individual who acquired title from a living or deceased relative. (3) Twenty percent or more of the cotenants are relatives. Id. § 651.1(5). 3

Muhr and Mickel contend the district court erred in its application of the

statute in two ways. First, they assert the district court lacked authority to order a

hybrid partition. And second, they claim the court erred in the “great prejudice”

inquiry required under a subchapter specific to heirs property. Iowa Code

§§ 651.30, .31. They also request attorney fees. While we find an error in the

district court’s application of the statute, its ultimate division of the property was

statutorily sound, equitable, and practicable. We affirm the district court’s order

and deny Muhr and Mickel’s fee request.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

After their mother’s death around twenty years ago, Muhr, Mickel,

Willenborg’s husband, and two other siblings inherited 273 acres of Carroll County

farmland as cotenants. From then on, the siblings shared in paying taxes and

insurance on the land. Willenborg’s husband also helped farm the land, as he had

since high school.

Willenborg’s husband passed away unexpectedly in February 2020, and

she inherited his share. Muhr and Mickel commissioned an appraisal, which

determined the market value of the property was $2,382,750 as of October 2020.

By the next November, only Muhr, Mickel, and Willenborg’s interests in the

land remained. The three discussed selling or buying their respective shares, but

they could not come to an agreement. Based on this lack of consensus, Muhr and

Mickel petitioned the district court to partition the farmland by sale in November

2021. Willenborg answered the petition, asking the district court to partition the

land in kind. Both parties agreed the land was heirs property subject to 4

subchapter III of Iowa Code chapter 651. See id. § 651.27. And neither party

requested the opportunity to make a cotenant buyout. Id. § 651.29.

The district court appointed a referee to evaluate the farmland and make a

recommendation on how to divide it. The referee had an agricultural business

background—with more than forty years of experience as a farm manager and

more than thirty years as a rural appraiser—and had served as a referee for

partition actions before. Muhr and Mickel commissioned an updated appraisal

from the same appraiser used in 2020, who found the market value of the property

was $3,221,400 as of January 2022. The parties and the referee agreed to this

valuation for purposes of these proceedings. Based on the appraisal, the referee

endeavored to physically divide the property such that each party’s parcel was

worth $1,073,800.

But the referee found splitting the property three ways impractical because

of the farm’s unusually “diverse topography,” including “two open ditches that

dissect the west half of the property and the southeast part of the property.” As

the referee explained it, these ditches were “not crossable with vehicles or farm

equipment,” making “access to certain parts of the farm . . . extremely limited or

entirely impossible.” As a result, the referee concluded a three-way division would

not work “[d]ue to the lack of access to some parts of the farm and the potential

farming inefficiencies[.]” Instead, the referee recommended a two-way split,

dividing the land into a “North Parcel” and a “South Parcel,” as depicted on

diagrams included with the referee’s filed report and reproduced below. See id.

§ 651.16(4) (“The referee shall file a report with the court that details the referee’s

proposed division of the property subject to partition in kind.”). 5

The referee reasoned “[t]his division would give good access to both parcels

and would be more advantageous for soil conservation practices and farming

efficiencies.” The South Parcel was 95.62 gross acres valued at $1,125,000;

roughly one-third of the entire property. And the North Parcel was 177.38 gross

acres valued at $2,096,400—roughly two-thirds of the entire property.

The referee proposed the court award the South Parcel to Willenborg and

the North Parcel to Muhr and Mickel. He also suggested Willenborg make a one-

time owelty payment of $25,600 each to Muhr and Mickel to offset the discrepancy

between the proportional values of the North and South Parcels. In the referee’s

opinion “creating the two parcels as described would represent an equitable and

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David A. Muhr and Christine L. Mickel v. Rachelle E. Willenborg, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-a-muhr-and-christine-l-mickel-v-rachelle-e-willenborg-iowactapp-2024.