In re Marriage of Strong

918 N.W.2d 502
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 18, 2018
Docket17-0160
StatusPublished

This text of 918 N.W.2d 502 (In re Marriage of Strong) 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
In re Marriage of Strong, 918 N.W.2d 502 (iowactapp 2018).

Opinion

POTTERFIELD, Judge.

Justin Strong appeals from the district court's modification of his and Rose Strong's dissolution decree, changing physical care of the parties' two minor children from Justin to Rose. On appeal, Justin argues the district court considered improper evidence in reaching its determination. He also maintains there was not a material and substantial change warranting modification and that Rose did not establish she could provide the children superior care. Rose asks that we affirm the district court's modification and award her $5000 in appellate attorney fees.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Justin and Rose were married in 2006. They are parents to two children, J.S., born in 2004 and P.S., born in 2008. When the parties separated in 2010, Rose and the children moved from Texas to Iowa, near both Rose's and Justin's families. Justin remained in Texas.

In November 2010, the children spent the night at the home of Justin's parents in Iowa for Thanksgiving. Justin's parents notified him of the fact, and he immediately flew to Iowa, picked up the children from his parents' home, and returned to Texas, without notifying Rose he had done so. After he left with the children, Rose received a video recording from Justin, which he had filmed four days before Thanksgiving. 1 The video was several minutes in length and consisted of Justin sitting on the coach speaking to the camera; he addressed his comments directly to Rose, stating, in part:

I want to just tell on this camera that I'm sorry, because if you get this video, that means that what I have planned has gone through. And it'll eventually, you'll understand, and if you listen to me, you'll understand more....
And on that note, I want to say, that for the reason I'm telling you I'm sorry is because the kids don't belong with you, not right not now, not at this point, and I'm sorry I had to take them. I'm sorry for the bullshit, but I'm going to raise them. ...
I mean, I got everything lined up already, and I have had. I just have to be there and seize the moment. And when I see it, I'm going to take it. And that's why I'm sorry. But I want you to watch this video and understand that it's going to suck and it's going to hurt not having the kids with you. ...
I'd like for you to call and talk to them and have that sense of pain that I've had. A lot's going to change if you're watching this. A lot is going to change.

After returning to Texas, Justin filed for dissolution. In June 2011, he obtained a default dissolution decree, which placed the children in the parties' joint legal custody and in Justin's physical care.

The two boys and Justin moved five times (with five different school districts) residing in three different states-Texas, Wisconsin, and Iowa-between the entry of the default decree and Justin's filing of the petition to modify the decree in February 2016. When he filed the petition asking the court to increase Rose's child support, Justin and the children had settled in Iowa, approximately ninety miles from Rose.

In June, Rose filed an answer and counterclaim, asking the court to place the children in her physical care. Rose also filed a motion asking the court to appoint a guardian ad litem (GAL) to represent the minor children.

The court appointed a GAL. 2

In July, Rose filed an application and affidavit for a temporary injunction. She noted that she was in the middle of thirty days of summer visitation with the children, as provided by the decree. During the summer visitation, the oldest child, J.S., had reported to a counselor that Justin had fired a shotgun at a candle in their home, while the youngest child, P.S., was so close he was hit by the spent shell. J.S. also reported that Justin left the children home alone all day in the summer and that they were often home alone at night during the school year, going to bed before Justin returned home. J.S., who was twelve, stated he was responsible for his brother, who was eight-cooking his dinner, helping him with his homework, and getting him up in the morning to get to school on time. J.S. also reported there were times there was no food in the home and claimed he and his brother went to bed without supper one or two times each week. As a mandatory reporter, the counselor, Tessa Anderson, filed a report of child abuse with the Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS). Angela Johnston, a child protective worker with DHS, met with Rose and the children. She informed Rose she did not believe it would be safe for the children to return to Justin's home on July 18-the date their summer visitation with Rose was to end. The children's GAL made a similar recommendation.

The court granted Rose's motion for temporary injunction, leaving J.S. and P.S. in Rose's care temporarily and preventing Justin from having unsupervised visits with the children. The order noted that Justin was to file a motion to set a hearing on the temporary injunction.

In a response, Justin denied the allegations and asked the court to order the children to be seen by a specific psychologist, Dr. Robert Joneson. Rose resisted Justin's request, noting the children were already seeing a different counselor. She stated J.S. had seen Dr. Joneson previously, had the perception Dr. Joneson "is aligned with their father," and had "reported to his current counselor that he did not disclose any of the details regarding his home life with Justin in his sessions with Dr. Joneson because Justin insisted on being present in the room during both sessions." The GAL also resisted Justin's motion.

The court ordered the children to meet with Dr. Joneson "at least on one occasion" and confirmed "said evaluation ... should be done without the presence of both parents."

On August 24, a hearing was held on the temporary injunction. 3 During the hearing, the court admitted into evidence the child abuse assessment completed by DHS, which determined the allegations of abuse were founded for denial of critical care and failure to provide proper supervision. The same day, the GAL filed a report to the court. In it, she noted that she had met with J.S. and P.S. without Rose present. During their meeting, J.S. made similar reports as he had made to his counselor-that he was in charge of his brother after school, there is often nothing to eat in their home that they are capable of making themselves except frozen burritos, and his father rarely got home before the two boys went to bed. Additionally, both children reported they were afraid of their father and his collection of weapons; they also reported a fear of being "smacked" by their father and stated that Justin "smacks" P.S. often. The GAL recommended that the children continue to reside with Rose and begin having supervised visits with Justin.

In its written ruling, the court noted the consistent allegations made by J.S. and P.S. to their counselor, the DHS worker, and the GAL but stated it was "somewhat reticent to reach the same level of urgency." The court continued:

In spite of what appears to be an easy decision, there is evidence to suggest that the answer may be more clouded. Specifically, Dr. Joneson, a license psychologist since 1982, testified on behalf of [Justin].

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Bluebook (online)
918 N.W.2d 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-strong-iowactapp-2018.