In re Marriage of Meints

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 27, 2022
Docket21-0172
StatusPublished

This text of In re Marriage of Meints (In re Marriage of Meints) 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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In re Marriage of Meints, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 21-0172 Filed January 27, 2022

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JEFFREY N. MEINTS AND CRYSTAL K. MEINTS

Upon the Petition of JEFFREY N. MEINTS, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning CRYSTAL K. MEINTS, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cerro Gordo County, Gregg R.

Rosenbladt, Judge.

Crystal Meints appeals the decree dissolving her marriage to Jeffrey Meints.

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

Brian J. Humke and Logan J. Eliasen of Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Ames, for

appellant.

Anjela Shutts and Anna E. Mallen of Whitfield and Eddy, P.L.C., Des

Moines, for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., Ahlers, J., and Mullins, S.J.*

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

(2022). 2

MULLINS, Senior Judge.

Crystal Meints appeals the decree dissolving her marriage to Jeffrey Meints

(Jeff). She argues (1) the court’s property distribution is inequitable for various

reasons, (2) the court erred in not concluding Jeff dissipated marital assets, (3) the

court’s award of spousal support in her favor was inadequate, and (4) the court’s

award of trial attorney fees in her favor was insufficient. Crystal requests an award

of appellate attorney fees.

I. Background

The parties married in 1989. Each party had children from prior

relationships—Jeff two and Crystal one—and the marriage itself produced two

more children. All of the parties’ children reached the age of majority prior to the

proceedings.

At the time of trial, Jeff was fifty-five years old and in good health. He is a

high school graduate but only attended one semester of college. Jeff runs a seed

and chemical business, Titan Pro SCI (Titan Pro),1 and also farms with Crystal’s

son, Derek, under a farming corporation, Otter Creek Holdings (Otter Creek).2 Jeff

is the founder of Titan Pro and has been its CEO since its inception in 2009.3 His

1 Titan Pro is owned by Jeff and his four biological children, all of whom are employed by the business. In 2017, Titan pro was appraised at a value of $4,870,000.00. Thereafter, Jeff sold each of the four children 10% of the company’s stock, leaving him with a controlling 60%. The children did not pay for the shares, but each executed a loan agreement and promissory note in favor of Jeff in the amount of $365,300.00 with annual interest payments and a balloon payment in 2026. Crystal testified she was not consulted about the sale of Titan Pro stock to the children. 2 Jeff began farming in the 1980s. 3 Titan Pro’s predecessor entity was Farm Advantage, which Jeff started with two

partners in 1990. The business was dissolved in 2008. At the time, only one other 3

annual base salary is $230,000.00. He has received additional compensation

based on commissions in the past, but he testified “[t]hat has dwindled over the

years because [he] don’t do much of that anymore and so that’s basically

nonexistent.” He is eligible for annual bonuses based on certain criteria and

profitability. He received a $20,000.00 bonus for fiscal year 2019 but did not expect

to receive a bonus for fiscal year 2020. His compensation package also includes

a vehicle and health and life insurance. According to Jeff’s affidavit of financial

status, his gross monthly income, including from Titan Pro and “real estate rental,”

amounts to $40,481.75, resulting in an annual gross income of $485,781.00.

Crystal was also fifty-five at the time of trial. She had recently had her

thyroid removed, and she has some knee and back issues. A biopsy showed her

thyroid was cancerous, and she will be on thyroid medication the rest of her life.

She needs back surgery at some point, which will involve three or four months of

recovery. She testified she also suffers from depression, anxiety, and post-

traumatic stress disorder. After completing high school in 1983, she attended

some college and then entered the workforce. Beginning in 1986, before the

parties were married, Crystal was employed by the local sheriff’s department as a

dispatcher and jailer. She continued this employment and other odd jobs while

Jeff farmed. Crystal discontinued working in 2003. She testified, thereafter, “I was

stay-at-home.” At some point, she began working for Titan Pro, “help[ing] out

wherever anything was needed,” “from cleaning toilets to cooking to . . . planning.”

Crystal testified Jeff did not want her to work anywhere else “because then [she]

partner remained with Jeff, and Jeff learned the partner was “skimming money off the top of the business.” 4

wouldn’t be able to be where he needed [her] to be.” She received a salary and

benefits. Over time, her duties decreased, and she discontinued working at Titan

Pro in 2018, when the company’s CFO recommended against her continued

employment due to potential liabilities relating to financial auditing. According to

her financial affidavit, Crystal’s gross annual income from leasing agricultural

ground and interest income is $37,907.00. She claimed her total monthly

expenses amounted to $24,478.00.

The parties obtained several pieces of property during the marriage that

have been used for farming by Otter Creek. Of the properties, several are titled in

Crystal’s name alone, which Otter Creek paid her cash rent to farm.4 Of the

properties in Crystal’s name, Jeff requested he be awarded the Butson farm, where

corn bins owned by him and Derek are located; the east half of Harold’s farm5; and

thirty acres in Franklin County. Jeff testified such an award would provide enough

farm ground to justify the ongoing farming operations of Otter Creek. Crystal

requested she be awarded the Butson farm because it generates income and “is

[her] retirement,” but she stated she would be willing to survey off the bin sites on

the property for purchase by Otter Creek. She agreed it would make most sense

for Jeff to own the entirety of Harold’s farm and testified she would allow Jeff to

buy her portion of Harold’s farm for its appraised value.

4 This appears to have been a tactic to shield Crystal’s property from potential risk relating to Jeff’s business ventures. 5 Harold’s farm was previously owned jointly by the parties. They partitioned the

property and placed the east half in Crystal’s trust and the west half in Jeff’s trust. Jeff testified both portions need tile work and, because Crystal’s share is between Jeff’s share and other farming property owned by Jeff and tile work needs to run through all three properties, it would make most sense for both halves to be awarded to him. 5

Ultimately, Jeff vacated the marital home and petitioned for dissolution of

the parties’ marriage in April 2019. Thereafter, Jeff lived in a warehouse leased

by Titan Pro. He lived there until February 1, 2020, when he moved into a lake

house. At that point, he could not purchase the lake house because of the ongoing

dissolution proceeding, but he began renting it from the owners with a plan to put

the rent money toward purchasing it in the future. Jeff entered into a rental

agreement to rent the home for $10,000.00 per month, and a purchase agreement

to buy the home, furnishings, and associated watercrafts for $1,200,000.00. He

began renting the home and paid a $10,000.00 deposit. Shortly thereafter, the

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